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Home / News / 'Sea Salt & Paper' Is Relaxing Mixed With Times Of Making Key Decisions
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'Sea Salt & Paper' Is Relaxing Mixed With Times Of Making Key Decisions

Jul 25, 2023Jul 25, 2023

Sea Salt & Paper is an origami marine life themed set collection game with some push your luck aspects combined to make a 30 minute game for 2-4 players. The game is designed by Bruno Cathala and Théo Rivière, and it’s published by Pandasaurus Games. The game is about collecting certain cards that match well together and then trying to choose when to end the game that will also score you possibly additional points, or maybe just the ones you’ve collected so far. Pandasaurus Games has published many small box card games like this, and they are very popular and easy to get to the table and play. We also recently reviewed The Wolves and Orichalcum from Pandasaurus Games, which we invite you to check out as well.

The cards are shuffled and form a deck with 2 cards placed face up to form two different discard piles. Players are trying to score points by collecting a combinations of different cards and using the card’s effects. The game ends when a player has at least 7 points and chooses to end the game or can give all other players one more round, betting they will still win.

Players take turns in a clockwise direction and begin by adding a card to their hand. They can do this by either taking the top 2 cards off the top of the deck, choosing one to keep, and discarding the other. Or, they can take one of the cards on top of one of the two discard piles. Either way, players gain one card each turn.

After adding a card to their hand, any duo cards can be played out in front of the player. These duo cards are cards that show a type of card in solid white and then another of the same type in dotted lines on the top left of the card. Each pair of duo cards gives you 1 point, but also, each gives you an effect that might add an additional card to your hand somehow. This can happen by taking a card from the top of the pile, searching through the discard pile and taking one, or taking one from another player, depending on the type of duo card you play.

Players collect other types of cards during the game that score points. Collector cards give you more points for having more of the same type of card. Point multiplier cards give you points for each type of card listed on that card that you have in your hand. Lastly, mermaid cards give you points for the biggest group of color cards you have in your hand. And if you ever get all 4 mermaid cards, you automatically win the game.

If a player reaches 7 points, they can decide to end of the game saying “stop”, or they can take a bet of having the most points at the end of the round by saying “last chance”, and all other players get one more turn. If a player says “stop”, then players reveal their hands and points are scored for all players. When a player says “last chance”, if they have the most points, they score their cards plus a color bonus of gaining 1 point for each color card they have the most of. All other players then only score their color bonus. If that player loses the bet, they only score their color bonus, and all other players score their hands as normal.

Everyone plays until they gain 40/35/30 points in a 2/3/4 player game. Or if a player ever gets all 4 mermaid cards, they automatically win the game no matter how many players there are.

When you learn this game, you might think this is just a normal card game, nothing too special. But after digging in a little deeper, you can see the layers of strategy incorporated in the game. Thus, this is a great game both for more lighter strategy game players or players new to playing board/card games. This is not a game everyone will just absolutely love, but again, it has a solid design that serves up some fun decisions.

You have a good variety of cards to choose from each turn. At the beginning you will most likely be looking at the top of each discard piles, and deciding if you want either one of those cards. If not, you get to look at 2 more cards and choose one of those. So really, you have a chance at one of four cards unless you see something you like prior. This lets you make decisions about what cards you might want to collect. It’s limiting, but not too limiting, as you will eventually have access to cards you probably will want as the game continues. But you will also base your decisions off of what you think others might want as well.

Not all cards are desirable for every player throughout the game. Players might want specific type of cards and others might not, so this may lead to what you consider “good” cards to be discarded, which you can pick up when its your turn with ease. I look at the possible ways to do the most good that costs the least amount of actions. For example, is investing in 2 turns to take 2 cards to make a shark and person pair worth it to steal a card from another player? Well for me it might not be worth it, but for defense, if I take a very important card that would score them a lot of points, then it might be worth it.

It’s a game for looking at what you have and what you might need to make all your cards score some points. You might be stuck with picking one good card from a choice of two, and that can be hard, but you can try to discard the other one and hope no one else wants it, so that you can pick it up on your next turn. So, there can be strategic occurrences in the game. Even so, sometimes it’s just picking a card from the choices you don’t really want, knowing those choices might affect your future choices as well.

To top it off, ending the game can be an interesting conundrum. Do you bet that you are doing so much better than everyone else? Or do you just take your points? Other players might have a lot of points, but just want to keep going, so you never really know where everyone else is at until the reveal. This means things can get really interesting at the end of a round.

The last thing I wanted to mention is flat out winning the game with 4 mermaids. This is very unlikely to happen, as players will most of the time want a mermaid to score them points that also overlaps with how their other cards score points. I have never seen anyone pull this off, but it can be a fun thing to anticipate and talk about as that would make a fun end to the game, especially if it was a player who was behind everyone else in points.

Ultimately, this is a card game with designers who know what they are doing. They make choices available throughout the game, and as you gain cards, the game ramps up. They balance the game out with making cards available, but not super easy. They make sure that when you invest in certain cards, they pay out differently but no one card is so over powered as to score way more points than another. As mentioned, this is a game that many will like, but others might pass on.

One final thing of note is that the art in Sea Salt & Paper is different than many other types of game art. Rather than a realistic or cartoonish style, which you see everywhere, the game uses photography of origami. Your mileage may vary on how compelling you personally find it, but it’s definitely distinct. From the pictures in this review, you can get a sense of whether or not you like it, but for my part, while I enjoyed both the design and the game, the art was less of an immediate draw to playing. Still, it might work for you and push you from just liking to thoroughly enjoying this game. So what are you waiting for? Check it out at your local game store and see if it will make it’s way to your gaming table.

You can pre-order Sea, Salt, And Paper NOW at the Pandasaurus shop, with full release set for late September at an MSRP of $14.99

Images via Pandasaurus Games

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Brody is a huge board game fan who loves games both simple and complex and he loves how they tickle the brain like nothing else does. Brody works as a cardiac travel nurse, soon to be nurse practitioner and enjoys being healthy, active, knowledgable, and a fan of many topics.

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Images via Pandasaurus Games