March 22, 2021 – Two worlds are colliding. A Lost Cities Roll-n-Write is Coming Q2 2021. The popular set collection and push your luck game will do what many games do and hop over to the score and move-on format that has dramatically increased in popularity and game options. The mash up of the two promises gameplay that has you “roll and write your way on expeditions to forgotten worlds.”
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Game designer Reiner Knizia from the original came in to handle this new standalone title as well. The game has a planned release of March 2021 from German publisher KOSMOS and in May 2021 in North America from Thames & Kosmos.
The original Lost Cities, released in 1999, is a a two-player game that had you gain points by mounting profitable archaeological expeditions to the different sites represented by the six colored suits of cards. You need to collect sets and there is always a balance of how far you want to push risk vs. reward. This new title keeps that same spirit.
Full Lost Cities: Roll & Write description from BGG:
You want to start your expeditions on the six colored paths with the smallest possible numbers on the dice. Each turn, decide whether to continue with an expedition or start a new one. Acceleration fields and artifacts provide opportunities to advance quickly, but you’ll have to carefully consider which paths to take on which roll. If you make good progress, victory beckons — but if an expedition gets stuck, you will lose points just as quickly as you earned them!
In more detail, each player has their own score sheet, which has eight columns on it: six colored columns matching the colors of Lost Cities (red/orange/yellow/green/blue/purple), an artefact column, and a dice column. You will fill or mark all of these columns from the bottom up.
On a turn as the active player, you roll the six dice — three six-sided color dice and three ten-sided dice numbered 0-9 — then choose one number die and one color die, then mark this number in this color column on your sheet. If you choose 0 and haven’t started this color column, you can mark the “double point” circle at the bottom of the column. If you choose a non-0 number and haven’t started this column, you write the number in the bottommost space of the column; if you have started this column, then you can add another number to this column only if it’s the same value or higher. (A 0 is written as 10 in a column.) Other players choose a number die and a color die from the two of each that remain, then mark one of their columns in a similar manner.
If you place a number on an arrow in a column, then you can “accelerate” any color column by filling the bottommost empty space with the same number currently at the top of that column. If you write over another arrow, then you accelerate once again! If you place a number on an artefact box, then you mark off a space in the artefact column. If you’ve filled all nine spaces in a column and can write a number there once again, you instead mark off an artefact.
If you wish, you can refuse to choose a number-color combination. If you do, then you mark off a die in the dice column.
If you write a number in the seventh box in a color column or mark off the seventh space in the artefact or dice column — and you’re the first player to do so — then you score a 20 point “bridge bonus” for being the first player to cross that bridge.
If you mark off the ninth space in the dice column, you are considered to be “exhausted”, but you continue to play. The game ends after the turn in which all players are exhausted or all eight bridges have been crossed. Players then score points for each color column based on the number of spaces they’ve filled, doubling this score — whether positive or negative — if they’ve marked the “double point” circle at the bottom of the column. Players also score points for the number of spaces marked in the artifact and dice columns, but if you’re exhausted, then you score 0 points for that column. Add your bridge bonus points to the sum of these eight columns, and whoever has the highest score wins.