Junta (1979)

Player no icon
2
– 7
240-
240 mins

Recommended Minimum Age:

16

15

BGG stats:

6.31363
2.86
1692

Age-Rating Graph

A graph plotting enjoyment on the y-axis against age on the x-axis

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

0.2

11

0.5

12

1.3

13

3.1

14

4

15

6.3

Adult

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

0.2

11

0.5

12

1.3

13

3.1

14

4

15

6.3

Adult

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

0.2

11

0.5

12

1.3

13

3.1

14

4

15

6.3

Adult

Parent Percentage

The percentage of site users submitting ratings who think the game is playable at each age

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

3

11

8

12

21

13

49

14

64

15

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

3

11

8

12

21

13

49

14

64

15

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

3

11

8

12

21

13

49

14

64

15

A B MOD is not yet available for this game.

B-MOD stands for balancing modification, a new tool developed by Board Games for All Ages to enable games to be balanced when played with children and young people, with younger players generally receiving generous bonuses. Click here for more.

Basic Game Details

Designer

Eric Goldberg, Ben Grossman, Steve Marsh (I), Steven Marsh (II), Vincent Tsao, Nikola Vrtis

Artist

Larry Catalano, Peter Corless, Stephen Crane, Stefan Dick, James Dunn, Martin Hoffmann

Release Year

1979

Publisher

Alderac Entertainment Group

Description

Players represent various families in Republica de los Bananas. Each game turn has between 7 and 9 rounds, drawing cards, President assigns roles, foreign aid money is drawn, the president proposes a budget which is voted on, locations are chosen, there are assassination attempts, then the bank may be open or not, there may be a coup and aftermath, then the next round starts. The game is won by whoever has the most pesos in their Swiss bank account when the money runs out.

The game is for 4 to 7 players (although there are 2 and 3 player variants). A president for life (El Presidente) is elected and then she or he allocates roles for all other players. Depending upon his or her office and the various cards they hold, each player has a certain number of votes. These are important for the first vote to elect El Presidente and then there are votes each turn on the budget proposed by the President. The budget starts when the President draws 8 money cards face down from the money deck (which varies in denomination from $1 to $3) and proposes allocations. Not everyone will be included in the budget and the amounts are at the President’s discretion. The President can keep undisclosed foreign aid money.

Players may attempt to assassinate the other players including the President by guessing where they will be from among five locations. Players who successfully assassinate another player take that player’s unbanked money, the only safe money is the money that has been deposited in a players’ Swiss bank account, and the only way to get to the bank is to survive the assassination round. Players assassinated or killed simply become another member of their family and begin again with new cards, but keeping any of their family’s funds deposited in their Swiss bank account.

If players are unhappy, see an advantage, or just want to, and there is a ‘coup excuse’, they can start a coup. A coup sees players compete using armed forces to control a majority of the 5 power centers. Rebel players control the forces of the role which they were assigned prior to the coup (e.g. army, navy, air force), and players loyal to the President do the same, seeking to control the strongholds until the coup is over. At the conclusion of each coup players who have control of the 5 power centres vote to be pro-President or pro-Junta determining if the President stays, or the Junta wins and elects a new President. And someone is sent to the firing squad.

Family-Focussed Media

Family-focussed videos

No family-focussed videos found

Family-Focussed Podcast Mentions

No family-focussed podcast mentions found

Written Reviews

No family-focussed written articles found

Additional info

Looking for more information on the game?

There is so much on boardgamegeek…

(We have no official affiliation to boardgamegeek, we just love it!)

Game Ratings

LOGIn

In order to view and submit your ratings

No results found.