La Strada | 
| Brand: MayFair Games Category: Toy
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $28.75 as of 9/6/2010 06:12 CDT details You Save: $21.24 (42%)
New (9) from $28.75
Seller: 7th Dimension Games Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 90,538
Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Age: 10 - 14 years Shipping Weight (lbs): 4 Dimensions (in): 10 x 2 x 10
MPN: 4099009 Model: 4099009 UPC: 029877033041 EAN: 0298770330414 ASIN: B0006HCVYA
Release Date: September 8, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
| |
| Features:
| • | Which road leads to riches? | | • | For 2-4 players | | • | Strategy board game | | • | Takes about 30 minutes to play | | • | Euro-style game |
|
| Similar Items:
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description As the proud owner of a northern Italian trading company, you must dispatch carts and wagons to find new customers for your goods. But times are hard and competition is fierce. Establish new markets by creating unique routes that bypass your competitors. Naturally, the larger towns are more lucrative, but profits will be greatest where you can keep the market to yourself. Competition will only hurt sales, so even a small village can be a valuable destination. A monopoly, however modest, is still sweet. Find the best way to reach your goals and bar your opponents from success by building a trade network across the variable board. Your opponents will quickly claim their routes, so plan your strategy with care! Creating the best network and taking the greatest share of the gold is the road to victory in La Strada! This family strategy board game is for 2-4 players, ages 10 and up. It takes about 30 minutes to play. Measures 2.25"L x 9.875"W x 2.25"H.
|
| Customer Reviews: Best Italian Trading Game in Yonks! October 5, 2005 Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) 4 out of 13 found this review helpful
Did you ever wish that you lived and worked in old Italy? Here's a role playing board game that will have you crying out, Mamma Mia, that's a spicy meatball!
Mayfair Games are always reliable, and many of us who used to swear by CLUE now have thrown the old Parkers Brothers standby right out the window and now we pledge allegiance to Mayfair's ALIBI game, which is roughly the same idea but fiendishly clever and much more thrilling. It's like CLUE with CSI thrown in. Another worthy game is called ELIXIR, which helps you bide your time waiting for the next HARRY POTTER movie to come out; it's fun, frivolous, involves fairies and makes players do stunts, like Madonna's TRUTH OR DARE, while under the spell of magical herbs, sort of the way the lovers in Shakespeare's MIDSUMMERS' NIGHT DREAM all have to change partners due to Titania and Oberon's wishes. Anyhow my lips were already therefore moist when I heard about LA STRADA, the Italian village industry game from Mayfair, in which you decide how to proceed with building your own business in the land of pasta and vino. It's before the days of motorcars, so you do your peddling out of a horse-drawn buggy, reminding us of Hakim Ali, the Arab peddler who loves the ladies in Rodgers & Hammerstein's classic OKLAHOMA! You are the master of fleets of wagons, and the fate of a vast Italian commercial empire rests on your shoulders. Have you got the 'cogliones' (Italian for, well, you can just imagine) to carry it off?
I have seen grown men cry after bringing their wagon to the fair and coming up empty. And yes, children cheer when they manage to do well on LA STRADA. Don't confuse this game with the popular "road movie" starring Giuletta Masina, the wife of Fellini. Just enjoy it, the way you once enjoyed playing Clue or Uno.
Only works with three or four players September 15, 2007 Amanda Hamm (NC) I like this game. It is fairly quick and easy to learn. It doesn't take long to set up either. The gist of it is that there are different sized towns scattered across the landscape and you get points for attaching them to your road network. More points for the larger towns. The cost for laying your roads differs based on the terrain type so you want to get the cheaper paths before anyone else. With three or four players, it works as a short filler game.
I strongly recommend buying something else though if you want a two-player game. According to the rules, the second player to choose a starting place goes first so that player can put the starting place in front of the other player's and immediately block it with a road. This gives that player a significant advantage and whoever chooses the first starting place will almost always lose.
|
|
|