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City Party is an 8-player turn-based party game where everyone acts at the same time. Released in 2026 by Current Games, it blends RPG elements with card mechanics in urban settings like New York, Tokyo, and Rio. Players roll dice, use character skills, control city tiles, and play combo cards to sabotage or aid others. The goal is to collect treasures and outmaneuver opponents through luck and strategy. It’s a fast-paced, social game designed for co-op or competitive play, with no waiting between turns. Ideal for groups seeking chaotic fun with a mix of randomness and planning.
Each round, players simultaneously roll dice to move, then perform actions like placing cards or triggering abilities. Skills let you steal resources, lock tiles, or boost your roll. Combo cards require coordination or clever disruption, like combining a "Black Market" tile with a "Smuggling" skill for bonus points. Treasure collection varies per playthrough, with randomized maps and event cards altering objectives. Matches last 45, 75 minutes, balancing luck and strategy. The simultaneous turn system keeps energy high, while character-specific powers add replayability. Managing resources and predicting opponents’ moves is key to winning.
PlayPile users rate City Party 4.5/5, with 88% critic score. 65% of players complete all 12 achievements, averaging 7 hours played. Community moods lean "chaotic fun" (72%) and "strategic depth" (58%). Reviews highlight the "no downtime" mechanic as a standout, though 23% find early-game randomness frustrating. 85% of sessions are multiplayer, with 60% played in parties of 5, 8. The game’s $29.99 price tag sees 45% discount during sales. Playtime spikes at 2, 3 sessions per player, suggesting high replay value despite a 17% drop-off after first play.
City Party thrives as a social experiment in chaos and cleverness. Best for groups who enjoy hybrid mechanics and don’t mind a bit of luck. The $29.99 price is fair for 35 achievements and 3, 5 hours of peak engagement. While not deep enough for hardcore strategy fans, it excels as a party starter. If your crew likes mixing card slapping with dice rolling, this is your jam. Avoid if you prefer solo RPGs or zero-randomness systems. Worth a try for its brisk, laugh-out-loud moments.
Game Modes
Multiplayer
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