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<body><h1>csi board game manual</h1><table class="table" border="1" style="width: 60%;"><tbody><tr><td>File Name:</td><td>csi board game manual.pdf</td></tr><tr><td>Size:</td><td>3571 KB</td></tr><tr><td>Type:</td><td>PDF, ePub, eBook, fb2, mobi, txt, doc, rtf, djvu</td></tr><tr><td>Category:</td><td>Book</td></tr><tr><td>Uploaded</td><td>9 May 2019, 18:18 PM</td></tr><tr><td>Interface</td><td>English</td></tr><tr><td>Rating</td><td>4.6/5 from 555 votes</td></tr><tr><td>Status</td><td>AVAILABLE</td></tr><tr><td>Last checked</td><td>9 Minutes ago!</td></tr></tbody></table><p><h2>csi board game manual</h2></p><p>Take your investigative prowess to expert level by looking at ballistics with Warrick, DNA with Greg or have Jim interrogate in this fun, entertaining whodunit CSI board game. Instead, CSI: The Board Game allows you to formulate theories based on deductive reasoning and cutting-edge science by visiting your favorite characters at their Crime Lab Division. The winner is the one that gets the correct motive to Grissom first. CSI: The Board Game game is designed for two to four players or two to four teams of players, age 13 and older. It can also take on a much larger dimension when played by adults who may have more patience to read and analyze all of the clues. It is very easy to get engrossed in the details of the crime lose track of time. For a game to take 1-2 hours is not uncommon. The game comes with: Players take turns collecting evidence from the crime scene and from the seven crime lab divisions: They investigate and analyze the evidence in order to determine which of the three suspects committed the crime by moving up through 3 levels. The winner is the first player to enter Gil Grissom's office with an arrest warrant that correctly determines the means, motive and opportunity of a specific suspect to commit the crime being investigated. Winning is going to depend on sifting through the evidence and figuring out what is key. To get to Grissom with the right motive and method, try a few of these strategies: Use deduction to figure out what is important on the card and what isn't. For example, in Fatal Foursome, what is important about the swabs of the golf clubs. Picking out the important details is key. Clue cards can be detailed, write down extra information you might need on scratch paper. Landing on spaces with a friend can give you a look at their clues. While it is about luck, you can move any direction. Reference cards again once all players have made it through each level. This can help you to double check your thoughts.<a href="http://gmart-express.com/demo/uploadpic/6945-user-manual.xml">http://gmart-express.com/demo/uploadpic/6945-user-manual.xml</a></p><ul><li><strong>csi board game manual, csi board game manual download, csi board game manual pdf, csi board game manual 2017, csi board game manual free.</strong></li></ul> <p> It is based on the Emmy Award-winning television series CSI - Crime Scene Investigation, which tells the stories of a team of Las Vegas forensic scientists led by Gil Grissom. The team investigates and solves unusual crimes. The CSI legacy grew in 2002 with the launch of the highly successful CSI: Miami. The eight murder cases in the game are written by Canadian award-winning crime writer Max Haines who has researched and written about murder mysteries since 1972. Each case is also reviewed by forensics experts. Thankfully, there are still several online and brick and mortar stores that offer this game. You can also purchase booster packs which contain new crime stories and evidence cards. However, given the age of the game, availability new can be limited. You can try looking for these at second-hand stores and auctions like eBay. CSI Senses Game - Bring your senses into the game through challenge cards in five stages including crime scene sketch and the audio-visual lab. CSI: 3 Dimensions of Murder computer game - Take your investigation virtual through the CSI video game which investigates 5 new cases. CSI: Miami Booster Pack - This booster pack adds three new crime stories to your CSI: Miami game. CSI Facial Reconstruction Kit - Try your hand at facial reconstruction like the masters through this fun kit that includes clay and a skull base. Walk into the imaginary crime lab and see if you can become the victor in your own real-life simulation of a crime case. Get your thinking caps on because whodunit just went to the next level. Why wasn't this page useful? All Rights Reserved. The show was regularly one of the highest rated shows on television and it ended up getting three spin off series. The basic premise of the CSI franchise was your typical crime drama where each week a new crime was solved. With how popular the show was it is no surprise that there were several board games made based on the franchise.<a href="http://agpaslauga.lt/userfiles/6950-user-manual.xml">http://agpaslauga.lt/userfiles/6950-user-manual.xml</a></p><p> Licensed games usually aren’t very good but I had some hope for the CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Board Game because games like Clue have shown that a murder mystery can work quite well in a board game setting. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game adds interesting stories to your typical deduction game but ends up forgetting about actually adding any interesting gameplay. Take the disclosure cards out of the box, shuffle them and place them on the corresponding spot on the gameboard. Choose one of the cases and take the cards that correspond to the case that you chose. Separate the evidence card by type and place them on the corresponding spots on the gameboard. Place the level one card on top followed by the level two card and then the level three card on the bottom. Place the 3 suspect cards (level one, level two, level three) on the start space. Place the two Grissom cards on the Grissom space with the level one card on top. Each player chooses a playing piece and places it on the start space. Each player also takes a checklist sheet and a folder. One player reads the description of the crime scene (in the instruction booklet) for the chosen crime. Each player fills in their checklist with the appropriate information. Players roll the die with the player rolling the highest number getting to go first. The first player will read both sides of the level one suspect card to all of the players before beginning the rest of their turn. Playing the Game A player begins their turn by rolling the die. The player will move their playing piece the number of spaces rolled. Players can move their piece in any direction but they can’t move over the same space twice during a turn and they have to use the entire number they rolled. If the player lands on a blank space their turn ends. Otherwise players will take an action based on the space that they land on.</p><p> Arrow: When a player lands on a green arrow space they can move to the closest crime lab division space in either direction. They will then take the action of landing on a crime lab division space. This player landed on an arrow space so they can either move to the interrogation or autopsy space. Crime Lab Division: When a player lands on a crime lab division space they will look at the card from that space that corresponds to their current level. The players start at level one. Players check off the card they looked at on their checklist and write down any other information that they want. They then return the card to the space and their turn ends. This player landed on the ballistics space so they look at the level one card from the ballistics department. Grissom: When a player lands on the Grissom space they can move their playing piece to any other crime lab division and read the corresponding clue. If you are the first player to land on the space in level one or two you get to take the corresponding Grissom card. The player has to read part of the card out loud but they get to keep the rest of the card secret. This player landed on the Grissom space. If the Grissom card for their current level is available they can take it. The player can then move their piece to any other department on the board. Disclosure: When a player lands on a disclosure space they draw the top card from the disclosure deck. The player reads the card and follows its instructions. If the card allows a player to use the card at a later time, the player can choose when they want to use it. Once a disclosure card is used it is returned to the bottom of the disclosure deck. This player has landed on a disclosure space so they draw the top disclosure card and follow its instructions. Regular Space Occupied by Another Player: If a player lands on a regular space occupied by another player, they get a chance to ask that player for a piece of evidence that they already collected.</p><p> The player chooses one of the divisions and asks the player if they have already seen that clue for the player’s current level. If the player has already seen that clue, the player that asked gets to move their playing piece to the corresponding space and look at the clue. If the player hasn’t seen the clue, the current player stays on their current space. Instead of asking for a division clue a player can choose to take the Grissom card from the other player on the space. These two players are on the same space. The player who landed on this space second gets to ask the other player whether they have seen a specific clue. If that player has the clue, the player who asked gets to look at the clue as well. Once a player has acquired all of the clues for level one, they move their piece back to the start space. The player can then read the level two suspect card to themselves. The player will now start collecting level two clues. When a player has collected all of the level two clues they can move onto level three. Once all of the players have completed a level the cards can be turned face up so that they are easier for the players to reference. This player has collected all of the level one clues so they can move onto level two. Winning the Game Once a player reaches level three they can continue to collect level three clues or they can try to solve the case. When a player wants to try to solve the case they head towards the Grissom space. When they land on the space by exact count they will submit their arrest warrant. The player fills out their arrest warrant with the suspect’s name, the means (links the cause of death with the suspect), motive (why the suspect killed the victim), and the opportunity (proof that the suspect was at the scene of the crime). In the formal rules the player has to reference a clue (department and level) for the means, motive and opportunity on their checklist without telling the other players.</p><p> In the informal rules the player reveals their solution to the other players (don’t need specific clues). The player then reads the solution in the instruction booklet. If the player was correct they read the solution to the other players and they win the game. If the player got one or more of the pieces incorrect, they are eliminated from the game. The rest of the players continue playing the game until someone solves the crime. My Thoughts on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game When most people think about deduction board games, the first game that comes to their minds is the classic game of Clue. Clue is one of those games that a lot of people either love or hate. Generally I would say that Clue deserves a lot of credit for innovating the deduction genre but it is also far from perfect. Before playing CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game I was expecting it to basically be Clue with the CSI theme pasted on. While this would have been far from original, it would have been better than what you end up getting in the CSI Board Game. Playing CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game kind of feels like you are playing a script of the television show. You roll the dice and move around the board to pick up different parts of the story. This is basically all the game shares in common with Clue. In Clue you use your deduction skills to ask the other players for information which you piece together in order to solve the crime. In CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game you basically just go to different spaces around the board to read cards which give you more information about the case. I think the biggest problem with CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game is that there really isn’t much to the gameplay. You mostly just roll the die and read clues. You try to figure out how the clues work together in order to figure out who the killer is along with the means, motive and opportunity.</p><p> You can debate how much deduction there really is in Clue but at least you have to be smart when asking questions to the other players. In CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game the information is just given to you and you just have to figure out how all of the pieces work together. While you still have to figure out what happened, being able to solve the case has more to do with getting all of the key clues instead of actually figuring out anything yourself. Since there is very little deduction in the game, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game ends up as a really dull roll and move game. You roll the die and move around the board. Now this would be boring enough on its own but the game then decides to make it even more excruciating by forcing you to land on spaces by exact count. This adds a lot of luck to the game as you move back and forth hoping to finally roll the number you need to land on one of the spaces you need to get one of the clues. Players will waste quite a few turns going back and forth over a space waiting to finally roll the number they need to visit the space. While eliminating the rule that you have to land exactly on a space would have helped the game (I highly recommend that you do), it still wouldn’t have fixed the many other problems that I had with the game. When you finally land on one of the spaces and get to look at one of the clues, things don’t get much better. The problem with the clue cards is that each one gives you a pretty long block of text that gives you a bunch of information to sift through. Some of the information is useful and a lot of it is pointless. Since you don’t really know which is which you need to carefully read all of the cards and either write down the key information or try to remember it all.</p><p> Good luck writing it all down though since the checklist sheets have no room to write down extra information so you need to bring along scratch paper if you want to write down clues you uncover throughout the game. With how much text there is on each card it takes players quite a while to digest it all if they want to get all of the details down. After a while we started letting players complete their turns while the player read their clue cards. This sometimes wasn’t even enough time as the players were sometimes still writing down notes when it got back to their turn. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game really needed to find a way to streamline the game. I don’t mind that the game has some clues that lead nowhere but the game could have done a much better job finding some way to shorten the clues. Instead of large blocks of text that read like a script, the game could have used bullet lists or just one or two sentences instead of a whole paragraph. After a while the reading gets kind of tedious to the point where you start to lose interest in the story. Speaking of the story it may be the only redeeming quality of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game. I will admit that the cases actually have a lot more detail to them than I expected. While I really haven’t seen a lot of CSI, the case I played actually reminded me a lot of an episode of a TV show. It actually wouldn’t surprise me if the cases from the game were abandoned stories from the show. Fans of the show will probably like the cases quite a bit. The stories might be somewhat interesting but you then get back to the gameplay. It seems like the designers spent all of their time creating the cases and then forgot to actually build gameplay mechanics to support them. The gameplay feels like breaks between reading the next development in the story. If the game actually had some interesting gameplay mechanics the cases could have made for a pretty good game.</p><p> With the gameplay lacking so much, you would probably just be better off watching one or two episodes of the show since the stories will be just as interesting and you won’t have to deal with the lackluster gameplay. If all of this wasn’t enough the game somehow finds a way to mess up the end game. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game actually has two ways to end the game and I would highly recommend using the informal method. In the formal method a player has to write down which card directly points to the suspect’s means, motive, and opportunity to commit the crime. Since several clue cards have similar information, good luck guessing which one the designers decided were the key clues that you were supposed to pick. Also good luck actually remembering what card gave you a particularly piece of information unless you write down what card you got each piece of evidence from. I could see you going through the whole game and then no one winning because they didn’t pick the right cards to prove their case. The informal method is much better since you just have to explain the suspect’s means, motive and opportunity and don’t have to remember which cards that information came from. Unless you want to add unnecessary difficulty to the game, I see no reason why you would ever want to use the formal end game rules. All these problems combine together to create one of the most boring board games that I have ever played which is saying a lot as I have played over 60o different games. The problem is that the lack of actual gameplay and all of the reading leads to the game taking forever. If CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game was only 30-45 minutes the game would still be bad but it would be bearable. Instead the game usually takes at least an hour and can easily take an hour and a half to two hours. When you get through the first or second level of clues you already wish that the game had ended.</p><p> On top of all of these other problems there is the fact you can really only play the game a certain number of times. The problem is that the game only includes eight different mysteries. Once you know the solution to a case the only thing you can do in the game is roll the dice and move around the board collecting the clues you are already familiar with. This will be a really boring experience. To ever enjoy one of the cases again you will have to wait long enough that all of the players forget the solution to the case. The original CSI has an encore edition and two expansions which contain new cases. The game even has a spinoff for CSI Miami and that game has its’ own expansion so there are plenty of cases if you want to purchase additional versions of the game. It is not just the lack of cases that hurts CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game’s components though. The game just feels cheaply made. The game mostly just includes cards, a normal die, playing pieces, and the gameboard. None of these components are of that high of quality. The cards picture images from the show but they are pretty thin and just feature blocks of text. The gameboard is also pretty bland. While the components are good enough to not to be distracting, I wouldn’t consider them to be very good either. Should You Buy CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game is simply not a very good game. At first I thought it was going to be Clue with a CSI theme. The only things the game takes from Clue though are its’ worst mechanics. You basically just move around the gameboard collecting clues to eventually solve the case. The stories are actually somewhat interesting but there is nothing to the gameplay. There really isn’t any deduction as you basically just try to find the key clues that lead to the solution. If the game was short these problems might not be as bad but the game feels like it takes forever.</p><p> Even if you somehow enjoy the game it only comes with eight cases so once you solve them the game has no replay value. Unless you love the CSI franchise and care more about the story than the actual gameplay, I can’t recommend CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game. Even if both describe you I would only recommend picking up the game if you can find it really cheap since it has little replay value. If you would like to purchase CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The Board Game you can find it online: Amazon, eBay Related posts: 5-Minute Mystery Board Game Review and Rules Clue Suspect Card Game Review and Rules Clue Master Detective Board Game Review The Prospector Board Game Review and Rules Angel in the Attic Board Game Review and Instructions What’s Yours Like. I got this board game as a gift but rules didn?t come with. I searched them on line but there?s nothing at all. I found others rules related to other CSI game boards. It will be really appreciated CSI Senses The Game Rules appeared (any link to be loaded as a pdf). Tks a lot!!! Greetings from Costa Rica ?? Reply Eric Mortensen Post author May 20, 2020 at 10:39 am Permalink Unfortunately I don’t know how much I can help you. As I don’t own the game I can’t provide the instructions. The only thing I could find online was this review on Board Game Geek which briefly outlines the rules. It doesn’t get into specifics though so I am not sure how much it will help you. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel reply Your email address will not be published. May appeal to fans of the show. Cons: Barely has any actual gameplay. It feels like the game never ends. To support the blog and keep it free for all users, Geeky Hobbies utilizes various affiliate programs to earn commissions. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. We are also members of the eBay Partner Network.</p><p> All rights reserved. Theme: ColorMag by ThemeGrill. Powered by WordPress. CSI board game allows players to experience what it's like to solve a crime and all the emotions that go with it. This board game is designed for more mature players due to the nature of the game: solving crimes. Each players goal is the be the first to enter Grissom's Office with the correct Arrest Warrant which must include means, motive and opportunity. CSI game players will assume the role of Crime Scene Investigators to gather evidence from seven different Crime Lab Divisions including Interrogation, autoposy, identification, trace, ballistics, forensics, and DNA. This board game will test the players while teaching them about new scientific methods and the original form of police work: investigation. Play the SCI board game today. The rules below are some of the exact directions that came in the original packaging.If you have any information regaring the CSI game rules or instuctions let us know and we will add it to this page. We will post any updates to this page as soon as we find it. All submissions will be reviewed within 24 hours. Add yours today. Perhaps the most promising initial sign of this is the size of the rule booklet, which is only four pages long. Once the board is set up with the cards in the proper slots and the bugs in their green bag (more on that later), the game gets going quickly. The game is designed for two to four players, but players can team up if there are more than four people present. The next step is to choose one of the six cases to solve. Each case comes folded up, with a picture of the crime scene on the outside. All players will get sixty seconds to study the picture before opening the card to answer a question specific to the CSI they've chosen to play as. A correct answer puts you on the shorter path for the duration of the game, with only six squares between each department, while a wrong answer sends you down the longer square path.</p><p> Don't despair if you end up on the longer path--true to Las Vegas, much of your luck will depend on the role of the die. The first department is Preliminary Investigation, which features a variety of forensics questions and trivia related to the show itself. Though CSI fans have an obvious advantage, even those who don't watch the show regularly will probably be familiar with terms that have slipped into the cultural consciousness, such as GSR and COD. Once players reach the actual department space, however, they're in for a challenge Grissom would appreciate--they select a card with a picture of an insect on it and have to reach into a green pouch and without peeking, pick out the bug on the card from eight rubber insects. This one isn't nearly as easy at seems, and it can take several turns before you can correctly identify the bug on the card in the pouch. Having only sixty seconds in which to do so makes it all the more challenging! Interrogation is the next leg of the journey, and the challenge here requires that you get your opponents to guess the word on the Challenge card without using the synonyms listed below the word to describe it. The first player to successfully pass each department gets to read the evidence card for that department out loud, providing crucial clues in the case. Here you'll be asked to answer riddles that CSI's fearless leader would appreciate, but can boggle the mind of even the cleverest of players. If you are playing in teams, this is when having another mind around will be the most helpful. If you're the first to finish this round, you get the first crack at the final piece of evidence and get the chance to guess the killer. Write the name of the suspect you think is the killer on a piece of paper and open the solve card for the conclusion of the case. If you're right, you've won the game; if not, you're out and the next player to reach the end will have the opportunity to guess the killer.</p><p> The first person to do so correctly is the winner. CSI fans will get a kick out of the mini UV lights, which reveal the answers to the questions in the Preliminary Investigation and the riddles in Grissom's Office. But diehard fans needn't worry that friends they rope into the game who don't watch the show will be lost by any means; finding a specific bug in a bag and puzzling over riddles will be equally challenging to CSI devotees and newbies alike. With cases penned by the show's creator, players are also guaranteed a quality mystery on par with the show's stories each time they play. Aside from that, things ran smoothly, and the game took about two hours with three players. With six different cases, that makes for several evenings' entertainment, though as is the case with the first CSI board game, hopefully boosters will follow at some point. Those less than satisfied with the sometimes slow-going first CSI board game will likely find this one a much more lively and interactive playing experience. To learn more, visit Specialty Board Games. Discuss this reviews at Talk CSI. Find more episode info in the Episode Guide. Kristine Huntley is a freelance writer and reviewer. The Big Bang Theory CSI Discord server CSI 20th anniversary revival in the. The Big Bang Theory CSI Files and its subsidiary sites are in no way affiliated with CBS Studios Inc. We'll assume this is okay if you continue to use this website. Accept Read More. Our payment security system encrypts your information during transmission. We don’t share your credit card details with third-party sellers, and we don’t sell your information to others. Please try again.Please try again.Please try again later.Each case is also reviewed by forensics experts.Show details. Order it now. Sold by Pantingfish08 and ships from Amazon Fulfillment. Sold by KP Trends and ships from Amazon Fulfillment. Brain Games - Crime Scene Investigation (CSI) Puzzles by Publications International Ltd.</p><p>Register a free business account Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Please try your search again later.CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, The Board Game challenges fledgling detectives to prove their mettle. With help from CSI characters, players become crime scene investigators in a race to collect evidence from 7 crime lab divisions: interrogation, autopsy, identification, trace, ballistics, forensics and DNA. The first player to present Grissom with a correct arrest warrant proving means, motive and opportunity wins. Disclosure cards and Grissom cards affect players as they employ modern science and old-fashioned police work. Features 8 stories written in unique CSI style by award-winning crime writer Max Haines. Includes CSI game board, 8 crime stories, 24 suspect and evidence cards per story, 2 Grissom cards per story, 25 disclosure cards, the CSI handbook, 4 arrest warrants, 4 playing pieces with 8 CSI character choices and 1 die. Made in USA.Designed for players ages 13 and up, the object of the game is to be the first player to enter Grissom?s Office with a correct Arrest Warrant proving means, motive and opportunity. With the help of the show?s main characters, players assume the role of Crime Scene Investigators in a race to collect three levels of evidence from all seven Crime Lab Divisions: Interrogation, Autopsy, Identification, Trace, Ballistics, Forensics, and DNA. Disclosure Cards and Grissom Cards come into play and add to the interaction and excitement of the game. Test yourself, friends and family while learning about cutting-edge scientific methods and old-fashioned investigative police work as you try to build a case against one of the three suspects.Buyers from any other state or international will be refunded upon purchase. To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average.</p></body>
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