Modern Art (game)

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Modern Art
DesignersReiner Knizia
PublishersHans im Glück (Germany)
Mayfair Games (U.S.)
(Greece)
Players3-5
Setup time5 minutes
Playing time60 minutes
Random chanceLow
Age range10+
Skills requiredHand management, bidding

Modern Art is an auction game[1] designed by Reiner Knizia and first published in 1992 by Hans im Glück in German. Players represent art dealers, both buying and selling works of art by five different fictional artists.[1] At the end of each round, they sell the paintings they bought back to the "bank". More popular artists' works are worth more, and the value carries over into future rounds.

Although the game is played entirely using cards, a board is used for scoring, so the game is sometimes referred to as a board game.

There are 25 versions of the game.[2]

Rules[]

Each player is dealt a hand of cards, which represent works of art that the player may offer for sale. Players then take turns putting these cards up for auction. There are several auction formats; the one used is determined by the card offered for sale.

As soon as a fifth work of art by a particular artist is offered for sale, the round ends (the fifth painting is not sold). Players then sell purchased artwork back to the bank — the more paintings of an artist that were sold in the round, the more that artist's paintings are worth. Only the three most popular artists' paintings are worth money; the others are worthless. Ties are broken by a fixed artist precedence. The game has a board to keep track of the value of a given artist's painting. Each artist occupies a column. The leftmost artist is always preferred in case of ties. The number of paintings in the deck reflects this; with the leftmost artist having the fewest paintings, and the rightmost artist having the most paintings.

The game is played in four rounds. In the second, third, and fourth rounds the value of paintings at the end of a round depends not just on how the artist did in that round, but carry over from previous rounds as well. Players are dealt additional cards in the second and third (but not fourth) rounds.

The player with the most money at the end of the fourth round is the winner.

Reception[]

In April 2021, it was rated by Board Game Quest as one of the "top 10" auction board games.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Pariso, Dominique (10 April 2020). "The Best '90s Board Games, According to Experts". New York. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b St. Clair, Dylan (9 April 2021). "Top 10 Auction Board Games". Board Game Quest. Retrieved 14 November 2021.

External links[]

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