Treasure of the Dragons Review
Briefly

Treasure of the Dragons Review
"The goal in Treasure of the Dragon is to collect as many of the 49 tiles as possible. To start the game, they are shuffled and laid out on a 7×7 grid. On a player's turn, they can reveal as many tiles as they want until they decide to stop or are forced to stop. If they reveal a treasure tile, they can continue flipping tiles until they have revealed enough matching treasure tiles to make a set, then collect them whenever they want to stop."
"Finally, if they reveal a dragon, they also lose all previously revealed tiles and end their turn...UNLESS the dragon was the first tile revealed. In which case, they can go dragon hunting. As long as they continue to turn over dragons, they can keep going until they decide to stop (collecting the dragon tiles) or reveal a treasure/spider, in which case their turn ends and they lose all revealed tiles."
"Once all the tiles have been collected (except the spiders), the game ends. The player with the most dragon collects the spider tiles, and the player with the most tiles wins."
Treasure of the Dragon is a memory-based tile-collection game aimed at young children and families. Forty-nine tiles are shuffled and arranged face-down in a 7×7 grid. Players reveal tiles on their turn and may continue flipping until they stop or reveal a spider or a non-first dragon. Treasure tiles can be collected when enough matching treasure tiles are revealed to form a set. Revealing a spider ends the turn and flips revealed tiles back over. A dragon revealed first enables dragon hunting, allowing continued reveals of dragons until the player stops or reveals a treasure/spider. The game ends when all non-spider tiles are collected; the player with the most tiles wins, and the player with the most dragons collects the spiders.
Read at Board Game Quest
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