If the last chip in the bag is a wild, how does that affect final scoring? BGG said that wilds are their own category when that happens.
The player who triggers the endgame has to declare their wilds first? Then their opponent gets to see what they declared, and then pick their wilds? Doesn't that make a huge disadvantage for whoever triggers the endgame? I.e., you should always end your turn when there are 2 chips left in the bag, so your opponent is forced to trigger the endgame.
Since the contents of the bag is public information, why not display this instead of making the player calculate it? (There are 6 of each chip type, and all chips are visible.)
The player who triggers the endgame has to declare their wilds first? Then their opponent gets to see what they declared, and then pick their wilds? Doesn't that make a huge disadvantage for whoever triggers the endgame? I.e., you should always end your turn when there are 2 chips left in the bag, so your opponent is forced to trigger the endgame.
Since the contents of the bag is public information, why not display this instead of making the player calculate it? (There are 6 of each chip type, and all chips are visible.)