Bag of Chips is a party game in which you will face crucial choices to score as many points as possible at the end of each round. Be careful though because if you're too greedy you will lose a lot!At the start of a round each player is dealt six objective cards and the 25 chips — in five colors ranging from 7 yellow potato chips to 3 orange chicken chips — are placed in the bag. Someone draws five chips from the bag and places them on the table then everyone discards two of their objective cards. The player draws four more chips then everyone discards another objective card. The player draws three more chips after which everyone places two of their cards on the positive scoring side of their playing area and the final card on the negative scoring side. The player then draws two more chips one by one both for increased drama and for some of the objective cards.If a played objective card has not been completed discard it. Add the points from your completed positive objective cards (if any) then subtract points from your negative objective card (if any). The player with the highest score wins two reward tokens and the player with the second highest score wins one reward tokens. Complete rounds until someone has four or more reward tokens and wins. (In a two-player game only the player with the higher score receives a reward token and whoever first collects three tokens wins.)
To set up Auf Teufel komm raus place 48 black coal pieces face down on the infernal fireplace in the middle of the game board. On their rear sides these pieces show values between 10 and 100 with a devil appearing on nine pieces.On a turn the active player reveals coal pieces one by one ideally without revealing a devil – but before he starts doing this all players make a bet about the total value that the next player will gain. To do so all players take poker chips into their closed fists with the wager being the minimum amount that the active player has to reach in order for the bid to pay off. Thus making a high value bet automatically increases the risk of losing that wager. If the active player reveals a devil he loses all the coals he gained that turn so while he wants to claim as much as possible pressing his luck could cost him everything – not to mention possibly making his opponents rich as well if their high bids pay off.The scoring track around the board shows whether a player has exactly 200 exactly 300 and so on or falls somewhere in between two of those numbers but NOT the exact amount that the players hold. Whoever manages to increase his total wealth from the starting amount of 200 to over 1,600 wins!