Ohanami cover
2019BGG rank #999

Ohanami

by Steffen Benndorf · Nürnberger-Spielkarten-Verlag

Browsing is free. Ask BoardGameBrain about this game when rules coverage is ready.

Players2–4
Time20m
ComplexityLight
Age8+

About the game

What is Ohanami?

Ohanami consists of a deck of 120 cards that are numbered from 1-120, with each card having one of four symbols on it. The game lasts three rounds, with players scoring at the end of each round, in addition to bonus scoring at the end of the game. At the start of a round, each player receives a hand of ten cards. Each player chooses two cards, then passes the remaining cards to the left. All players reveal their cards at the same time, then decide whether to use 0, 1, or 2 of them in personal rows of cards. When you start a row, you can use any card; to add a card to an existing row, that card must be higher than the row's highest card or lower than the lowest one. A player can have at most three rows of cards. Discard any cards you don't use. Players repeat this drafting, passing, and playing process until they have played ten cards. The first round ends, and players now receive 3 points for each blue card in their rows. Players then receive a new hand of ten cards to start round 2, once again choosing two cards and passing the rest, but now to the right. Players continue building on the rows that they already have, scoring 3 points for each blue card and 4 points for each green card at the end of round two. For round three, players have ten more cards and pass cards to the left once again. At the end of this round, players once again score for their blue and green cards, while also receiving 7 points for each gray card in their rows. Additionally, each player scores for their pink cherry blossom cards, with these cards having a pyramidal scoring structure: one card = 1 point, two cards = 3, three cards = 6, etc. Whoever has the highest total score wins!

How it plays

Mechanics

Closed DraftingOrderingSet Collection

On the shelf

Categories

Card GameNumber

Questions players ask

Questions to bring to BoardGameBrain

  • How do setup and the first turn work in Ohanami?
  • When does scoring happen and what ends the game?
  • How should the table resolve an unusual timing or rules interaction?