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Those that know the game of Uckers need read no further, this is what you've been looking for

Uckers

by Timothy Wills

What is it about?

Those that know the game of Uckers need read no further, this is what you've been looking for. Six offs, mixiblobs and all bits in 8 piece-ings are here!

App Details

Version
2.0.3
Rating
(7)
Size
37Mb
Genre
Puzzle Board
Last updated
July 27, 2021
Release date
January 10, 2019
More info

App Screenshots

App Store Description

Those that know the game of Uckers need read no further, this is what you've been looking for. Six offs, mixiblobs and all bits in 8 piece-ings are here!

Select advanced rules like suck backs and blow backs if you want to play with them. Everyone plays Uckers slightly differently so select your favourite rules!

If you're new to the game then learn in tutorial mode one of the most addictive board games ever made. You play with 2 colours each and aim to block your opponent from moving around the board by 'blobing up' whilst still getting your bits around the board first.

Enjoy the satisfaction of hacking off a maxi-mixi-blob and sending all your opponents bits home while you press on to victory.

Features:
• No in-app purchases and no ads. Pay once for the game and once only.
• Play online with friends or against the computer
• Tutorial mode teaches you how to play.
• Play doubles with 4 players
•. Social features - add recent players as friends and upload your profile photo
•. Get promoted and earn achievements as you play
•. 4 leaderboards to showcase your skills
• Select which rules you prefer to play with, eg. suck-backs.
• Submit feedback at www.playuckers.com for the features that you want added.

Getting Started

Uckers is a 2 or 4-player game played against either a computer or online opponent. Each player plays with tokens or ‘bits’ of either red and yellow or green and blue. The aim is to move your bits clockwise around the board and onto the respective final squares before your opponent does.

You’ll need a 6 to get one of your bits out of the home squares and then you’re free to move them around the board using one or both of the dice you roll. Each time you roll the dice, you must use both dice to move your bits if you can.

Important things to remember

If you roll a 6 then you get another go. Rolling a double also gets another go if you have that rule turned on in settings. However, rolling a double 6 does not get 2 extra goes.

In the event that progression is not possible with the resultant of both dice, then the value of the highest scoring dice is to be used, unless progression is blocked. If bits cannot be moved with the value of either die, then that's the end of your turn.

Hacking off

If your bit lands on a square with one of your opponent’s bits on then you take (‘hack off’) their bit and send it back home.

Blobbing up

If you get 2 bits of the same colour on one square (a ‘blob’) then your opponent cannot get past or hack off these bits. This is the best way to slow down your opponent and stop them getting round the board. However, if you have 2 or more bits of differing colours on one square then this is known as a mixi-blob. Your opponent can hack off all the bits in a mixi blob if one of their bits lands on that square and your opponent can pass these squares with impunity.

Sixing-Off

You can get your bits past a blob by landing one of your bits on the square immediately behind the blob and rolling a six on the first roll of your turn. You can then elect to ‘six-off’ the blob by tapping the ‘6’ over the square in question. You’ll need to roll a number of sixes in succession greater than the number of bits in the blob (plus one extra six if your bit needs to get out of home as well). This will then allow you to send your opponent’s bits all back home whilst moving one of your bits forward onto the square.

Finishing

Once one of your bits gets towards the end of the board, when it is on those squares of its own colour, it is safe and cannot be hacked-off by your opponent.

The first player to get all their bits onto the final squares with an exact dice roll is the winner. If this is done before their opponent gets any bit round the board, it is known as an eight-piecing. If the winner gets all their bits in before their opponent has got any bits out into play then it is known as an eight piece in the pen.

Additional rules can be selected, happy Uckers playing!

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