The Bottom Line
Pros
- Designed by master game designer Reiner Knizia.
- Easy-to-learn rules, challenging strategy.
- Attractive game pieces.
Cons
- Too abstract for some players.
Description
- For 2 to 5 players, ages 8 and up.
- 20 to 30 minutes per game.
- Designed by Reiner Knizia.
- Published by Out of the Box Publishing.
- Includes 35 stackable, colorful fish.
- Each player has five fish and 11 challenge cards.
Guide Review - Fish Eat Fish
Attacks are resolved by combining the size of the fish (a stack is one to five fish tall) with the number on a challenge card. The winner is the player with the larger total. Players choose their challenge cards simultaneously, providing plenty of bluffing opportunity. Most challenge cards show a fish and a number, but two special challenge cards are available: the shark, which wins over any fish card, and the octopus, which nullifies the attack. Once used, challenge cards are discarded.
The winner of an attack places his fish on top of the defeated fish. If this makes the stack more than five fish high, fish are removed from the bottom of the stack; they are then put into the winning player's "catch." When only one player has fish remaining on the board, the game ends. The player with the most fish in his catch is the winner.
Fish Eat Fish is a clever abstract game with an appealing them added. It lies somewhere between Checkers and Chess on the strategy continuum, with a nice element of bluffing adding to its flavor.



