Azul Rules

Azul

Introduced by the Moors, azulejos (originally white and blue ceramic tiles) were fully embraced by the Portuguese, when their king Manuel I, on a visit to the Alhambra palace in Southern Spain, was mesmerized by the stunning beauty of the Moorish decorative tiles. The king, awestruck by the interior beauty of the Alhambra, immediately ordered that his own palace in Portugal be decorated with similar wall tiles. Azul brings you,
a tile laying artist, to embellish the walls of the Royal Palace of Evora.

 

GAME SETUP

1. Give each player a player board (A). Flip your board to the side with the colored wall. (See Variant Play to play with the gray side of the player board). Each player must use the same side.

Only the classic board is provided with the accessibility kit. Ignore the colors when playing with the variant.


2. Take 1 scoring marker (B) and place it on space "0" of your score track.
3. Place the Factory displays (C) in a circle around the
center of the table:
• In a 2-player game, place 5 Factory displays.
• In a 3-player game, place 7 Factory displays.
• In a 4-player game, place 9 Factory displays.
4. Fill the bag (D) with the 100 tiles (20 of each color) (E).
5. The player who most recently visited Portugal takes the starting player marker (F) and then fills each Factory
display with exactly 4 tiles randomly drawn from the bag.

Return any unused player boards, scoring markers and Factory displays to the box. 

Object of the Game

To be the player with the most points at the end of the game. The game ends after the round in which at least one player has completed a horizontal line of 5 consecutive tiles on her wall. 

Gameplay

The game is played over multiple rounds, each of which is composed of three phases: 

A. Factory offer
B. Wall-tiling
C. Preparing the next round

A. Factory offer


The starting player places the starting player marker in the center of the table and then takes the first turn. Play then continues clockwise.
On your turn, you must pick tiles in one of the following ways:


EITHER

a) Pick all tiles of the same color from any one Factory display and then move the remaining tiles from this Factory display to the center of the table.

OR

b) Pick all tiles of the same color from the center of the table. If you are the first player in this round to pick tiles from the center of the table, also take the starting player marker and place it onto the leftmost free space of your floor line.

Then, add the tiles you picked to one of the 5 pattern lines on your player board (the first line has 1 space to hold 1 tile, the fifth line has 5). 

Place the tiles, one by one, from right to left in your chosen pattern line.

If the pattern line already holds tiles, you may only add tiles of the same color to it. 

Once all spaces of a pattern line are filled, that line is considered complete. If you have picked up more tiles than you can place in your chosen pattern line, you must place the excess tiles in the floor line (see Floor line). 

Your goal in this phase is to complete as many of your pattern lines as you can, because during the following Wall-tiling phase, you will only be able to move tiles from complete pattern lines to their corresponding lines on your wall to score points. 

In all later rounds, you must also comply with the following rule: You are not allowed to place tiles of a certain color in a pattern line whose corresponding line of your wall already holds a tile of that color.

FIRST TURNS EXAMPLE

 1. On his turn, Peter picks the 2 black tiles from a Factory display and places the remaining tiles in the center of the table.

2 . Martin picks the yellow tile from a Factory display and places the remaining 3 red tiles in the center of the table.

3. Then, Andrea picks these 3 red tiles from the center of the table. As she is the first one to pick from the center; she also takes the starting player marker and places it on the leftmost space of her floor line.

 

Floor line


Any tiles you have picked that you cannot or do not want to place according to the rules, you must place in your floor line, filling its spaces from left to right These tiles are considered as having fallen on the floor and give minus points in the Wall-tiling phase. If all spaces of your floor line are occupied, return any further fallen tiles to the lid of the game box to store them for now.
This phase ends when the center of the table AND all Factory displays contain no more tiles.
Then, continue with the Wall-tiling phase. 

EXAMPLE 2:

Andrea picks 2 yellow tiles from a Factory display.
She is not allowed to place them in her second or third pattern line, as their corresponding wall lines each have a yellow tile.

She may not place them in the fourth pattern line either, as there is already 1 blue tile and she may not add tiles of a different color to it.

She may, however, place 1 of them in the first pattern line and the excess tile in the floor line.

Or she may place both tiles in the fifth pattern line.

She may even choose to place both tiles in the floor line.

B. Wall-tiling


This phase can be carried out by all players simultaneously, as they move tiles from their complete pattern lines over to their walls.

A) Go through your pattern lines from top to bottom. Move the rightmost tile of
each complete line to the space of the same color in the corresponding line of
your wall. Each time you move a tile, score points immediately (see Scoring).


B) Then, remove all tiles from any pattern lines that now have no tile in the right most space. Place them into the lid of the game box to store them for now.

 

Once that is done, any remaining tiles on the pattern lines stay on your player board for the next round. 

EXAMPLE 3:

A) Peter's second pattern line is complete with 2 red tiles. So he moves the rightmost tile of this pattern line over to the red space on the wall ( and immediately scores 1 point, see Scoring).

As the third pattern line is not complete, he ignores it. From his complete fourth pattern line, he moves the rightmost blue tile over to the blue space on the wall ( and scores 1 point immediately).

He ignores the fifth pattern line, as it is not complete.

B) Afterwards, he removes the remaining tiles from the second and fourth pattern lines and places them in the lid of the game box. The tiles in his third and fifth pattern lines stay on his board.

Scoring

Each tile you move over to your wall is always placed on the space matching its color and immediately scores as follows: 

If there are no tiles directly adjacent (vertically or horizontally) to the newly placed tile, gain 1 point on the score track

If there are any tiles adjacent, however, do the following: First check if there are 1 or more tiles horizontally linked to the newly placed tile. If so, count all these linked tiles (including the newly placed one) and gain that many points.

Then check if there are 1 or more tiles vertically linked to the newly placed tile. If so, count all these linked tiles (including the newly placed tile) and gain that many points. 

Finally; at the end of the Wall-tiling phase, check if you have any tiles in your floor line. For each tile in your floor line, you lose the number of points indicated directly above it. Adjust your scoring marker on your score track accordingly (however, you can never drop below O points). 

Afterwards, remove all tiles in your floor line and place them into the lid of the game box. Note: If you have the starting player marker in your floor line, it counts as a normal tile there. But instead of placing it in the lid, place it in front of you. 

C. Preparing the next round


If nobody has completed a horizontal line of 5 consecutive tiles on her wall yet ( see End of the game), prepare the next round. The player with the starting player marker refills each of the Factory displays with 4 tiles from the bag as in the setup. If the bag is empty, refill it with all the tiles that you have placed in the lid of the game box and then continue filling the remaining Factory displays.

Then, start the new round.


In the rare case that you run out of tiles again while there are none left in the lid, start the new round as usual even though not all Factory displays are properly filled.

 

END OF THE GAME


The game ends right after the Wall-tiling phase in which at least one player has completed at least one horizontal line of 5 consecutive tiles on her wall.
Once the game has ended, score additional points if you have achieved the following goals:

• Gain 2 points for each complete horizontal line of 5 consecutive tiles on
your wall.


• Gain 7 points for each complete vertical line of 5 consecutive tiles on your wall.


• Gain 10 points for each color of which you have placed all 5 tiles on your wall.

The player with the most points on her score track wins the game. In the case of a tie, the tied player with more complete horizontal lines wins the game. If that does not break the tie, the victory is shared.

Variant play


For a slightly different game, the sighted players should use the gray side of the player boards and the blind players should just ignore the colors printed on the board. 

Rules are exactly the same as in the normal game, except that when you move a tile from a pattern line to the wall, you may place it on any space of its corresponding wall line. However, as the game progresses, in each of the 5 vertical lines of your wall, no color may appear more than once.

CREDITS

Game Design: Michael Kiesling

Producer: Sophie Gravel

Development: Viktor Kobilke & Philippe Schmit

Art Direction: Philippe Guerin

lllustrations: Chris Quilliams 

Graphic Design: Philippe Guerin, Karla Ron & Marie-Eve Joly

Coordination: Genevieve Blouin

Foreign Affairs: Andrea Ahlers & Katja Wienicke

Editing: Sophie Gravel, Viktor Kobilke

Marketing: Martin Bouchard

Development by:

© 2017 Plan B Games Inc.

19 rue de la Cooperative, Rigaud, QC. J0P lP0, Canada. www.planbgames.com

Made in China.