If you love Board Games, you're in the right place!

Reconnect with loved ones and create lasting memories—grab a board game today for endless family fun!

Discover one of the largest online stores for board games: 5,500+ titles in stock!

Rio Grande Games  |  SKU: RIO195

Puerto Rico

€29.34 EUR
This item is available for pre-order. Orders will be fulfilled in order received. We will contact you if the item is unavailable.

Delivery and Shipping

For more details, please refer to our Shipping and Order Information.


Description

Designer Andreas Seyfarth
Publisher Rio Grande Games
Players 3-5
Playtime 90-150 mins
Suggested Age 12 and up
Expansion Puerto Rico: Expansions 1&2 - The New Buildings & The Nobles 
Honors


In Puerto Rico assume the roles of colonial governors on the island of Puerto Rico. The aim of the game is to amass victory points by shipping goods to the Europe or by constructing buildings.

Each player uses a separate small board with spaces for city buildings, plantations, and resources. Shared between the players are three ships, a trading house, and a supply of resources and doubloons.

The resource cycle of the game is that players grow crops which they exchange for points or doubloons. Doubloons can then be used to buy buildings, which allow players to produce more crops or give them other abilities. Buildings and plantations do not work unless they are manned by colonists.

During each round, players take turns selecting a role card from those on the table (such as "Trader" or "Builder"). When a role is chosen, every player gets to take the action appropriate to that role. The player that selected the role also receives a small privilege for doing so - for example, choosing the "Builder" role allows all players to construct a building, but the player who chose the role may do so at a discount on that turn. Unused roles gain a doubloon bonus at the end of each turn, so the next player who chooses that role gets to keep any doubloon bonus associated with it. This encourages players to make use of all the roles throughout a typical course of a game.

Puerto Rico uses a variable phase order mechanic, where a "governor" token is passed clockwise to the next player at the conclusion of a turn. The player with the token begins the round by choosing a role and taking the first action.

Players earn victory points for owning buildings, for shipping goods, and for manned "large buildings." Each player's accumulated shipping chips are kept face down and come in denominations of one or five. This prevents other players from being able to determine the exact score of another player. Goods and doubloons are placed in clear view of other players and the totals of each can always be requested by a player. As the game enters its later stages, the unknown quantity of shipping tokens and its denominations require players to consider their options before choosing a role that can end the game.

Customer Reviews

Based on 4 reviews
50%
(2)
50%
(2)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
S
Solomon Somers
A really great game

This is probably the best action drafting game I have played. It's relatively cheap to buy, fairly simple to teach, and cutthroat. Really fun to play even when you are losing because of how the actions work. It doesn't have a lot of downtime, and that is a HUGE plus when you want to teach it to new players

K
Kyle harder
First played this 8 years ago and I still daydream about indigo

Not as short as I remember but its a classic. Art looks like grandmas couch, but the gameplay is exciting and strategic. Those role tokens or whatever is such a good mechanic good Twilight Imperium stole it for their strategy cards.

T
Travis Johnston
Standing the Test of Time

This game continues to be one of our favorite cut throat eurogames. We love the variety of paths to victory and the player interaction through the well thought out mechanisms. It is best played with 5, but 3 and 4 are still enjoyable. It is unfortunate that this game is not conducive for 2. Fortunately, there is San Juan, if you more frequently enjoy date nights that involve getting mad at your spouse because he/she took the action that you needed to win the game.

A
Adam Stewart
Little complex

Seems to be a fair amount of rules to understand but a very good game in the end.