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Encyclopedia > Fireball Island

Fireball Island (in French, L'Île Infernale) is a board game first published by Milton Bradley in 1986. The tagline is "The dimensional adventure game of pitfalls and perils!" It is set on an unexplored tropical island, the home of the primitive idol Vul-Kar. Players progress along winding paths around the island, avoiding fireballs and trying to capture Vul-Kar's jewel and carry it to the escape boat. Image File history File links Emblem-important. ... Image File history File links Broom_icon. ... A board game is a game played with counters or pieces that are placed on, removed from, or moved across a board (a premarked surface, usually specific to that game). ... For the Oakland Athletics outfielder, see Milton Bradley (baseball player) The Milton Bradley Company is an American game company established by Milton Bradley in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1860. ... Year 1986 (MCMLXXXVI) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link displays 1986 Gregorian calendar). ...

Fireball Island
Players 2-4
Age range 8 and up
Setup time < 5 minutes
Playing time 1 hour
Random chance High
Skills required Dice rolling, hand management

Contents

Two standard six-sided pipped dice with rounded corners. ...

Rules

The game mechanics in Fireball Island are moderately complex, requiring both skill and luck to win. The object of the game is to proceed to the top of the mountain on which Vul-Kar sits, stealing the jewel at the pinnacle. The player who reaches the escape boat with the jewel wins. There is only one jewel, so once a player grabs it he becomes the target of the others. The jewel will change hands many times during the course of a game. A game mechanic is a rule or set of rules intended to produce a set of outcomes in a game. ...


Players roll the die to choose who goes first.


Fireballs

Fireballs are seated at various locations on the 3- D game board. One is inside Vul-Kar's mouth; the entire idol can be rotated to spit the fireball in the desired direction. The player who is rolling a fireball picks one and tips it off its perch. Most paths on the board slope in one direction, so the fireball will roll down the path until it comes to rest. Any player-token that is touched by the fireball, or by another player-token already killed or being pushed along, is 'killed' and moves to the nearest smolder-pit. Being killed by a fireball is not the end of a player's game; it just means that on that player's next turn he must 'stand up' in the smolder pit, effectively losing that turn. 2-dimensional renderings (ie. ...


A player must try to hit someone if he can, even if the only available target is himself. Some spaces are only hit occasionally by a particular fireball; it is a usually a matter of house rules whether aiming for a player on such a space is a legal fireball. Some places, such as the peak between the bridges, or the gully steps up to Cave Five and the first bridge are unreachable by fireballs. If a player rolls a '1' and there are no valid targets, he must proceed 1 space.


Smolder Pits

A player who has been fireballed is immediately placed in a smolder pit. Although for most of the map players simply go to the nearest pit, there are definite rules for which smolder pit a player on a particular space heads to. The divisions between the zones of trail that are covered by each smolder pit are usually divided by ridges or steps in the trail. Note that it is the location a player starts on, not where he ends up, during fireballing that determines where his body goes. Any number of players may occupy a smolder pit.


Cards

Each player is dealt one card at the beginning of the game, face down. Players may look at their own hands but not at opponents'. Throughout the game, whenever a player lands on a dark space, he draws a card. Any card can be played both on the active player's turn or another's (with the exception of the Fake Jewel card, which must be played against someone stealing the gem from you). There is a maximum hand size of four; a player with a full hand may not draw any new cards.


The complete list of cards:

  • FIREBALL! Immediately roll a fireball
  • FAKE JEWEL! Play this card when a player attempts to steal the jewel from you. You keep the jewel and the opponent must continue his move past you.
  • CANCEL ANY CARD EXCEPT FIREBALL CARD! Cancels any card, including another CANCEL or a MAGIC TALISMAN.
  • MAGIC TALISMAN STOPS A FIREBALL! Prevents any player from rolling a fireball.
  • REROLL THE DIE! The player that just rolled the die must reroll; the original roll is ignored.
  • TAKE ANOTHER TURN AFTER YOUR TURN! You take an extra turn after your turn. The rulebook is ambiguous about whether you can play this card to force an opponent to take another turn, or if you can take a turn between two opponents' turns.
  • TAKE 1 CARD FROM ANY OPPONENT! Take one card at random from any opponent's hand.
  • MOVE AHEAD X SPACES INSTEAD OF ROLLING DIE! (X is 4, 5, or 6). May only be played before the active player moves; the active player moves the appropriate number of spaces instead of rolling the die. The rules are ambiguous about what happens if you use this card on a player who is in a cave, though since the rulebook suggests playing it on opponents to force the number, that it would be legal in caves.
  • MOVE ANY OPPONENT BACK X SPACES! (X is 1, 2, or 3). From the rulebook:

    Play one of these cards on any opponent's turn, to move the opponent back on the trail the number of spaces indicated on the card. If you play the card before the opponent rolls the die, the opponent must move back before rolling. If you play the card after the opponent has rolled the die, the opponent must finish the move, then move back.
    NOTE: These cards do not move players out of caves, smolder pits, or the water penalty area at the bottom of Great Sway Bluff. If one of these cards moves an opponent back onto an unoccupied bridge, the opponent must end his or her move on the bridge.

    This card is a prime candidate for house rules, since it is sometimes unclear which direction is 'back' and it often would make more sense to move a player during your own turn rather than on their turn. "Back" after moving would imply the directon opposite that moved, while "back" prior to rolling would be subject to the whim of the one who played the card.
  • DOUBLE THE NEXT DIE ROLL! The next die roll is doubled. Importantly, a '1' becomes a '2' so no fireball is rolled. It is unclear what happens if a player in the caves must double his die roll and rolls above 3.

House rules is a phrase referring to a unique set of rules applying only in a certain location or organization; may also be called rules of the house. ...

Caves

There are six caves placed at various locations around the island. A player may opt to step into a cave that is adjacent to the space he is on instead of continuing with his move (assuming he has at least one move left). The player then rolls the die and moves to the cave with that number (if it is empty). If that cave is occupied, then the active player stays where he is and does not reroll. If a player moving in the caves rolls a one, he rolls a fireball and goes to cave one if possible.


A player who starts his turn in a cave must choose, before rolling the die, whether to stay in the caves or come out. If he chooses to stay in the caves, he proceeds as if he had just stepped into the cave, rolling and going to the appropriate cave if it is empty.


Cave number four is special in that it has no adjacent path, and so there is nowhere to step out to. The only choice is to stay in the caves.


Bridges

On the route to the escape boat, there are two bridges over rushing gorges. A player who steps onto an unoccupied bridge must end his turn there. An occupied bridge can be stepped over like any other space.


A bridge is a perilous perch, since there are fireballs which can roll down the gorges and knock players into the river, leaving them stranded on a beach back along the path. This special smolder pit does not require a fireballed player to stand up, although the steps up from the water take a few turns.


Tokens

There is an altar near the start of the map where each player can pick up a token. Tokens may be traded in at the Ruin for a full hand of cards, but if you have a token and the jewel, then other players cannot play 'take one card from any opponent' on you.


The Jewel

The jewel is the most important game token, since it is required to win. The first player to reach the top of Vul-Kar Point gets the jewel, fills up his hand to four cards, and rolls a free fireball. Then he takes three full turns. Token can mean one of several things: In computer science, specifically lexical analysis, a token is usually a word or an atomic element within a string. ...


If another player passes the jewel carrier, the passing player steals the jewel. If the jewel carrier is fireballed, the jewel is placed on the trail outside the smolder pit, to be picked up by anyone. If the jewel carrier is fireballed on a bridge, the jewel stays on the bridge.


A player who lands on the dock (a special space) with the jewel wins. It is not necessary to roll the exact number of moves.


A Timeless Champion

In the late 1980's and early 1990's, worldwide Fireball Island enthusiasts were amazed by the raw talent and unlimited potential of a young player from Canton, OH. Kenny Cooper mesmorized novice and expert players alike with his uncanny ability to repeatedly snag Vulkar's jewel on Dock Run, spoiling his opponents' near victories time and time again. Seven-year-old Cooper took the Fireball Island World Championship crown in 1988, and he still holds the title to this day. When asked if he ever fears the end of his 19 year reign of Fireball terror, Cooper smiles and says, "My brother Eric used to think he could beat me, but I slapped him with a Talisman and threw a Cancel Card on his hope. Now he Re-Rolls the Die all day long while I Double my Next Die Roll." Cooper admits there have been a few losses along the way, but in the eyes of the International Fireball Island Guild (IFIG), there is no doubt: Kenny Cooper is the greatest player ever to tangle with Vulkar.


External links

  • Fireball Island rules on Hasbro's website
  • Fireball Island Fireball Island at BoardGameGeek

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