Spyfall
Spyfall
Rulebook
“Loose lips sink ships” is a saying that dates back to the days of WWII. It also represents a vital wartime principle. There were lots of things that could give spies away — rust-free staples in their documents, square-headed nails in the soles of their boots, and so on... This game offers everyone an opportunity to walk a mile in the shoes of both a spy who’s close to having their cover blown and the special agent who’s hot on the spy’s heels.
Contents
• 240 cards (30 decks of 8 cards each)
• 30 ziplock bags
• Rulebook
You will also need to keep track of time during the game, so make sure you have a stopwatch handy. One of the players probably has one on their cell phone.
Overview
A game of Spyfall is made up of several short rounds. In each round the players find themselves in a certain location with a specific role assigned to each player. One player is always a spy who doesn’t know where they are. The spy’s mission is to listen carefully, identify the location, and keep from blowing his cover. Each non-spy must give an oblique hint to the other non-spies sugges-ting that he knows the location’s identity, thus proving he’s not the spy. Observation, concentration, nonchalance, and cunning — you’ll need all of them in this game. Stay on your toes!
Objective
The spy’s objective is to avoid exposure until the end of a given round or identify the current location. The non-spies’ objective is to establish consensus on the identity of the spy and expose him or her.
Preparing for Round One
Before the first round begins, sort all the cards into location decks. Each deck should have seven cards with identical illustrations and one spy card. Each deck goes in a separate ziplock bag. All cards should be face down, with the spy card on top. All the locations are shown in the middle spread of the rulebook. The players are advised to study it well before the first round begins. This should give the “potential spies” an idea of the kinds of locations they will have to choose from during the game. We strongly advise the spies not to study the middle spread during the game — that’s a dead giveaway.
Note: If you are not the spy, your card will also specify your role at the given location. Before the beginning of the game, the players should agree on whether they will adhere to the role on their card and play the corresponding role or not. We strongly recommend doing this in order to make the game more interesting, but not for your first few game sessions. For example, if you’re a college professor and somebody asks you why you missed the faculty party, you can complain about your age and arthritis; if you’re a student, you might want to express your outrage at not having been invited by the senior faculty. The name of the role might seem to suggest that you’re playing a male character, but all characters can actually be either male or female. So the flight attendant on the airplane could also be a stewardess, or the actor could also be an actress.
Sample Round
Anne, Juan, Maria, and Isaac find themselves in the crusader army. However, Anne isn’t aware of this because she got the spy card. Juan gets the Knight, Maria the Squire, and Isaac the Archer. They all play their parts and try to identify the spy. Anne’s goal is to identify the location without blowing her cover.
Maria the Squire asks the first question: “Isaac, do you remember which sea we took a dip in yesterday?“ Isaac the Archer naturally names the Mediterranean, and Anne the spy takes notice: the location could be the beach or the pirate ship. Isaac can’t ask Maria, so he asks Juan, “Juan, when do we get paid — is it at the beginning of the month, or the end?“ All the other players are on the alert, since the question might identify Isaac as the spy. However, Isaac is just sounding out his fellow players. Since Juan is a knight and not a spy, he answers the question easily: “Who knows? We’ll get paid whenever the commander feels like paying us.“ Anna the spy is thoroughly confused — now she suspects the location might be the military base or the submarine. Juan asks her next question: “Hey Anne, what did they serve for dinner yesterday? I couldn’t make it.“ Anne is evasive: “Oh, you know, the usual stuff — potatoes, nothing special.“ This is where other players start to suspect her of being the spy — as crusaders, they’re well aware that Columbus won’t be bringing that particular plant back from the New World for another three hundred years or so...
End of Round
Note: The players can agree on a different round length. Make sure you decide how long you want rounds to be before you start the game. First-time players might want to play longer rounds — say, 12-15 minutes.
A round ends when one of the following three things happen:
1. Eight minutes have passed
When time runs out, each player (starting with the dealer) gets to accuse another player of being the spy. Players are now free to discuss their suspicions. If ALL players agree with the dealer’s accusation (the accused doesn’t get to vote), then the accused player’s card is revealed. If a spy card is revealed, each of the non-spy players win. If a non-spy is revealed, the spy wins.
If the dealer’s choice is not unanimously convicted, the accusation phase proceeds to the player on their left. The accusation phase continues until a unanimous vote is achieved. If no one is convicted of being the spy after each player has had a turn as accuser, the spy wins. A player may be accused multiple times during this phase (and never gets to vote on their own behalf).
2. When a Player Gets Suspicious
Each player may stop the clock once per round to declare one of the players a suspect and ask the others to vote. If all players agree (the suspect doesn’t get a vote), the game ends and that player’s card is revealed. If there is not unanimous agreement, restart the clock, and the player who made the accusation cannot use this action again this round, but can still make an accusation after time has run out (see #1). It’s in the players’ best interest to perform this action. It might also benefit the spy to use this action in order to divert suspicion from themselves. The same person may be the target of multiple accusations during a round.
Note: Players should abstain from discussing the spy’s identity during voting. The players’ arguments “for“ and “against“ the spy’s identity could inadvertently reveal the location’s identity to the spy.
3. At the Spy’s Request.
The spy can stop the clock at any time (except when the clock has already been stopped by another player) by revealing their spy card to the other players. The spy is then allowed to consult the location list in the middle spread of the rulebook and identify the current location. The spy wins if they identify the location correctly.
Otherwise the other players win.
Note: The spy may only reveal his card while the game clock is running, and has not run out! Once the round is over, the cards from that round are returned to the dealer and can no longer be played in the current game. The ziplock bag with this deck is returned to the box.
Objectives and Strategies
The objectives of the non-spy players are to identify the spy and avoid revealing their location. Therefore, the non-spies should refrain from being too explicit in their questions: (for example, “How much cash did the robbers steal yesterday?“ The spy will instantly identify the location as the bank). However, when a player’s questions and answers are too vague, other players might start suspecting them of being the spy, enabling the real spy to win.
The spy’s objective is to listen as carefully as possible to what the other players say and do their best to avoid blowing their cover while also trying to identify the location before eight minutes have passed. A spy who doesn’t attempt to guess the location is taking a risk — it is entirely possible that the other players will identify them after discussion and voting.
Scoring
Tally up the points earned by the players at the end of the round based on the results.
Spy Victory
• Victory: The spy earns 2 points if no one is successfully accused of being the spy
• The spy earns 4 points if a non-spy player is successfully accused of being a spy
• The spy earns 4 points if the spy stops the game and successfully guesses the location
Non-Spy Victory
• Victory: Each non-spy player earns 1 point
• The player who initiated the successful accusation of the spy earns 2 points instead
End of the Game
Whoever scores the most points after the agreed-upon number of rounds wins the game.
Credits
Publisher: Hobby World LLC
Created by: Alexander Ushan
Game development: Hobby World • Art: Uildrim and Sergey Dulin
Directors: Mikhail Akulov and Ivan Popov • Editor-in-Chief: Vladimir Sergeyev
Rulebook copy and editing: Alexander Kiselev, Valentin Matyusha, and Matt Hyra • Design and layout: Ivan Sukhovey
Proofreading: Olga Portugalova • Publisher contact: Nikolay Pegasov (nikolay@hobbyworld.ru) Special thanks to Ilya Karpinsky.
Hobby World
Cryptozoiac Entertainment
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©2015 Cryptozoic Entertainment. www.cryptozoic.com.