Who will be the smartest and figure out which numbers are hidden under the cards? When you were younger, you probably played some form of Go Fish, the card game where you tried to gather sets of numbered cards from your opponents. A simple enough game with a deck of cards, but if you wanted a bit more a challenge, let me introduce you to Trio, the game of gamers Go Fish.
Originally printed as nana, players are dealt a hand of cards, which they are required to sort numerically. Then the active player asks any player at the table, or even the table itself, for their highest or lowest card. Your aim is to make a set of three matching cards, and if you do, you place this set in front of you. If you get a card wrong, your turn is over, but everyone else now knows some new information.
Why was the game called nana? Nana is the Japanese word for 7, and players win the game if they have either three sets or win the set of 7’s. Trio has slight changes to the rules, with players using all cards no matter the player count. Additionally, you play in normal or “”spicy”” mode, winning with two linked sets or the 7s. Finally, Trio includes rules for playing in teams with four or six players.
Contains 36 numbered cards, in sets of 3 of numbers 1 to 12.




