Flip 7 Card Game Review
Blog Andrew Joseph 17 Jul , 2025 0

Even though I love a good “heavy” game that fills my desktop with cards, huge wooden boards and a variety of components, I also admire the little games I can notify later, I can teach for a minute or two in a minute or two and have a pleasant time. The latest game in my series is perfect for that character, it's Flip 7, a card game that we've become one of them The best cheap games you can buy. It was also nominated for prestigious Game of the yearand won the board game geek's party game of the year Gold Geek Award 2024. very good.
Designed by Eric Olsen and published by OP Games, Flip 7 is at the heart of a game that he is obsessed with, Player Competition is the first to blindly reach 200 points from 0 to 12 cards through playing cards. For all numbered cards (zero) (zero) (zero) (zero) (except for each card), each card has a number of copies, both with dungeons and 1 card, if they can use 2 2 times duets directly, etc. They turn and get points they earn in that round, or if they manage to flip seven value cards, this can also win player bonus points. The round lasts until one player reaches 200 points.
Although Flip 7 is a simple game, it is visually striking with Art Deco aesthetics and with bright colors and a large number of cards. Each number has its own color, and the card with the modifier is a bright honey yellow contrasting with the background of the tan-centered digital card to avoid confusion. With a pleasant touch, some of the decor and ornaments on the cards connect seamlessly to each other, allowing you to make a cute, rainbow-like card with each card.
The entry barrier for Flip 7 is so low that it actually takes at least one player to do simple math (even if you can mitigate it with a free tracking app) and the game takes only 15 minutes, so it's a simple advice for basically anyone. This is a game that I can easily recommend to friends who play heavy board games with my board games, or my mom, a more comfortable mom in the Land of Cards and knowing that both audiences will be fun. For the party, the game also does a great job of expanding incredible zoom.
For some, Flip 7 might be a bit off, and it's the fact that the heart of the game is pure luck game, and the only strategy comes from whether you risk drawing another card to try more points. Ideally, I would like to say if there is a slightly hint of element that draws on strategy here. Flip 7 fills the same place as UNO or Skip-BO, and simpler games attract a wider market – but in these games, players can make more choices than the only real choice for Flip 7, which offers players to draw cards.
In my collection, I have very elite games, my gum box collective. These are games I love to keep them in my car’s glove box so I can keep them on hand anytime, anywhere. These games can be temporarily eliminated and I can kill for a few minutes when I meet with friends at a local brewery or just visit my family. The Flip 7, thanks in large part to its fast teaching and easy-to-play nature, has earned a place in my most prestigious collection.
I do wish there were more player choices involved, but the nervous “I should or shouldn’t” nature led to some good moments of celebration, in which case the risk of taking led me to win a game, and those frustrated, I boasted about all the extra chances of safety cards but still lost back to back. But this is life in the game of luck.