All aboard for a fast, friendly night of domino fun.
Stop scrolling and grab the dominos. Snacks too. This game brings kids, abuelos, and everyone in between to the same table. It’s quick to learn, silly to play, and just the right amount of sneaky.
Short answer: Mexican Train is a domino game where 2–8 players build lines called “trains” from a center tile. You match numbers, play on your train (and a shared “Mexican Train”), and try to be first to play all your tiles or have the fewest dots left.
Why People Love It (Yes, Even the Sore Losers)
It’s simple, social, and speedy. Turns move fast. Kids can play with grown-ups. You cheer, groan, and laugh a lot. And you get a tiny thrill every time your train takes off.
What You Need to Play
Domino set (usually double-12; double-9 works for shorter games)
Table space and a center spot for the “station”
Train markers (coins, buttons, or any small token)
Paper and pencil for scoring
Set Up the Station
Shuffle dominos face down.
Each player draws a hand (with double-12 sets, many use 12 tiles for 2–4 players, fewer for bigger groups). Put the rest in a draw pile (“boneyard”).
Place a starting double in the center (many groups begin with the highest double in the set). That number is the “engine.”
Each player has a personal train that must start with that engine number.
How a Turn Works (So Easy a Kid Can Teach It)
Play one tile that matches the open end of your train. If you can’t, draw one from the boneyard.
If you still can’t play, place your marker by your train. Now it’s “open,” and others may play on it.
You may also play on the shared Mexican Train if it exists and you can match it.
The Famous “Mexican Train” (The Shared Shortcut)
Anyone can start the Mexican Train on their turn if they have a tile that matches the center engine number. Once started, anyone can play on it during their turn. It’s the community track—use it when your own train stalls.
Double Tiles: Little Brakes You Must Clear
If you play a double, you must immediately try to play one more tile to “cover” it. Can’t do it? Draw one. Still stuck? Your train stays open until someone covers that double. Doubles create fun traffic jams—plan ahead!
When the Round Ends
Someone plays all their tiles, or
No one can play and the game is blocked.
Add up the dots on leftover tiles. Lowest score wins the round. Play new rounds with the next engine number if you like full “down through the doubles” play.
Quick Table Tips to Play Smarter
Start the Mexican Train early. It keeps options open.
Save wild-helpful tiles for traffic jams (think doubles and rare numbers).
Watch open trains. Easy points ride those rails.
Thin out heavy tiles (big dot totals) before the end.
Common Oops (We’ve All Done Them)
Forgetting to draw before marking your train open.
Not covering your double when you can.
Holding huge-number tiles until it’s too late.
Fun House Rules to Try
Whistle Start: Everyone tries to start the Mexican Train in the first turn if possible.
Double Trouble: Play again after any double you cover (speed boost!).
Short Hop: Use a double-9 set for a quick, school-night game.
Fast FAQ
How many players? 2–8 is common. Big groups love it.
How long? 30–90 minutes, depending on set size and rounds.
What’s the goal? Get rid of all your tiles or have the lowest leftover dots.
All Aboard—Your Turn
Grab the set, pick your engine, and start your train. Keep it light, keep it loud, and remember: even a tiny tile can move a long line. Choo-choo!
Laisser un commentaire