In Dance of Ibexes, you're not just a player: you're the leader of a herd of stubborn ibex trying to conquer the board without being pushed into the ravine. Each turn, you choose a numbered tile, reveal it along with the others, and hope your move is smart enough to avoid disaster... and mean enough to cause it to happen to the others.
It's a strategic family board game by Wolfgang Kramer : numbers that rise, rows that shrink, dangerous spaces, points suddenly gained and lost, and constant laughter when a poorly placed ibex forces you to move, lose, and start again. The golden rule? Place your piece where it hurts you the least... and the most .
Every choice is made simultaneously: no one waits, everyone trembles as the pieces reveal themselves. In this board game of numbers and placement, the real enemy isn't chance, but the other players' survival instincts. And when a row explodes and someone metaphorically falls into the abyss, the table fills with shouts, laughter, and vengeance announced for the next round.





