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Le Scorpion Masqué  |  SKU: TM01EN

Turing Machine

$44.95 CAD $49.95 CAD
This item is available for pre-order. Orders will be fulfilled in order received. We will contact you if the item is unavailable.

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Description

Designer Fabien Gridel
Yoann Levet
Publisher Le Scorpion Masqué
Players 1-4
Playtime 20 mins
Suggested Age 14 and up


"Codes are a puzzle. A game, just like any other game."
- Alan Turing in The Imitation Game.

Turing Machine is a fascinating and competitive deduction game. It offers a unique experience of questioning a proto-computer that works without electricity or any sort of technology, paving the way for a new generation of deduction games.

The Goal? Find the secret code before the other players, by cleverly questioning the machine. With Turing Machine, you’ll use an analog computer with unique components made of never-before-seen perforated cards.
The game offers more than seven million problems from simple to mind-staggeringly complex combinations, making the gameplay practically endless!

Including the original competitive mode, you can combine your brain power as a team or try to beat the game itself while playing solo.

Are you ready for an intense cerebral gaming experience?

Customer Reviews

Based on 15 reviews
80%
(12)
13%
(2)
7%
(1)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
P
Paul T.
Great solo game

Great solo game.
If you are a fan of deduction games, this should be right up your alley.
Easy to learn.
There is an app which very good, and provides a daily challenge.
Can be a bit fiddly forming each 'test'.

J
Juan Carlos Goyes
Best Deduction game EVER

Best Deduction game EVER

C
Cheryl Reichert
Really fun

Enjoy playing solo. Quick and keeps my brain thinking.

D
Danielle Tanios
Great Machine!

Super fun game. Good system. Recommend to anyone who likes logic puzzles.

J
Jason Smyth
Interesting Spin on the Logical Deduction Genre

I think this is a great game for people interested in practising their logical deduction skills.

I was first introduced to this game digitally and, while game play is the same, the mechanics of playing physically are, unfortunately, necessarily unwieldy.

The punch-card system is a fantastic and ingenious throwback to the early days of computer programming, but with only 3 copies of each card, it seems likely that players in a 4-player game will end up having to wait when everyone wants to use the same card in their guess code.

I also found setup to be frustratingly tedious. Each game players must find and place the correct verifier and answer key cards before play can begin. While the effort to do this can be lessened by keeping the card sets sorted (which is how the game ships), this is handled automatically and instantaneously by the digital version I played.

Players each get their own investigation sheet for recording their guesses and findings. This is another aspect where the digital version outshines the physical. In the digital version each player effectively gets their own copy of each of the verifier cards, and can make notes directly on or beneath the cards themselves. In the physical version the investigation sheet is generic so players must record the verifier information themselves, or constantly shift focus between the sheet and the main game area to link their notes with the verifier details.

One place where the physical version probably trumps the digital is when playing nightmare mode. In this mode, the relationship between the verifiers and answer keys is unknown; players must deduce that as part of figuring out what each is verifying. The digital version does not provide an easy way of marking this relationship, so it is probably easier to write out the possibilities on the physical sheets.

All in all I think this is an excellent game, but I much prefer playing the digital version to the physical one.