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== How to Play Uptown ==
== Objective ==
=== Objective ===
The goal of Uptown is to place your colored tiles in such a way that at the end of the game, they're connected in as few groups of as possible. A group is a collection of tiles of the same color which are all touching at least one other member of the group on at least one side (not just on a corner).  Note: The ''number'' of groups is important, not the ''size'' of the groups.
The goal of Uptown is to place your colored tiles in such a way that at the end of the game, they're connected in as few groups of 2 or more edge-connected tiles as possible. A group is a collection of tiles which are all touching at least one other member of the group on at least one side (not just on a corner).  Note: The NUMBER of groups is important, not the SIZE of the groups.


If two or more players have the same number of groups at the end of the game, the player who has captured the fewest of their opponents' tiles wins. See below for more about capturing.
If two or more players have the same number of groups at the end of the game, the player who has captured the fewest of their opponents' tiles wins. See below for more about capturing.


=== Playing the Game ===
== Playing the Game ==
Below the board you can see the five tiles that are in your rack and available to place. On your turn, click one of these tiles, then click the space on the board where you want to place it. To be a legal move, the tile you're playing must match the board space where you're trying to place it. You can only place tiles with a letter on them (A-I) in the row with a matching label. You can only place tiles with a number (1-9) in the matching column. You can only place tiles with a symbol (man, ring, woman, street sign, skyline, saxophone, automobile, playing cards, champagne) in the area of the board with matching symbols on it. The dollar sign ($) tile is wild and you can place it anywhere.
Below the board you can see the five tiles that are in your rack and available to place. On your turn, click one of these tiles, then click the space on the board where you want to place it. To be a legal move, the tile you're playing must match the board space where you're trying to place it. You can only place tiles with a letter on them (A-I) in the row with a matching label. You can only place tiles with a number (1-9) in the matching column. You can only place tiles with a symbol (man, ring, woman, street sign, skyline, saxophone, automobile, playing cards, champagne) in the area of the board with matching symbols on it. The dollar sign ($) tile is wild and you can place it anywhere.


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You can see any tiles that your opponents have captured displayed below their names. Tiles that you have captured appear below your rack of tiles - a captured tile cannot be played. At the end of the game, if two or more players have the same number of groups, the player with fewest captured tiles wins.
You can see any tiles that your opponents have captured displayed below their names. Tiles that you have captured appear below your rack of tiles - a captured tile cannot be played. At the end of the game, if two or more players have the same number of groups, the player with fewest captured tiles wins.


=== BGA Scoring ===
== Game End ==
BGA counts each distinct set of 1 or more tiles as 1 NEGATIVE point, the closer your score is to 0 (and the fewer captures you've made) the better you are doing!  If 2 or more players have the same score, the player with the fewest captures winsIf 2 or more players have the same score AND the same number of captures, enjoy the win together - or enjoy a playoff game!
After all players draw their final tiles, everyone gets one final turn and then the game endsAt the end of the game, you will have four un-played tiles left.


=== Game End ===
==Two player game==
After all players draw their final tiles, everyone gets one final turn and then the game ends.  At the end of the game, you will have four un-played tiles left.
 
Each player has two colors of tile, which are counted as separate colors for scoring (eg. a red tile next to a brown tile counts as two groups, even if they are owned by the same player). You can't capture your own other color.
 
When you play a tile, draw one of the same color. If there are none left to draw, that color is now finished: set your four tiles of that color aside, and for the rest of the game you can only play the other color.
 
When both players have finished their second color, the game ends.


=== Uptown vs. Blockers! ===
== BGA Scoring ==
Uptown was originally published with a small print run in 2007. In 2011 it was rebranded and re-released as Blockers! In addition to a new abstract theme, Blockers! changed the end of game scoring rules. Instead of the number of captured tiles being a tie breaker, the largest number of captures tiles of a single color gets added to a player's score. So if a player were to end the game with one group and three captured blue tiles, they would lose to a player with two groups and only a single capture in each color.
BGA counts each distinct set of 1 or more tiles as 1 '''negative''' point, the closer your score is to 0 (and the fewer captures you've made) the better you are doing! If 2 or more players have the same score, the player with the fewest captures wins. If 2 or more players have the same score AND the same number of captures, enjoy the win together - or enjoy a playoff game!


Currently the version on BGA implements the original Uptown scoring. It may eventually support the option of using the Blockers! rules instead.
== Variants ==
=== Blockers ===
Blockers! changed the end of game scoring rules. Instead of the number of captured tiles being a tie breaker, the largest number of captures tiles of a single color gets added to a player's score. So if a player were to end the game with one group and three captured blue tiles, they would lose to a player with two groups and only a single capture in each color.

Latest revision as of 16:44, 15 May 2023

Objective

The goal of Uptown is to place your colored tiles in such a way that at the end of the game, they're connected in as few groups of as possible. A group is a collection of tiles of the same color which are all touching at least one other member of the group on at least one side (not just on a corner). Note: The number of groups is important, not the size of the groups.

If two or more players have the same number of groups at the end of the game, the player who has captured the fewest of their opponents' tiles wins. See below for more about capturing.

Playing the Game

Below the board you can see the five tiles that are in your rack and available to place. On your turn, click one of these tiles, then click the space on the board where you want to place it. To be a legal move, the tile you're playing must match the board space where you're trying to place it. You can only place tiles with a letter on them (A-I) in the row with a matching label. You can only place tiles with a number (1-9) in the matching column. You can only place tiles with a symbol (man, ring, woman, street sign, skyline, saxophone, automobile, playing cards, champagne) in the area of the board with matching symbols on it. The dollar sign ($) tile is wild and you can place it anywhere.

Your supply includes one tile of each letter, number, and symbol as well as a single dollar sign ($) tile. The game ends when each player has DRAWN (not played) all of their tiles and each player has taken a final turn (each player will have four un-played tiles). You can see how many tiles are left for you and your opponents to draw by looking at the number in the user information area in the top right corner of the page.

Capturing

If you wish to place a tile on a square where an opponent has already placed one of their tiles, you may do so. However, you may not split an opponent's tiles into more groups than they already had. You may also never capture one of your own tiles.

You can see any tiles that your opponents have captured displayed below their names. Tiles that you have captured appear below your rack of tiles - a captured tile cannot be played. At the end of the game, if two or more players have the same number of groups, the player with fewest captured tiles wins.

Game End

After all players draw their final tiles, everyone gets one final turn and then the game ends. At the end of the game, you will have four un-played tiles left.

Two player game

Each player has two colors of tile, which are counted as separate colors for scoring (eg. a red tile next to a brown tile counts as two groups, even if they are owned by the same player). You can't capture your own other color.

When you play a tile, draw one of the same color. If there are none left to draw, that color is now finished: set your four tiles of that color aside, and for the rest of the game you can only play the other color.

When both players have finished their second color, the game ends.

BGA Scoring

BGA counts each distinct set of 1 or more tiles as 1 negative point, the closer your score is to 0 (and the fewer captures you've made) the better you are doing! If 2 or more players have the same score, the player with the fewest captures wins. If 2 or more players have the same score AND the same number of captures, enjoy the win together - or enjoy a playoff game!

Variants

Blockers

Blockers! changed the end of game scoring rules. Instead of the number of captured tiles being a tie breaker, the largest number of captures tiles of a single color gets added to a player's score. So if a player were to end the game with one group and three captured blue tiles, they would lose to a player with two groups and only a single capture in each color.