About this deal
Your goal here is simple: use up all your cards by building a tower with them. Because everyone's contributing to the same structure, things get precarious fast. That's especially true when Rhino Hero himself comes into play; certain cards task you with moving his token from one layer to another, and doing so obviously becomes harder as the game goes on. Seeing as anyone who makes the tower fall loses instantly, it'll have you on the edge of your seat. The character images are well-drawn (which is super helpful when you cannot remember what the character looks like!)
Over four players however and the number of chances for things to go sideways increases but so do the lengths of the rounds, Sketchy Tales: Disney Edition also tends to work best with an even number of players but don’t let that stop you if there’s only an odd number of gamers as you can make it work.Players draw the Character doing the Action they chose on their player board. Once everyone has finished their drawing, the pass them face-down to the player on their left.
The obvious main difference is the use of Disney characters vs. Things. In Telestrations players get a word or phrase to draw and people receiving the drawings don’t have a frame of reference. It could be anything. But in Sketchy Tales, it’s like a story you get to draw — someone doing something. We really like that. Would you rather draw Forky or Anna?We prefer the Telestrations spiral bound booklet over the individual cards. The biggest issue is that when you add a card under the clip, the card below often gets smudged. And if not when inserting the card, they can still get smudged when pulling them all out at the end of the round. Unfortunately, the top part of this drawing is smudged.