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Robo Rally

#216201BGG ↗

2016 · 2-6 players · 120min · weight 2.36 · 3,804 ratings

v2 v3

BGG raw

ID
216201
Name
Robo Rally
Year
2016
Rank
1270
Min players
2
Max players
6
Playing time
120
Min playtime
20
Max playtime
120
Avg weight
2.3594
Num weights
64
Bayes avg
6.33957
Average
6.93175
Users rated
3804
Num owned
7974
Wanting
127
Wishing
957
Num comments
730
Fetched at
Sat Apr 25 2026 16:16:58 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Mechanisms (17)
Action QueueBiasGrid MovementHand ManagementLine of SightLose a TurnModular BoardPattern MovementProgrammed MovementRaceSimultaneous Action SelectionSlide / PushSquare GridTake ThatTurn Order: Stat-BasedVariable Player PowersVariable Set-up
Categories (4)
MazeMiniaturesRacingScience Fiction
Description (2305 chars)

The race is on for the robots of the Robo Rally automobile factory who work long, hard days at the assembly line building high‐speed supercars, but never get to see them in action. On Saturday nights, the factory comes to life as the ultimate race course with treacherous obstacles and rival sabotage. In Robo Rally, players move their robots through the course by speeding through corridors and dodging traps to reach each checkpoint first. Only the strongest robots survive! Enter the world of mad machines and dangerous schemes in the Robo Rally board game. Players control their robot with game cards which reveal directions on how the robots can move through the hectic Robo Rally automobile factory. Use strategy to outsmart rival robots while racing towards each checkpoint in your chosen course in numerical order. Beware of factory obstacles such as industrial lasers, gaping pits, and moving conveyer belts that can make or break the race. The 2016 edition of Robo Rally differs from earlier versions in a number of ways: Players each now have their own deck of twenty cards, with the same cards in each deck. On a turn, a player draws nine cards from their deck, programs five of the cards, then discards the rest. Two cards says "Again" and repeat the action programmed in the previous slot; one card says "Energy" and gives a energy cube which you can use to buy options. Since each player has their own deck, the cards no longer have priority numbers to determine who moves first. Now movement order is determined by whoever is closest to a transmitter on the game board. When players are damaged, they no longer receive one less card for each damage (or have one of their program registers locked) at the start of a round; instead they receive damage cards that will be shuffled into their decks. "Normal" damage from the board or a robot laser gives you "spam" damage. When you program one of these cards, you remove it from play at the appropriate time and replace it in the register with the top card from your deck. Surprise! Other types of damage exist, with a Trojan horse granting you two spam, a virus infecting nearby players, and a worm forcing you to reboot, which gives you even more damage. By playing the damage, though, you remove it from your deck.

LLM v2 (wide)

Not yet enriched at v2 (wide pass).

LLM v3 (deep)

Not yet enriched at v3 (deep pass).