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Clubhouse Games review (DS)

CNET Editors' Rating

4.0 stars Excellent
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Average User Rating

4.0 stars 2 user reviews

Clubhouse Games serves up 42 different parlor games that practically anyone can pick up and play--and most of them support local and online multiplayer modes.

Board games, card decks, and sets of dice take up a ton of physical space and are a real pain in the behind to drag down out of the closet, but they sure are loads of fun to play when your buddies are over. Drink some beverages, break out the pretzels, and have a grand old time into the wee hours. Clubhouse Games for the Nintendo DS eliminates all of that storage space and prep-work hassle. It packs 42 different parlor games into a single DS cartridge and lets you play them alone or against your friends, whether they're in the same room with you or chilling out in their own homes across town.

The diverse selection of games includes both popular and esoteric standbys. There are 18 different card games, broken down into basic, intermediate, and advanced categories. Basic card games include Old Maid, Spit, I Doubt It, Sevens, Memory, and Pig. Intermediate card games include Blackjack, Hearts, President, Rummy, Seven Bridge, Last Card, and Last Card Plus. Advanced card games include Five Card Draw Poker, Texas Hold 'Em, Nap, Spades, and Contract Bridge. Next up, there are 12 different board games, which are split into basic and advanced categories. Basic board games include Checkers, Chinese Checkers, Dots and Boxes, Hasami Shogi, Reversi, Connect Five, and Grid Attack. The advanced lineup includes Backgammon, Chess, Shogi, Field Tactics, and Ludo. Also included are nine different variety and action games, including Soda Shake, Dominoes, Koi-Koi, Word Balloon, Balance, Billiards, Bowling, Darts, and Takeover. Rounding out the list are three single-player games: Solitaire, Mahjong, and a slide puzzle game called Escape.

Don't see your favorite game on the list? It could be hiding there under an alias. For instance, the popular schoolyard game "Bulls***" is listed under its politically correct title, I Doubt It. Other examples include Grid Attack, better known as "Battleship"; Word Balloon, which is a nice name for "Hangman"; Last Card Plus, a standard deck version of "Uno"; and President, which many a giggling child first learns as "A-Hole." The lineup is so diverse that everyone is pretty much guaranteed to find a few games to enjoy. The best part is that the majority of games in the collection let multiple players compete, either by linking multiple systems together or by logging into Nintendo's Wi-Fi Connect online service. The only exceptions are the single-player games and a couple of the basic card games.

What's especially great is that the whole product, from top to bottom, is put together in such a way that anyone, regardless of age or amount of video game experience, can just jump in and begin playing. The majority of games follow the same rules as their real-life counterparts, so you probably already know how to play many of them. For the games you are not familiar with, rulebooks are just a single tap away. The graphics and audio are very plain, but the upside to the no-nonsense table depictions and cheesy lounge music is that everything is neatly organized and easy to see. When you're not in a game, instructions are displayed on the upper screen, while interactive menus and buttons are situated on the touch-sensitive bottom screen. When you're playing a game, the upper screen shows the game board or table, while the lower screen shows your cards or pieces and lets you manipulate them by using the stylus. It's all very accessible. Laying down cards and manipulating pieces is always a simple matter of tapping and dragging onscreen objects with the stylus. For action games, such as darts, billiards, and bowling, you grab onto the dart, stick, or ball by touching them with the stylus and let them fly by quickly flicking and lifting the stylus away. Simple animations show the objects sailing across the screen. Obviously, physical games played in this fashion don't pack as many thrills as their real-life counterparts, but the video renditions are still enjoyable.

All of the games are generally as you remember them, although some of the card games have been streamlined in the interest of saving time. You can't split in Blackjack, for example, and betting in Texas Hold 'Em has a fixed limit. If you had dreams of yelling out "All in!" like Johnny Chan, well, you'll have to settle for "Sixty bucks!" The most controversial changes concern the implementation of hand limits and negative bankrolls. To make a long story short, you can continue to play when you're in the negative, and games end after a set number of hands, as opposed to continuing until everyone is eliminated. The games are still fun despite these changes, but there's no denying that some of the tension is lost when people can bet from the red, and chip leaders can fold their way to wins. It's worth repeating, though, that these changes apply only to specific card games. Anyone who is looking for a great Poker game or a great Blackjack game won't find it here, but when you consider that this is a collection of 42 different games, the renditions included in Clubhouse Games are more than enough.

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Quick Specifications

  • Release date05/31/06
  • ESRB Everyone
  • Developer Agenda
  • Genre Board Games
  • Number of players 1-8 Players
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