In Dungeons & Dragons: Dungeon Scrawlers – Heroes of Undermountain, you and other adventurers are drawn together to delve into Undermountain, an immense underground of dungeons created by the Mad Mage, Halaster Blackcloak. Use your markers to trace your path, defeating monsters, casting spells, connecting artifact fragments, and collecting shiny treasure on the way! The round ends when one player defeats that dungeon’s mighty boss, so you have only a few minutes to collect as much loot as possible. The player with the most points after exploring three dungeons wins!
At the beginning of each game, players pick one of five characters, each with a thematic ability that helps them collect one type of points more easily as they draw their line through the maze. Normally monsters or treasure need to be entirely covered with marker to be collected, but rogues need only to touch treasure, while barbarians need only to fill in the monsters’ heads to defeat them! While anyone can cast a spell by tracing an intricate pattern, a wizard needs only to draw a small circle!
Dungeon Scrawlers contains ten unique mazes of increasing complexity, introducing new challenges as you go. These include portals, locked doors, multiple bosses, time limits, and more! With multiple paths through each maze, and over one hundred different three-maze combinations, you’ll never have to stop scrawling!
—description from the publisher
punkin312
Simply joys of line drawing. The race is on to get through the maze and obstacles before everyone else. Great game for the family. I would have loved this as a kid! 10 levels to explore.
The Innocent
Somehow my review of Dungeon Scrawlers turned into a review of my seven-year-old. Oh well! Dungeons Crawlers (18 January 2022): https://spacebiff.com/2022/01/18/dungeon-scrawlers/
Raybaker90
I ordered this out of gtm thinking it sounded fun for my kids and I. My kids are 7 and 9 and they both really enjoyed it but my wife and I actually really enjoyed it also. Now it is definitely a very simple game and one more of dexterity than thought. ( I swear my wife has some sort of an artists advantage.) I wouldn't label it just as a kids game though because it was fun for all of us. My wife and I had the advantage of dexterity of hand and eye to map ahead a bit of the mazes and our kids were almost even with eachother too. My one complaint is that the rules could be just a bit more clear on scoring and unfortunately there isn't a faq yet. All in all I'd put dungeon scrawlers in the same category as games like spot it, unstable unicorns, and the like. Games we bring out when we've got some "casuals" over and just want to have a bit of fun without needing to explain much. My kids are planning to play it when their cousins come over to play too so it's definitely going to see a fair bit of use. I hope they come out with more maze packs. ?