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R&R Games Rome: City of Marble Game: A Strategic Tile-Laying Game for Family Night
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Purchase options and add-ons
- A Fun Tile Game for Adults and Kids: The City of Marble is great for family game night! With its immersive historical theme and engaging gameplay, this game will surely be a hit with players of all ages.
- Strategic Game: This tile-laying game is a unique and exciting addition to any game night. Players must use strategic planning and clever tile placement to build their way to victory and gain Imperium.
- Exciting Family Game: With its easy-to-learn rules and fast-paced gameplay, this game is sure to keep everyone entertained. The game encourages strategic thinking and problem-solving skills, making it ideal for kids of all ages.
- High-Quality Playing Tiles: The beautifully illustrated tiles are of high-quality construction, ensuring that your Rome: City of Marble game stands the test of time.
- Great Game Gift: With its beautiful artwork and engaging gameplay, this game makes a thoughtful and entertaining gift for anyone who loves playing board games or strategy games.
- You might have a hidden treasure in your closet at this moment! Random hidden hunts are waiting to be found in numerous R&R games. Explore any R&R game, solve the hidden treasure hunt, and you might win an exciting reward!
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Product information
Product Dimensions | 12 x 12 x 3 inches |
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Item Weight | 4 pounds |
ASIN | B015QGG7PO |
Item model number | 450R |
Manufacturer recommended age | 10 - 15 years |
Best Sellers Rank | #921,865 in Toys & Games (See Top 100 in Toys & Games) #2,343 in Domino & Tile Games |
Customer Reviews |
4.5 out of 5 stars |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Release date | September 13, 2018 |
Manufacturer | Flat River Group |
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R&R Games Rome: City of Marble Game: A Strategic Tile-Laying Game for Family Night
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Product Description
Welcome to ancient Rome! In this tile-laying game, you are a builder backed by one of the powerful Patrician families of Rome. Influence and direct new construction of the expanding metropolis through shrewd development of the city's districts. Construct various civic buildings: Temples for worship, Baths for health, Theaters and Arenas for arts and entertainment. The more you build, the more you gain Imperium, the measure of real power and influence in Roman society. As buildings are constructed, influential players score victory points representing their prestige. Score additional victory points by building Bridges, Aqueducts, and Fountains. Earn a final reward for your level of Imperium. The player with the most victory points in the end wins the title of. Architects Romanus!.
From the brand

R&R Games
Welcome to R&R Games, where we believe that playing games with friends and family is the best way to be social.
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We take great pride in being known as the company that brings you "The Games You Want to Play!" Our award-winning games have been recognized with over 40 national awards, extensive editorial coverage, and national television exposure. Our founder, Frank DiLorenzo, started R&R Games with the goal of providing a fun forum for gatherings of friends and families. His passion resulted in an ever-expanding line of award-winning games.
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Customer reviews
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Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2024So I'll be honest, I didn't get into this one like I do most board games. It just wasn't for our family.
That said. The quality of this product is great, I collect board games so I am proudly displaying the cool game art on the shelf.
The pieces and board are all great. Even the instructions were well written and easy to follow (which is like really rare!)
I love the historical theme, great for expanding young minds. Ages and gameplay time are on the money. We played 2 rounds and enjoyed the evening.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 12, 2024This game is great. I like the pieces, they seem pretty solid, it’s a fun game, and it’s a nice addition to my collection.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2024A dry euro that’s past it’s prime. This may have been more interesting when it first came out in 2015, but 9 years later I don’t think it’s got what it takes to compete with other similar games.
You get 2 actions per turn. Two of the same or 2 different ones. The actions are take tiles (can’t be used in the same turn), expand an aqueduct, retrieve a meeple (inefficient but sometimes they get stuck on the board) or play a tile.
Playing a tile is the main action and how you create the hexagon shaped neighborhoods to potentially score the buildings. Player interaction comes in the form of either taking a spot someone else wanted or placing a tile in such a way that they are stuck in an incompletable area and have to waste a turn at some point to retrieve it.
Aquaducts can score a fair amount of points but they are also fiddly since they end up stacked on top of tiles and buildings.
Components: Standard cardboard for most of it. Wooden cubes and meeples. Nothing bad, nothing standout.
Bottom line for me: It’s pretty simple to play but also fiddly. It’s probably more involved than would appeal to most family or casual gamers but doesn’t have enough oomph to appeal to regular gamers. I just don’t see it as something that I would have much interest in going back to when there are so many games that offer more.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2024The quality of this board game really is a cut above. The printing is clean and meticulous on all pieces, which there are a lot of. The cardboard pieces are very thick and well made, the board is clean and well made. The instructions booklet is full color in several languages.
The game itself is quite involved. Setup wasn't difficult, but there are a lot of different pieces. It's a pretty long game with lots of systems working together, so I wouldn't recommend this game for very young children.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2024Well, it's different.
It's taken me a bit to get people together to play games, so different is sometimes welcome. This is a game with a lot of (figurative) pieces to it. (Which is Criticism The FIrst for me - while it provides little baggies for some of the really small pieces, it does not include any way of organizing all the tiles and other parts you need, meaning the very first part of a play session is "sort everything." Even more little baggies or a generic tray would really help here.)
It took a readthrough or three, looking at the board and pieces, to get a solid grasp of what they wanted to do. The way (quadrilateral) tiles are laid out determines what kind of building gets to be built where (if) they all meet, with different buildings worth different points. There's also a nice bit of randomness at the beginning, as where you can *start* building depends on which three hills you start the game with. This will add some replayability to the game - you won't always need (say) to just "rush to the right and grab that piece" for instance. Similarly, you won't be able to place aqueducts in the same place (other than the starting points) or want to place them the same way each game, which will give a bit of a fresh challenge each play through.
That said, you do kind of need to have a certain itch scratched to reach for this. This seems to have landed firmly between "grab that game, I want to play it again!" and "Don't ever bring that by." It's interesting, it can be fun if you're into this sort of game (and would probably translate well into a video game, really, as sort of a competitive sim city) but it didn't seem to land in the "first or second choice" game spot for me. (which, again, for me partly is because of the "time to play sort the tiles before we play the game." Buy some baggies or some sort of organizer.)
- Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2024Good design and OK components, but not terribly exciting. With the exception of the 'aqueducts' you build this could be a completely abstract tile placement and area control game. Not a bad game but not one of my favorites.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2024This game is really fun, and my family and I have enjoyed playing it. It's not too hard to learn, and it isn't too long to play, so you won't be tied up for hours.