
Right, hanafuda: this is Nintendo's second Western digital launch of this classic Japanese card game, also known as koi-koi. Most games come with optional, automatic guides that tell players where they can and cannot place new pieces, particularly in rules-heavy games like chess, backgammon, and hanafuda. Cards are dealt, pieces are placed, and automatic "draw a new card when you're out" scenarios play out briskly in every applicable game.

For some games, you'd be correct, but those digital versions still benefit from the Nintendo touch.

After a quick glance at the package, you might assume you'd only need playing cards, dice, and a few board game pieces to replicate the Clubhouse Games experience.
