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Reviews
Review: Zooloretto: Animal Fun for the Whole Family… Really!
Price: $4.99
App Store Link: Full / No Lite Version
Verdict: Like it
Replay Value: Very High
Pros: Cute animal graphics, great tutorial (suggested), and easy for anyone to play
Cons: When playing against the computer, you’ll always be the first player to make a move, which can drastically change strategy, it should incorporate Bluetooth for multi-player instead of Pass ‘n Play only, and a little pricy at $4.99
Bottom Line: Zooloretto is a unique, family board game that is relaxing to play yet requires strategy and planning in order to do well. While it may be a little pricy, it will entertain for hours.
The goal of Zooloretto is to achieve more visitors than your opponents by carefully planning the location and number of your animals and vendor stands. In each round, the player tries to collect matching sets of animals. However, each of your 3 starting enclosures can only hold so many animals and only one kind of animal. The player loses a point for every extra animal collected and stored in the barn.
Each round consists of several turns. At each turn, the player can do one of three options: Add a tile to a delivery truck (the number of delivery trucks correspond directly to the number of players), choose a truck of items to add to their zoo, or carry out a money action. Players turn over tiles that can reveal an animal, a vending stall, or money. These tiles are placed on one of the trucks, each with three slots. When ready, the player chooses a truck of items to place in their zoo. Strategy comes in to play by selecting trucks with items that you need or even perhaps taking items that your opponent might need to take the lead. The goal is to collect the exact number of a certain animal to fill each area. A round is completed once each player has accepted a truck of tiles.

Money is used to move animals from one pen to another, buy overstock animals from other players, and purchase an expansion in order to collect more animals. Vendor stands can be placed around the zoo to earn extra visitors.
To add a little challenge, if a female and a male animal of the same kind are added to an enclosure, they will produce a baby. While many times the freebie animal will be just what you need to fill up your enclosure, if the space is already full, you’ll be forced to put the extra animal in the barn, therefore counting against your total score.
There are only two problems I saw with the game. One, when playing against the computer, you will always take the first turn. If a player could choose their starting position (or if chosen randomly), it would add more strategy to the game and mix things up a bit. The second problem I found is pass ‘n play is the only option for multi-player. Because the game requires many turns of switching back and forth, I’m hoping they will add a Bluetooth and/or Wi-fi option.
All in all, Zooloretto is a well-thought-out game. The drag and drop controls make the game a breeze especially in contrast to the physical board game itself. In addition, as you play games you earn points that unlock other characters and animals. The developers have even added fun trivia about animals for those who like to learn while they play! I would definitely suggest going through the tutorial the first time around to make sure you understand all the features of the game. It is evident that the developers tried and succeeded at making this a game for all ages, including both children and adults. While it is a little pricy, it will provide many hours of fun for the whole family!