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Race to the White House

By: Bipartisan Games

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: Race to the White House

Last Stocked on 3/1/2023

Product Info

Title
Race to the White House
Publisher
Category
Author
Samantha Paul, Jamie Twiss
Publish Year
2016
Dimensions
12.25x9.25x3"
NKG Part #
2147790317
Type
Boxed Game
Age Range
12 Years and Up
# Players
2 Players
Game Length
30 - 90 Minutes

Description

Race to the White House is a sophisticated two-player simulation of the upcoming presidential election. Its mechanics are board-and-card driven with some dice-influenced results; the game flow is controlled by action and reaction cards, dice rolling, hand management, and area influence. A quirky, humorous tone keeps the mood light, despite the deep gameplay.

The game takes place over the final eight weeks of the campaign and concludes with the assignment of electoral votes on Election Night. Each player chooses a candidate they are trying to propel to victory. Play as one of the leading lights of the 2016 campaign, or bring back a proven winner! Some candidates are better at speaking, some bring more skill at fundraising, some are from swing states, and others are simply rich.

Each week is divided into two turns, one for each player, and is affected by an environment card that may temporarily alter the cost or effect of your actions. You’ll begin with five action cards, representing various things you can do during that week’s campaign, such as uncover a scandal, criticize Cuba, collect an endorsement, or even start a war. You’ll also start with five state cards, which determine where you can play your action cards. Each turn gives you the opportunity to draw or purchase new and more powerful action cards, some of which can be combined to extraordinary effect.

Each week you’ll spend time and energy visiting swing states, building up influence points that hopefully will lead to winning that state on election night. If you build up enough influence, you’ll get momentum in that state, which will make it harder for your opponent to come back—but be careful; spend too much time in any one place and they’ll start to get sick of you.

Have you sold out to major donors to finance your campaign? Of course you have! This gives you money, which you can spend on state or national advertising. Again, this can give you momentum, but you risk overexposure.

You can do all sorts of things in Race to the White House by playing Action Cards. You can come out against the Keystone XL pipeline (if you’re a Democrat) or promise more mining permits (if you’re a Republican). If your party is in office, you can start a war, or respond to a major natural disaster—but be careful; either one can backfire badly, and your opponent might have an October Surprise ready. You can cheer for a swing state’s baseball team in the World Series, or you can stick your opponent with bad weather. You can uncover a scandal in state government that puts a safe state in play, or you can send hecklers into your opponent’s rallies that neutralizes their effects. It feels just as crazy, exciting, and dirty as an actual campaign!

Over the course of eight weeks, you’ll build up a strong position in some swing states, and if you’ve been smart about it, you’ll have managed to play defense and prevent your opponent from doing the same. But you never really know, do you? When election night rolls around, you’ll be on the edge of your seat waiting for the networks to call the states in the order that their polls close. Some states will be easy, but others will be too close to call, potentially until early in the morning. If you’re behind, do you concede and save some victory points? Or do you hang on until the bitter end? It’s all up to you… in Race to the White House!

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