Yahtzee
- Yahtzee (1973 on Mainframe)
- Yahtzee (1974 on Terminal)
- Yahtzee (1975 on Wang 2200)
- Yahtzee (1977 on TI Programmable Calculator)
- Yahtzee (1978 on Mainframe)
- Yahtzee (1978 on Apple II)
- Yahtzee (1978 on Commodore PET/CBM)
- Yahtzee (1979 on Exidy Sorcerer)
- Yahtzee (1979 on TI-99/4A)
- Yahtzee (1979 on Commodore PET/CBM)
- Yahtzee (1979 on TRS-80)
- Yahtzee (1980 on TRS-80)
- Yahtzee (1982 on Philips P2000)
- Yahtzee (1983 on BBC Micro)
- Yahtzee (1983 on DOS)
- Yahtzee (1987 on TRS-80 CoCo)
- Yahtzee (2002 on BREW, J2ME)
- Yahtzee (2009 on Xbox 360)
Description
Hasbro's Yahtzee gives players a set of five dice, with the aim of obtaining a scoring combination from three rolls (keeping any dice they like after each of the first two). There are 13 of these scoring combinations - The Upper Section allows you to only count dice of a particular digit (with a 35-point bonus if you total more than 63 (effectively, three of each)), while the Lower Section rewards specific tricks, such as small and large straights (runs of four and five consecutive numbers respectively) and the Yahtzee - five of a kind. You have 13 turns each, and if you can't score in a box, you must zero one. The strategy is therefore to maximise each box to obtain the best overall score.
You can play the game this way, but two new modes are added to the computerised implementation. Triple Yahtzee maximises this strategic element - you play 39 turns each on a scorecard with 3 columns worth single, double and treble points. Strategy is therefore more advanced - Is a 3-of-a-kind score of 23 worth trebling, or could you get better in a future roll? Should a roll of four sixes go on your triple-score Upper Section, or on the double-score one which is marginal on reaching the bonus? Should you give up on the single-score Upper Section, and use it as a 'dump' for bad combinations?
The Power Yahtzee mode is the meat of the game. On a standard gamesheet, you play as standard, but using advanced power-ups. These can guide you to favourable moves, inflict bad luck on opponents, block out certain squares on your opponent's board, and so on. Winning games of this unlocks further powerups.
Groups +
Screenshots
Credits (Windows version)
15 People (11 developers, 4 thanks)
Game Design | |
Game Development | |
Design | |
Producer | |
Art Director | |
Music |
|
SFX |
|
QA | |
Localization | |
Technical Support | |
Thanks to |
|
Analytics
Upgrade to MobyPro to view research rankings!
Identifiers +
Contribute
Are you familiar with this game? Help document and preserve this entry in video game history! If your contribution is approved, you will earn points and be credited as a contributor.
Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Martin Smith.
Game added June 2, 2007. Last modified February 22, 2023.