Skip to main content

Next President, The

By: Reiss Games

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: Board Games (Reiss Games)

Price Reduced
Price Reduced

Product Info

Title
Next President, The
Publisher
Category
Author
James Dunnigan, Philip Orbanes, Terence Holland
Publish Year
1971
Dimensions
12.5x12.5x1"
NKG Part #
2147426555
Type
Boxed Game
Age Range
10 Years and Up
# Players
2 Players
Game Length
60 Minutes

Description

The game comes with separate rules for The Nomination Game and The Election Game.

The object of the Nomination Game is for you, as the campaign manager of a leading Presidential Candidate, to plan a nomination strategy that will result in winning a majority of the delegate votes at your party's nominating convention.

The object of the Election Game is to conduct a nationwide campaign, beginning on Labor Day, and win the majority of the States' Electoral Votes on Election Day.

The game comes with statistics for all of the major candidates from 1972 and fifteen historical candidates such as Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln.

The Nomination Game puts players in the role of campaign manager. Each player records the number of points one wants to commit for each of twenty-two state primaries. The one who commits the most to each state wins it. After the last state has been contested, players move on to The Convention phase where players once again bid to win the remaining states. If no player has the 769 votes needed to win the game. The player with least number of votes drops out and the process is repeated until there is a winner.

The Election Game simulates a presidential election. Both players choose a candidate for president and vice president. Play is simultaneous. A round consists of each player collecting campaign funds, revealing three event cards, secretly allocating resource markers, revealing those allocations and determine campaign results. This goes on for six rounds and then it's Election Day. The results of the campaigns are realized and the player with 270 or more Electoral Votes is the winner.

The game comes with statistics for all of the major candidates from 1972 and fifteen historical candidates such as Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln.