Ride the Lightning with Super Mega Lucky Box

Don’t be fooled by Super Mega Lucky Box’s ridiculous name or Schoolhouse Rock-inspired artwork: it’s a great, lightweight game you can teach anyone in a few minutes, and the kind of game even non-gamers will ask to play again. If you’ve played Silver and Gold before, this is a similar game from the same designer, Phil Walker-Harding, taking the flip-and-write concept of the earlier game but making it a little simpler to grasp for newbies.
Super Mega Lucky Box—which I’m going to call SMLB, because come on already—is also a flip-and-write game, which means that on every turn, someone flips a card to reveal a new value that every player then uses to mark off a box on their personal grids. Each player starts the game with three cards showing 3×3 grids that contain single-digit numbers in every box, although they never just show 1 through 9. Each row has a bonus listed at the right end, and each column has a bonus listed at the bottom, and you get that bonus once you’ve checked off all three boxes in that row/column. Completed cards are worth points, with the value going from 15 points if you finish a card in the first round (very difficult) to 8 points if you do so in the fourth and final round. You’ll get another card after each of the first three rounds as well, receiving three from the deck and choosing one to keep.
The flippin’ deck has 18 cards in each, numbered 1 through 9, with two of each. In every round, you shuffle the deck, deal out nine cards, and then flip those one by one for players to use to write on their own cards. That means in most rounds, you’ll see certain numbers twice, while other numbers don’t come up at all. Every player has lightning tokens they can use to modify the flipped number, moving its value by one per token spent. You start the game with four lightning tokens and can gain more as row/column bonuses. They’re worth nothing at the end of the game, so you want to use them… but running out of them can be disastrous, as it may leave you unable to write at all on some turns. Optimal use of the lightning tokens is one of the two keys to playing SMLB well, along with finding the best ways to chain your bonuses so you check off more boxes, since you can get one bonus that lets you fill in another box on any card and perhaps triggers another bonus after that.