🧩 Escape, Count, and Conquer the Classic Fairytale Challenge!
FoxMind Games: Hansel & Gretel is a cooperative board game for 2-4 players aged 6 and up that combines strategic movement and math skills to escape the witch Baba Yaga. Featuring eco-friendly, thick cardboard pieces that form a 3D gingerbread house, this game immerses players in the classic Brothers Grimm story while promoting teamwork and cognitive development. Part of the Granna Fairy Tale Series, it offers a charming, educational experience with strong table presence and no plastic waste.
M**H
❤️Almost 5 year old and I adore this game❤️
This looked adorable and we enjoy the Brothers Grimm fairy tales so I thought why not give it a try, even though I thought we'd have to wait a bit for my daughter to understand it.Some of the reviews said it was too complex for kids/themselves to understand. I disagree.My not even 5 year old completely understands the game. We've played it three times now and she asks multiple times a day if we can play it again.AND unlike most kid games, I actually really want to keep playing this game. It is deep but not complex, I would argue. It is simple enough for my 4 year old to play but deep enough for me to enjoy to.Also, it plays well as a two player game!! Which is hard to find. Especially this fun of one.I am being honest here, this is right up there with the best little, little kids games I've played like Outfoxed and Animal Upon Animal. I mean, it's excellent.To the argument that it is too complex to learn and too much going on, I would say that most worthwhile games have a learning curve. This is one even my 4 year old understood after just a few turns so once you start playing, it makes sense and is easy from there. I would say it's the same difficulty in picking up as Outfoxed.What makes this game so fun:1. The art and excellent board and components - its just more fun to run the wooden pawns along the side of the box vs. plastic ones flat on a board.2. You are trying to keep away from Baba Yaga on the board you are moving the players around while making completed treats with the titles to collect all 5 gingerbreads. There is an element of luck in the luck of the draw with drawing the tiles, and an element of strategy making sure the tile you lay won't run Hansel & Gretel into the witch, and also in laying the tiles.3. The box is small so it fits nices in game closet4. Each game is a little different due to the tiles draw being different so it doesn't feel redundant.I mean this is just a solid, solid game I see us playing for years to come. I have already looked more into FoxMinds other games - I would like more like Hansel & Gretel.Easy 5 stars 🌟 keep making games FoxMind!
T**W
Super Cute Co-Op Game
The FoxMind Games: Hansel & Gretel is super cute and fun!This game is great in getting kids to do more than just move a directed tile from a card or a roll of a dice. I appreciate the bit of strategy and complexity that the game allows children ages 6 and up to delve into. Do note that some of the game does also depend on luck.This game does take a bit of setup. You have to put together the scene by popping out the house pieces and locking them together. The pieces stay together well enough and can withstand gameplay without just wearing out quickly.The game play does vary so one is likely wanting to play again and again without it becoming boring.My youngest was intrigued by this game from the theme and the cool looking art. She had no problem picking up how to play.I say it is a game worth giving a shot especially if you are looking for a co-op title.
G**S
Clever and fun
This Hansel and Gretel game made for a really fun game night with the kids. Although the game was designed for players 6 and up, we didn't have too much trouble with getting the younger players (3 and 5) to understand most of the concepts this game teaches. The hardest part is keeping the kids from moving the three game pieces around the track.Gameplay is cooperative. Everybody against the board. The board is a cute cardboard cottage made to look like gingerbread, surrounded by a fence (made from the game's box) on which the Baba Yaga and Hansel and Gretel run. To move the characters around the board, players must lay down tiles to assemble various sweets (mostly frosted croissants, ice cream cones, and donuts) in a similar manner to Carcassonne. Each tile has colored dots on the perimeter, which match the colors for the three character pieces. The number of dots on the outside perimeter is the number of spaces each character moves. Dots that are touching other tiles don't count.As gameplay progresses, the characters begin to circle the gingerbread house faster and faster. It also makes it more difficult to lay the tiles down, as players have to consider the consequences of their actions ("If I lay this tile down, could the Baba Yaga catch up to Hansel or Gretel, or vice versa?"). This is countered by the collection of the Gingerbread tokens, which are earned upon completing each sweet. Each token has the one-time power to move a character one or two spaces in either direction, or to stop movement of a character.To end the game, the players must collect a total of 5 gingerbread tokens. At that point, there is a short passage you can read to the players about how Hansel and Gretel got away safely.Not in the rulebook: If they are doing well and want to keep going, players can go for an extra three tokens (which I hid inside the house before the game started), but the game becomes significantly more difficult at that point, as the characters all begin moving too fast to deal with easily. I'd recommend sticking with five tokens for most players.This game is a great way to sneakily teach children addition, subtraction, counting, matching, and cooperation. It's fun all of us, and we look forward to more sessions in the future.
S**E
Cutest game ever
This is a really cute and fun game. It took me a while to figure out how to play the game. The directions of the game are fairly detailed, but I’m the kind of person who likes to see how a game is played rather than read how the game is played. I like that this is a cooperative game. I ordered this game to play with my 9 year old granddaughter. When it is time for one of us to play one of our pieces, we discuss which piece would strategically be the best play. I like this because it teaches problem solving skills. We are trying to beat the game rather than beat one another so it is a cooperative game as well.The game is made really well. The pieces are made of a high quality thick cardboard and the graphics on the pieces have a Bavarian feel to them The set up is really cute with the 3D cottage. The game box bottom actually becomes the game board. This is a visually pleasing and fun game. I highly recommend it.
TrustPilot
1天前
2 个月前