No. According to the Protect Your Cryptos Rule, the first set you play is always secure and cannot be challenged or stolen. An opponent can only attempt a attack if you have at least two sets in your Player Pile.
If you win a challenge using a Wild Card, that Wild Card is added to you Player Pile sets. When you place the newly acquired set on top of your Player Pile, ensure a standard Asset Card (XRP, Doge coin) is visible on top, not the Wild card (Bitcoin/Ethereum), to clearly show what type of crypto it is.
Yes. You can challenge any set using a Wild Card (Bitcoin/Ethereum). Wild cards can attack or defend anything.
No. If your opponent uses Bitcoin to attack you, you must play Bitcoin to defend. If someone tries to take your Bitcoin using a Bitcoin card, you have to use your own Bitcoin to stop them. But, if your opponent uses Ethereum to attack you, you may use Bitcoin or Ethereum to defend.
No. You must always play Asset cards in matching pairs to form a set. You cannot place a single card in your Player Pile; it must either be paired with an identical Cryptos or a Wild card (Bitcoin/Ethereum).
Yes. You can play two Wild cards (Bitcoin/Ethereum) together to form a new set.
When a new set from your hand, you are limited to using maximum Two Wild card per pair. However, if you are involved in a challenge (Attack), you can use as many Wilds as you have in your hand to defend or attack per time.
When a new set from your hand, you are limited to using maximum Two Wild card per pair. However, if you are involved in a challenge (Attack), you can use as many Wilds as you have in your hand to defend or attack per time.
Yes. On your turn, if you have a card that matches your top-most set, you can play it to increase that set’s value. This is a great way to “beef up” a set and make it more difficult for others to steal.
Yes. you can! Whenever you discard a Asset or Wild Card, it goes into Play Pile, however the other player can take that Asset or Wild Card to play.
Yes. you can. Whenever you want to challenge another player, you must take the Asset or Wild card to your hand then you can make a pair and stack it into your Player Pile or you can Attack an opponent Player.
No. Makes sure every player has at least one safe pile (your Genesis Set) before the “Attack” begin. You must build your own first set of matching cards in front of you before you are allowed to try and ‘hack’ or take anyone else’s cards”.
You can’t move your sets until your vault is big enough! You must build your first set (The Genesis Set) and two more sets on top of it before you can use the ‘Move One’ card. This is because the ‘Genesis Set’ is stuck to the floor—it’s so heavy it can’t be moved, and nothing can go under it!
No. Once you put a Safe Wallet on a pile, it’s like a giant heavy lid that is locked shut. You can’t slide anything under that lid. If you want to use your Move One card to hide a new set, you need to have a big enough stack of at least two new sets sitting on top of that Safe Wallet first!”.
Yes. The Utility Token is an Attack and Defense card designed to help you in both ways. While it forces a “Double Defense” when you are the aggressor, you can play it to block a standard hack initiated by someone else(Note: When played in defense, the attacker must play 2 extra cards to continue the attack).
A Safe Wallet only protects the cards currently beneath it at the moment it is played. If an opponent has already successfully stolen a set and placed it in their own vault, you cannot use a Safe Wallet to “reclaim” or protect it retroactively. You must play the Safe Wallet on your own turn to lock down your current top stack.
No. The Safe Wallet is an absolute physical barrier. Once a Safe Wallet card is placed on a stack, that stack is considered “Offline” and is completely immune to Hacker Attack cards, standard matching hacks, and even Utility Tokens.
Yes. Moving a stack to a different position in your vault is a significant strategic maneuver and consumes your one allowed action for that turn. You cannot “Move One” and “Form a Set” in the same turn.
No. The Genesis Rule states that your very first set is permanent and must remain at the very bottom of your vault as your foundation. “Move One” can only be used to reorder subsequent sets played on top of the Genesis Set.
