Onirim is a solo/cooperative card game: you must work against the game and find the oneiric doors before you run out of cards. Will you wander in each room, hoping to find the door that will take further, Adv. Contact us at 1-800-767-4263. Toggle navigation. Onirim is creative production company, we represent Directors, Photographers and Creatives. We produce commercial, brand content and photos.
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Onirim is a solo/cooperative card game in which you navigate the landscape of dreams themselves. By playing or discarding Location cards, you search for oneiric doors that will lead you from the dream labyrinth. Playing three Location cards of the same color in a row reveals a door. You can use the power of Prophecy to re-order the top five cards of the deck. But make haste! Time is short, and you are not alone in the labyrinth. Terrifying nightmares slither through its corridors to thwart your quest by any means possible. Encountering one triggers a penalty, such as forcing you to discard your hand of cards. If you get all eight Door cards into play before the deck runs out, you escape the labyrinth and win the game!
This edition of Onirim contains seven expansions that can alter your journey through the labyrinth in new and mysterious ways. Each expansion adds new cards that create new challenges and grants you additional control over the dream world. For example, The Book of Steps Lost and Found requires that you obtain the Door cards in a particular order while also adding spell cards you can use to remake the labyrinth as you see fit. Or you could chase down Lost Dream cards as you explore the labyrinth's ever-shifting chambers and corridors. Whichever expansions you choose, your dreams will never be the same again!
Contents
2 Rulebooks
169 Cards
1 Incubus Pawn
Ages: 10+
Players: 1-2
Game Length: 30 minutes
Have you ever had a bad dream that you can’t wake up from? For me, it is always me trying to run, but not being able to move. I have found that my arms still work in these dreams, so I am able to drag myself along to try to escape. This cooperative game is based on that kind of dream.
In Onirim, you are trapped inside a dream and have to figure out how to escape by finding keys, doors, and matching locations to unlock enough doors to escape. The game is very fun to play, but it is also very hard to win. The deck is stacked against you. Additionally, you are going to have to shuffle those cards a lot, so if your shuffling technique is 52 card pickup, this is not the game for you. (Fortunately, they just released an app version of the game that shuffles for you.)
Here is my strategy, but you will still lose 50% of the time, roughly.
The game allows you to do a few things with keys.
I like to use the key to rearrange the top cards because you usually will remove a Nightmare card, and you can arrange the cards to get exactly what you need in the order that you need them. Additionally, if you draw cards you don’t want, but there is a door, you can put that first in line to give you a chance to reshuffle to get what you need.
There are a few caveats to this.
In your initial draw, you will have more of one color. Start with this one and try to open all the doors of that color. If you do, it gives you significant leverage for the rest of the game in discarding those colors of cards. There are more Red and Blue cards than Green and Brown, so consider going for Red or Blue because you have better chances. (That being said, don’t discard your Green and Brown, or you won’t be able to complete the in the end.)
The caveat to this is that you don’t want to completely ignore the other colors. Take advantage of whatever appears to maximize your chance of winning.
Almost always kill a nightmare with a key if you have one, unless it is your only chance to open a door. If you don’t have a key, you have to decide which is worse. If you have the cards you need to open a door, and especially if you have moon cards, you are better off discarding from the top of the deck. If you don’t need the cards in your hand, discard them instead.
There are 16 red, 15 blue, 14 green and 13 brown cards. Each set of cards only has 4 moons, so don’t discard them if you can help it. If you know you have already used or discarded all the moons, you know you can’t discard the keys for that color. Often, you will know that the game cannot be won before you get to the end of the deck.
Have fun, I hope your dreams come true.
What other strategies have worked for you?