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How to Play:

Pennywise is one of the oldest Cheapass Games, and one of


the smallest. It was designed to fit on a business card, and it has Choose one of the character recipes, listed below, and
give every player that set of coins. Different characters
appeared as a free game on the Double Secret Website and in many make the whole game different, but every player must start
books and magazines. with the same set of coins.

The first incarnation of Pennywise was called Fight. At first, that There is a pot in the middle of the table. Players will
game had multiple characters, but not like this version. The original take turns playing one coin into the pot. After you play a
coin, you may withdraw from the pot any set of coins that
characters were intended to be balanced for play against one another, adds up to less than the value of the coin you put in. For
but that balancing act proved nearly impossible, and the game was example, if you put in a dime, you can take back up to 9
eventually published using the Cody recipe as the only set of coins. cents. (You should always take back as much as you can.)

In this version, each different character describes a set of coins that The goal is to run your opponent out of coins. Your
score is the number of cents that you have remaining when
all players must use. This varies the game while keeping it fair. your opponent plays his last coin. Keep score over multiple
games, alternating who goes first.
After our original attempts to create multiple characters for
Pennywise, we tried again in a game called Zodiac, which eventually To play with more than two players, use the same
became the paper dice game called Diceland. In Zodiac, each basic rules, with the turn passing to the left. In this case,
when one player is knocked out, the game is over, and the
character was a differently numbered set of three 8-sided dice. player with the most points wins.

Eventually this dice-are-a-character concept was honed into Button Visit www.cheapass.com to find versions of these
Men, a mean little dice game where every character is a collection of characters formatted as trading cards. You can also print
roughly five polyhedral dice. It won some awards and stuff. your own coins, which is useful unless you have a lot of 2-,
3-, and 20-cent pieces lying around.

Coins: 1 2 3 5 10 20 25
Taylor: 3 2 1
Sugar: 2 2 2 1
Darlene: 3 3 2 1
Cody: 4 3 2 1

Pennywise is 1996, 2011 Cheapass Games: www.cheapass.com


Illustrations by Cheyenne Wright

This Cheapass Game is free. Thats right, free. You can print it, copy it, and share it with
your friends. Obviously, if you like it, wed appreciate a dollar or two in return. We think
this is the best way to get great games into your hands, so please help us make it work.

Yes! I gave Cheapass Games $_________ for this game!


To learn more, read the last page of this document, or visit www.cheapass.com.
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Why do you pay $30 for a board game? The story goes they endorse you or your use of the work). In this case, Penny-
like this: the retail price of a game covers the cost of wise is 1996, 2011 James Ernest and Cheapass Games:
manufacturing it, and there is no way you could make www.cheapass.com. Art by Cheyenne Wright
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Pennywise is 1996, 2011 Cheapass Games: www.cheapass.com. Illustrations by Cheyenne Wright

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