Poke-Tapa

Poke-Tapa
Poke-tapa Gen I Front.jpg
Box art from first version
Release date 1999
Publisher(s) Estrela
Age 8 and up
Players 2 to 4
External Links

Poke-Tapa is a series of board games produced by Estrela and sold in Brazil. Two versions have been released, each with 50 Pokémon, the first featuring Generation I Pokémon and a second featuring mostly Pokémon from Generation II. It combined pattern recognition, manual dexterity and speed, as players had to locate and slap the correct Pokémon card to capture it.

Blurb

Generation I

Olhe as figuras das fichas. Combinou? Tapa na ficha.
Pegue todos os Pokémons no tapa! Quem pegar mais é o mestre do Poke-Tapa!

Generation II

Olhou? Combinou? Tapa na ficha.
50 novos Pokémons para você pegar no tapa! Quem pegar mais é o mestre do Poke-Tapa!

Playing the game

Each player receives one of four plastic hands with a suction cup at their end. The round Pokémon cards are distributed on a large surface, facing up. The square Pokémon cards are stacked facing down.

Each turn, one player turns the top square card, revealing it for everyone. Players must then look for the corresponding round card and try to slap it with the suction cup. The first player to slap the correct card "captures" it, getting it for their own pile. If a player slaps a wrong card, it is returned to its place. After the card has been captured by the player, the next round begins, with another square card being revealed. The game ends when the last round card is captured. The winner is the player with the most round cards captured.

Pokémon featured

Generation I version

  1. Bulbasaur
  2. Charmander
  3. Charizard
  4. Squirtle
  5. Caterpie
  6. Metapod
  7. Butterfree
  8. Weedle
  9. Pidgey
  10. Pidgeot
  11. Rattata
  12. Arbok
  13. Pikachu
  14. Raichu
  15. Sandshrew
  16. Sandslash
  17. Nidorina
  18. Nidoqueen
  19. Clefairy
  20. Vulpix
  21. Jigglypuff
  22. Gloom
  23. Vileplume
  24. Venonat
  25. Venomoth
  26. Psyduck
  27. Golduck
  28. Primeape
  29. Arcanine
  30. Poliwhirl
  31. Slowbro
  32. Grimer
  33. Shellder
  34. Gengar
  35. Voltorb
  36. Electrode
  37. Weezing
  38. Tangela
  39. Kangaskhan
  40. Horsea
  41. Ditto
  42. Eevee
  43. Vaporeon
  44. Jolteon
  45. Flareon
  46. Kabuto
  47. Kabutops
  48. Dratini
  49. Dragonair
  50. Mewtwo

Generation II version

  1. Pikachu
  2. Chikorita
  3. Bayleef
  4. Meganium
  5. Cyndaquil
  6. Quilava
  7. Typhlosion
  8. Totodile
  9. Croconaw
  10. Feraligatr
  11. Sentret
  12. Hoothoot
  13. Ledyba
  14. Ledian
  15. Spinarak
  16. Ariados
  17. Lanturn
  18. Togepi
  19. Togetic
  20. Natu
  21. Xatu
  22. Mareep
  23. Ampharos
  24. Bellossom
  25. Marill
  26. Azumarill
  27. Sudowoodo
  28. Hoppip
  29. Skiploom
  30. Jumpluff
  31. Sunkern
  32. Sunflora
  33. Yanma
  34. Quagsire
  35. Slowking
  36. Gligar
  37. Steelix
  38. Snubbull
  39. Scizor
  40. Heracross
  41. Ursaring
  42. Swinub
  43. Piloswine
  44. Donphan
  45. Stantler
  46. Elekid
  47. Miltank
  48. Blissey
  49. Lugia
  50. Ho-Oh

Trivia

  • The background for the art box is the same as for the Pokémon Master Trainer board game box.
  • The game is a version of another game by Estrela, called Tapa Certo, in which players slap cards with animals or characters from other franchises.

Errors

  • The Generation II game misspells Cyndaquil as "Cindaquil", Mareep as "Marrep", and Ho-Oh as "Ho-oh".


  This article is part of Project Merchandise, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on all Pokémon toys, dolls, books, and collectible merchandise.