Kremlin (board game)

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The box cover to the boardgame.
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The box cover to the boardgame.
A score sheet to Kremlin that shows its parodic nature (Note the names of the Politburo members.
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A score sheet to Kremlin that shows its parodic nature (Note the names of the Politburo members.

Kremlin is a board game parody of soviet government. It was designed by Urs Hostettler and released in 1988 by Avalon Hill. In 1989, Kremlin won the Origins Award for Best Boardgame Covering the Period 1900-1946.

[edit] Gameplay

Each player controls a number of "politician cards" depicting caricatures of Soviet politicians. These are arranged in a pyramid on the game board, representing a hierarchy of power. Players promote, demote and exile these politicians in order to maneuver their own politicians to the top of the pyramid. Each turn, the topmost politician "waves". If a player's politician waves three years (game turns) in a row, the player wins. Additionally, politicians age and each year there is a chance they will die. There is a significant chance that no player's politician will wave three years in a row, and in effect the game itself will win.

[edit] Expansions

In 1989, Avalon Hill released Kremlin: Revolution!, which added cards depicting the real people and events at the birth of the Soviet Union.

[edit] External links

In other languages