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The Heirs

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The Heirs

The Heirs

2006

Designed by Fyodor Soloview, Katerina Soloview

Published by Six Generations Publishing

Description

THE HEIRS CARD GAME GAME CATEGORY: Outplay Game. GROUP OF GAMES: Matching Games. THE AIM OF THE PLAYERS: To make other player unable to move a card. SIMILAR GAMES: Meet the Ancestors, Chess, Checkers, or Draughts. AMOUNT OF PLAYERS: 2 (or two couples.) TIME TO PLAY: 10-30 minutes. CARDS: 32 cards from Six Generations deck. Only cards with numbers 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 are used. SHUFFLING: Yes. DEALER: There is no dealer. SCENARIO: The Multimillion Dollar Inheritance, Left in 1917 By Californian Gold Miner to His Future Smartest Great-Great-Grandchild, Still Waits for the Winner. Four generations of Henry Smith's siblings have been waiting for 90 years, for only two of the qualified heirs, Emily and Jacob, brother and sister, to turn sixteen by 2006 and enter into genealogy battle with their numerous ancestors and trustees about what being the "smartest" heir means. Henry Smith, who made his fortune by discovering gold in California during the Gold Rush and his future investments, signed his will in 1917 at the age of 86. With an unusual precision, he left his 35-year-old son George without the money. Smith was angry that his son was not married, did not have siblings, and was planning to join the United States Army in the battlefield in Europe during WWI, where he could be possibly killed. Instead, he signed his inheritance to some unknown great-great-grandchild, to be born in the future, and he died shortly afterward. That made his son change his mind, marry soon, have a son named James, and manage the destiny of his other siblings, so they would keep the family dynasty alive for another three generations in order to get the inheritance. The family line almost stopped when James's only son David was killed in Vietnam in 1964. His father was forced to remarry, and at the age of 47 he and his new wife Linda had another son, Michael. Michael, now 40, and his wife Jennifer, have two children, Emily, 17, and Jacob, 16, who are the straight heirs of their great-great-grandfather Henry. The judicial problem with selecting the right heir for billion-dollar assets is that even though the children have agreed to share the money equally, they still must compete with each other, because legally the inheritance should be given to only one: the smartest child. Rules of competition between Emily and Jacob have been set by the board of trustees, who might hold the funds until the contest is over. Emily and Jacob must square off to find the "smartest heir" - by winning the chess-style card game called "The Heirs". DESCRIPTION: The pack of genealogical playing cards called "Six Generations" will be used to play "The Heirs". Instead of using the entire 72 card deck, "The Heirs" will be played with only 32 cards numbered 1 to 5. The playing field consists of 32 squares having 4 rows and 8 columns on it. The total playable size of the field is 15 x 20 (38 x 50 cm.) Two players, one of them helping Emily and the other helping Jacob, must open cards placed at random with all their ancestors in four generations and have them join in the thrilling fight for the inheritance. All cards with black numbers (men) will help Jacob, and the red cards (women) will help Emily to win. The number on each card represents a generation of relatives in the family. 2 cards from generation #1 are Emily and Jacob, brother and sister, by themselves. Generation #2 with also two cards is their parents, Jennifer and Michael. Generation #3 - 4 cards – represents the children s grandparents - Mary, Linda, James and Robert. 8 cards from generation #4 are their great grandparents - Margaret, Helen, Mildred, Dorothy, George, William, Joseph and John. And 16 cards from generation #5 are their 16 great-great grandparents including Henry Smith. Their names are Florence, Minnie, Elizabeth, Lillian, Emma, Marie, Alice, Martha, Henry, Harry, Harold, Edward, Walter, Arthur, Frank and Albert. UNDERSTANDING THE GAME: According to the story, a family member

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