Rotten Tomatoes Party Game To Be Released By Cryptozoic
September 7, 2022 by fcostin
Quite the strange and unexpected brand name has headed over to Cryptozoic Entertainment. The publisher's output of tabletop titles usually goes hand in hand with massive IPs that are embedded in pop cultures, such as Batman and The Lord Of The Rings. However, this upcoming title may not be based on a movie, comic or video game, but it's certainly a logo and theme that you know.
Rotten Tomatoes: The Card Game // Cryptozoic Entertainment
Rotten Tomatoes: The Card Game is based on the movie review website. This should be an interesting party game title that places two to twenty players in the role of the critic.
The website is well-known for providing fair, honest and often quite harsh scores for movies! In the upcoming card game, players will be taking a stab at guessing the Tomatometer score, ranking different titles in an order determined by the description. The player who guesses closest to the genuine score will be awarded the point.
Across 350 movie cards, players will be dissecting movie details to challenge their strength in critique, to pitch and guess percentages of an overwhelming success or a painful flop on the red carpet.
If you consider yourself a movie buff that often frequents Rotten Tomatoes, the card game is set to be released in the final quarter of the year. Taking roughly twenty minutes to play through one game, and pitched for ages fourteen-plus, this seems primed for those with a deep enough analysis for movies.
Rotten Tomatoes: The Card Game is certainly a different game that I think not many people were expecting!
"n the upcoming card game, players will be taking a stab at guessing the Tomatometer score, ranking different titles in an order determined by the description..."
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Lol could be fun.
Fair reviews? it’s owned by WB/NBC, much like Amazon owns IMDB, regularly restricts or deletes negative reviews and doesn’t count anything less than a full 1 star at all (even though you can score a fractions of stars). And that’s before you even start to look at the enormous disconnect between critic scores (which are reported on google when you search for a film) and the audience scores. I mean, which score do you have to guess? I really don’t see how the idea for this ever entered anyone’s head. Unless of course Rotten Tomatoes have paid for it…