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Bang! (card game)

Bang! is a Spaghetti Western-themed social deduction card game designed by Emiliano Sciarra and released by Italian publisher DV Giochi in 2002. In 2004, Bang! won the Origins Award for Best Traditional Card Game of 2003 and Best Graphic Design of a Card Game or Expansion.[1]

The game is known worldwide as Bang!, except in France, where it was known as Wanted! until September 2009.[citation needed]

Overview

The game is played by four to seven players (up to eight players with variants and expansions). Each player receives a unique character card with special abilities and a number of 'bullets' (representing their lives), and takes one of four face-down roles:

The game is played in turns, in clockwise order, starting with the Sheriff. Each player's turn has three phases:

Draw: Draw cards (default two) from the draw pile.
Play: Play cards to heal or buff their character (any number can be played, although some have timing limitations), or attack other players in an attempt to eliminate them.
Discard: Discard cards down to the hand size limit (equal to the number of bullets shown on the player's character card)

Each character has a different ability . For instance in the base set, which has 16 character cards, "Bart Cassidy" (parodying Butch Cassidy) starts with 4 bullets and draws a card every time he loses a life point, while "Willy the Kid" (parodying Billy the Kid) can play any number of "Bang!" cards during his turn.

A player who loses their last bullet is considered dead, and reveals their role card. Penalties and rewards exist to encourage the social deduction aspects of the game. For example, if the Sheriff eliminates a Deputy, the Sheriff must discard all the cards in hand and in play.

The game ends as soon as the Sheriff dies, after which the winner(s) are determined. Players who are already dead when the game ends are still considered to have won if their team's win condition is met.

Strategy

In 2002, designer Emiliano Sciarra posted strategy tips on BoardGameGeek.

As only the Sheriff is known, it is hard to know who has what role. Generally, a player's role is implied if they try to shoot, or otherwise harm, the Sheriff. Others' roles can be implied if they try to harm those who harmed the Sheriff. The advantage of keeping one's role hidden from enemies must be weighed against the need to accomplish one's goal.

Since the Renegade loses if the Sheriff dies when there are still others in the game, that player must defend the Sheriff to some extent. On the other hand, their ultimate goal is killing the Sheriff. This leads to a "two faced" nature of the Renegade, trying to weaken each side (Outlaws and Deputies) while keeping the Sheriff alive until the end. This also makes it harder to ascertain who is an Outlaw, who is a Deputy, and who is a Renegade, as their actions may be similar.[2]

Expansions

Special Releases

BANG! The Duel

This is a 2 players standalone game. One player controls a team of law enforcers, while another player controls a team of bandits. It contains 12 enforcer and 12 bandit characters.

Computer versions

Official

On October 29, 2009, Palzoun Entertainment (which acquired the official license from DaVinci Games) announced the development of a Bang! video game. The game was developed in partnership with SpinVector.[7] It was published on the iTunes App Store on December 18, 2010. A console version was also expected to arrive in March 2011 but has been delayed.[needs update]

A live action trailer of the game was released on November 2, 2010.

Unofficial

On May 14, 2012, Christopher Gordon Carr's Software Developer Portfolio[8] released Kraplow!, an open source online Bang! clone, which can be played in-browser with chatbot or with other players. Kraplow! features all the rules from version 4.0 of Bang! and is open source.

The Starcraft II mod Barcraft[9] is a copy of Bang! which replaces the wild west theme with themes and characters from the Warcraft, Starcraft and Diablo franchises.

Some other online versions of Bang! have been released during the years, however they have received DMCA takedown notices as they were using copyrighted assets. Some online versions have managed to provide a playable experience by replacing the images such as PewPew![10] which has been available online since Q1 2021.

BoardGameArena (BGA) is a real time board game online game system that allows to play Bang! along with some of its expansions. It was published on the 23 February 2022.[11]

Lawsuit

In 2014, DaVinci Editrice initiated a lawsuit against Ziko Games, the Chinese manufacturer that had published Legends of the Three Kingdoms, a game that DaVinci claimed was a clone of Bang!, simply changing the Wild West theme and art to that of ancient China. While the court found there was potential for copyright infringement on its initial hearing,[12][13]it ultimately ruled in favor of Ziko Games and dismissed the case in 2016.[14][15]

Reviews

See also

References

  1. ^ "Origins Award Winners (2003)". Academy of Adventure Gaming Arts & Design. Archived from the original on 2008-01-06. Retrieved 2007-12-06.
  2. ^ Sciarra, Emiliano (Nov 21, 2002). "Strategy tips". boardgamegeek.com.
  3. ^ "Bang! The Valley of Shadows – Board Game – BoardGameGeek".
  4. ^ "Fórum – bang.cz".
  5. ^ "Bang! The Bullet! – Board Game – BoardGameGeek".
  6. ^ "Fórum – bang.cz".
  7. ^ "Palzoun & daVinci present Bang! The videogame" (PDF). daVinci Games. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  8. ^ Carr, Christopher. "Software Developer". tulip.io. Christopher Gordon Carr. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  9. ^ "Arcade Highlight: BarCraft".
  10. ^ "PewPew!".
  11. ^ "Play board games online from your browser". Board Game Arena. Retrieved 2022-09-13.
  12. ^ Dean, Drew S. (2015). "Hitting reset: devising a new video game copyright regime". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 164: 1239.
  13. ^ "DaVinci Editrice S.r.l. V. Ziko Games, LLC et al, No. 4:2013cv03415 - Document 44 (S.D. Tex. 2014)".
  14. ^ "DaVinci Editrice S.r.l. V. Ziko Games, LLC et al, No. 4:2013cv03415 - Document 73 (S.D. Tex. 2016)".
  15. ^ "DaVinci Editrice S.r.l. V. Ziko Games, LLC et al, No. 4:2013cv03415 - Document 74 (S.D. Tex. 2016)".
  16. ^ "Pyramid: Pyramid Pick: BANG!".
  17. ^ Lowder, James (2010). Family games : The 100 best. Green Ronin. ISBN 978-1-934547-21-2.

External links