Downfall Game
|
| List Price: | £12.99 |
| Price: | £9.21 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
29 new or used available from £2.99
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #221 in Toys & Games
- Brand: Hasbro
- Dimensions: .0" h x .0" w x .0" l, 2.20 pounds
Features
- Item may vary from picture
Editorial Reviews
Manufacturer's Description
Play head to head in Downfall, the classic game of strategic race to the finish fun. Every turn leads to a new twist as you race against your opponent to get all your counters down the cogs but watch out, a wrong turn could lead to your downfall. Use your key to turn the cogs but look out--if a cog already has your opponent's key in, you'll have to wait until they move their key before you can turn that cog. Try playing with an added twist--getting your counters down in colour sequence. For a greater challenge, try to get your counters down in colour and number sequence. Whatever game you play, if one player keeps winning, you can change their cogs to even the odds.
Box Contains
- 1 x Downfall game
- Player counters
- Player keys
Customer Reviews
Classic strategy game fun - in a not-so-good new version
This version is the "new" downfall. I am also reviewing the classic version, which I greatly prefer. If you can get that one, do it!
We first picked this game up - the classic version - in Hamley's in London in 1992 - I love games of all kinds, and it's not sold in Canada. My husband lived in the UK for a few years as a child and had fond memories of this game, so it didn't take much to convince me.
The colour scheme has been updated for this "New" version from the institutional blue and white we bought back then. And it's been given a new, "mechanical" look that seems to go over well with the little-boy demographic in our household!
As I said, I must recommend the classic version, if you can get it, over the NEW Downfall style. I think it's a better game.
This "new" version certainly looks more exciting, but its structure is poorly conceived overall. Setting it up, it's hard to pop the cogs in properly, and heaven help you if you don't. My husband had to break his fingers prying them off (after my attempt) and snapping them back on again. I was afraid they would break at that point, but luckily, they didn't.
But the base of this version is its real "downfall" (so to speak). The upper portion snaps onto the base and snaps off for storage. The base is a narrow pointy shape, MUCH less stable than the old rectangular version - wobbles a lot and has no rubber feet, so it slips and slides across the table as you play. Plus, you need a special "key" to turn the dials, as I'll mention below.
I special-ordered the new version from the UK because we'd lost all the playing pieces. So now we have both versions, and I will be reviewing both, and - as I said - recommending the classic one.
In this version, you turn the dials by sticking in a special "key", not by turning knobs as in the classic version. The keys are a little fiddly to use and don't add much to the gameplay beyond novelty. If one key gets lost, the two players will have to share, which isn't much fun either. In families, one has to think about these eventualities... :-)
The goal is to get all your little pieces down to the bottom - (in order, for more advanced players, because it's wickedly hard to do it that way).
The theory of this version is exactly the same as the classic one - navigate the pieces through the little cogs, but watch out! You can't turn the cog used by the other player on his/her turn, so you need to plan the path your pieces will take carefully in advance and try to "trap" your opponent into turning cogs that will inadvertantly advance your pieces!
I'm giving this game - both versions - a few marks for educational value because this game encourages forward thinking and problem solving - always important skills. After a few games playing at random, you DO start to try to out-think your opponent, and it's great watching kids scheme this way.
The NEW version of the game does come with two substitute cogs that you can use if/when one player gets so good that the regular cogs are too easy for them. The substitute ones have fewer slots for pieces to fit into, so it does make winning more difficult. We have not had to use the extra cogs so far; the regular version is tough enough for us!
I am, frankly, a fan of any "old-fashioned" game that relies on kids' ingenuity rather than on batteries, DVDs, or electronics of any other kind. So happy that this game is still around and going strong!
Really wish this game - either version! - were available here in Canada (can't imagine why not!), but now that we have it - both versions - we'll continue to enjoy it, at least until all the little pieces (or keys) get lost under the sofa... :-)
Playability on Shabbat: YES!!! (no batteries, electronics or writing)
poorly made
this version of downfall is very flimsy, bendy and unstable. i was missing a key when i bought this and i contacted mb games via email, to ask for a replacement. they would not send me one. very bad customer service. i am now left with an incomplete, poorly made game. not happy.
so, i would not recommend buying this version at all. maybe try the older version, as has been suggested below?
Reasonable to play, poor build quality
I enjoyed playing this game as a child and now that I have children of my own have introduced them to it.
The idea of the game is good, very visual and mechanical and encourages the players to think ahead and plan, but the modern implementation is poor:
i) You will have to construct the game yourself from the pieces of plastic provided in the box - each dial comes in two halves that must be pressed together through the main upright unit. In my case the dials had to be pressed together so hard (to avoid them being too loose) that you could hear the plastic splitting.
ii) there is no feel of quality or smoothness when rotating the dials in game play - it looks and feels cheap and fragile.
iii) Counters can too easily get stuck or just fall out (the former I recall was a problem with the "old version" from my youth but if memory serves correct - and it may not - the problem was less frequent).
I will be on the lookout for the older version game in future.
On the upside: an extra twist with the newer version of the game is that a couple of the dials can be replaced with dials with fewer holes on one side thus giving one player a handicap.



