King of Tokyo
![]() |
This page is a sandbox. Sandboxed pages are unfinished and not yet approved. Information found here may be unpolished or unverified. |
---|
This article is a work in progress. Please help in the creation of this article by expanding or improving it. |
King of Tokyo is a 2011 tabletop game designed by Richard Garfield. The game features several original monsters inspired by giant monsters media over the years, featuring also creatures from mythologies, folklore, literature and movies, with King Kong being one of them. The game has received several expansions since 2012 and two spin-offs: King of New York in 2014 and King of Monster Island in 2022.
Description
Please help improve this article by contributing useful information or discussing ideas on its talk page. |
To be added.
Gameplay
Monster Selection: Players choose from six unique monster characters, each with their own special abilities and playstyles.
Dice Rolling: The heart of the game lies in rolling a set of custom dice. These dice feature symbols for attacking, healing, gaining energy, and manipulating the city's power grid. Players re-roll and manipulate their dice results using cards purchased with acquired energy.
Tokyo Tower and Beyond: The city of Tokyo serves as the game's central arena. Players fight for control of iconic landmarks like the Tokyo Tower and the Imperial Palace, earning victory points for each occupied location. However, occupying Tokyo also makes a player the target of other monsters' attacks.
Evolution to Kaiju Kings: As players gain victory points, they evolve their chosen monster into a more powerful form. This unlocks new abilities, additional dice rolls, and even the ability to regenerate from the brink of defeat.
Monsters
- King Kong
- The Kraken
- Quetzalcoatl
- Cthulhu
- Boogie Woogie
- Pumpkin Jack
- Anubis
- Chupacabras
- Brockenbär
- Pouic Monster
- Draccus
- Izbushka
- Fenrir
- Adamastor
- Smok Wawelski
- Nian
- Golem
- Boitatá
- Vampir
- Steel Armored Qilin
- Meka Hunter
- King Cron
- Ibong Adarna
- Alpha Zombie
- The Horde
- Alienoid
- Cyber Bunny
- Gigazaur
- Baby Gigazaur
- The King
- Meka Dragon
- Captain Fish
- Drakonis
- Kong
- Mantis
- Rob
- Sheriff
- Cyber Kitty
- Space Penguin
- Pandakai
- Pagurah
- Megamoth
- Rex Florae
- Spirotron
- H.A.D.E.S.
- Cybertooth
- Kookie
- Rozy Pony
- Iron Rook
- Ali-San
- X-Smash Tree
- Lollybot
- Crabomination
- Orange Death
- Piecekeeper
- Marhanagy Szürke
- Lynxote
- Lutoborshch
- Ka-Boomer
- Ikarioh
- Helmut
- Cy-Gull
- Castor Van Dam
- Laargus
- Kawaii Ju
- Megaxolot
- Crystal Dragon
- Sewer Crocs
- Unnamed cards monsters
Gallery
Concept art
Dark Edition Cyber Bunny and Kraken sketch by Paul MafayonPRO
Quetzalcoatl development by PATONEGRO
Artwork
Kraken artwork
King Kong artwork by Regis Torres
Dark Kraken artwork by Paul MafayonPRO
Quetzalcoatl artwork by PATONEGRO
Promotional
King Kong packaging
Screenshots
Trivia
- The next media that includes King Kong, Kraken, Cthulhu and Chupacabra is Funko's mobile app game Funko Pop! Blitz which also featured Godzilla and Mechagodzilla.
- Kraken's appearance was inspired by Cthulhu, having a humanoid body and several tentacles which hang down from its mouth area.
- The Kraken of the Monsterverse Skull Island Netflix Show also feature an humanoid body inspired by Cthulhu, Brian Duffield previously wrote for the 2020 film Underwater which also featured Cthulhu.
- Brockenbär was based on the character used in the Heidelbärger Spieleverlag logo, a German game publisher.
- The Pouic Monster was based on the Tric Trac logo, a French-speaking website dealing with board game news that was created in 2000, but closed in 2022.
- Alpha Zombie is a crossover promotional character based on the boss monster from the Zombie 15 boardgame that was offered as a "sweetener" to everyone backing Zombie 15 during its 2014 Kickstarter campaign.
- Ali-San was based on the actress and television correspondent Alison Haislip.
- Meka Hunter and King Cron were a set of two promo characters funded through Spieleschmiede, and generated to support Berlin Brettspiel Con during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Eternal links
References
This is a list of references for King of Tokyo. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]
|
Comments
Showing 9 comments. When commenting, please remain respectful of other users, stay on topic, and avoid role-playing and excessive punctuation. Comments which violate these guidelines may be removed by administrators.