Betrayal at House on the Hill

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Betrayal at House on the Hill box

Betrayal at House on the Hill quickly builds suspense and excitement as players explore a haunted mansion of their own design, encountering spirits and frightening omens that foretell their fate. With an estimated one hour playing time, Betrayal at House on the Hill is ideal for parties, family gatherings, or casual fun with friends.

Betrayal at House on the Hill is a tile game that allows players to build their own haunted house room by room, tile by tile, creating a new thrilling game board every time. The game is designed for three to six people, each of whom plays one of six possible characters.

Creating the Mansion

Betrayal is a game where you wander around exploring a horror house, room by room. Basically, each character can move a number of rooms based on their speed trait value and if they wander into an unexplored space they draw a room tile and place it there. They then draw a card as stated by the room – either an event card (most common) or an omen or maybe an item card. Then it's the next player's turn. So yes, it plays pretty much like Dungeonquest.

The events that can happen are usually something bad - like you hear a scream or horrifying ghosts appear before you or whatever… and you have to make some sort of trait roll to see if you endure (and improve your character by moving one stat up) or not (usually some sort of penalty to a stat).

Trait Rolls

For the trait rolls, the game is equipped with funny dice - strictly spoken they're d3s minus 1, meaning they can show 0 or 1 or 2 on any given roll. Each character has a number in each of the four traits - speed, strength, sanity and intellect. On a trait roll you roll as many dice as your trait value and see if you reach the target number for that particular roll.

So the players walk around in the house with hideous stuff happening to each and everyone as they stumble upon more stuff. If they're lucky, their trait values go up, and if they're unlucky, they go down. The characters have all different "configurations" for the traits shown on their character boards. The card message "Gain 1 sanity" means "move the sanity marker on your board up one step" which doesn't necessarily mean that the sanity value goes up - the configuration might be 1-2-3-3-4-4-5 or something similiar.

If any trait goes down below the lowest value, the character dies. Although, they can't die before the Haunt starts, which means, before one of the players has turned into the traitor. And it's these Haunts that make the game worthwhile.

Omens and the Haunt

Each time a so called "Omen" card is drawn, the player who drew it must roll six dice to see if the Haunt starts. If they roll equal to or less then the number of "Omen" cards in play, then it starts. If they don't then they keep bumbling around the house until it does eventually start. At this point, the game turns into an "all against one", where the traitor and the heroes have different goals to pursue and it's a battle for the crown of victory.

Exactly what the Haunt is, and who is the traitor, depends on what Omen triggered the Haunt and in what room it was found. The players refer to the scenario book to see what Haunt they'll be playing and who is the traitorous fiend.

The player who was the traitor takes the Traitor's Tome (the traitor's version of the scenario book) and preferably leaves the room to read his version of the scenario and plot his fellow player's demise. The remaining players pick up the Survivor's Manual (the hero version of the scenario book), read up on the current Haunt, and start to plan on how to survive.

This can be anything from the Traitor actually being a Vampire lord trying to ensnare the other players to that the house in question is a living organism trying to eat them… or that the house is sinking, trapping everyone in it. After the Haunt has started, the heroes are now mortal and can be killed. The conditions for victory are specified in the respective scenario books, but naturally one team doesn't know exactly what it is the other team (?) is trying to achieve, although they can have some sort of clue. Usually the traitor's goal is to kill off the players, but the means by which he does this varies quite a bit. The heroes typically have to perform some trait rolls in some specified rooms in order to achieve something, such as escape on a toy airplane after being shrunk, or they have to find a specific object and use in a special way. There are 50 Haunts in the game and you can find more online, so it lasts quite awhile. My particular group of friends has played fifteen games and only replayed one Haunt.

And so the game goes on, with the heroes against the traitor until either team can declare themselves the victor at which time a new game usually starts.

Issues

The only real problem with the game is that the very nature of it's randomness makes some Haunts completely unfair for one team some games and the exact opposite the next time you play it. So in one Haunt the traitor could win on turn one and then everyone feels let down. This usually results in a new game being started, which ends up being far more entertaining.

Also, there are too many damn tokens. It's easy to lose them and hard to find the ones you want sometimes.

Also, also, the game is out of print. Due to this factor, this $40 game has skyrocketed up to an $80-$100 game.

Errata

Tome Errata Tome Errata

Links

Haunts (Survivor's Tome) Haunts (Traitor's Tome) Website