Race and Class cards (including Half-Breed and Super Munchkin), and other similar cards (See Important Note #5.), can be discarded at any time, including to power a special ability, but not an ability for the discarded Race or Class (unless the ability requires discarding that particular Race or Class).
Can you discard monster cards in Munchkin?
You may discard any card, in play or in your hand, to power a special ability. You can discard a Class card at any time, even in combat: “I don’t wanna be a Wizard anymore.” You may not belong to more than one class at once unless you play the Super Munchkin card.
Can you change your race in Munchkin?
Q. When using Super Munchkin or Half-Breed (or Double Agent or Bilingual . . .), can you discard one of your Races or Classes and replace it with another, or just not replace it? A. You can turn from a half-breed dwarf-elf to a half-breed dwarf-human, or, if you have the Halfling card, dwarf-halfling.
How many cards does each person get in Munchkin?
four cards
Deal four cards from each deck to each player. Keep separate face-up discard piles for the two decks. You may not look through the discards unless you play a card that allows you to!
How long does a game of Munchkin take?
Munchkin (card game)
| Old box cover | |
|---|---|
| Publication | September 2001 |
| Setup time | 1–2 minutes |
| Playing time | 1–2 hours |
| Random chance | High |
What do people of color do when they use the race card?
Here are two things people of color are actually doing when they “use the race card.” 1. Rejecting Societal Whitewashing and Colorblindness “This land is your land, this land is my land…” “Puerto Rico isn’t a colony.” “We elected a Black president, so racism is over.”
What’s the problem with using the race card?
The problem with the race card is that noone is allowed to use it. When a white person suggests that a black person is using it, the white person is accused of being ‘in denial’ about race, racism, discrimination and history. When a non-white person uses it, they are accused of defaulting to race as an ‘excuse’ for whatever it is that transpired.
Can a person win with the race card?
Noone can win with the ‘race card’ and yet there it is: Ready to be ‘played’ and everyone in fear of what will happen when it does get played. A stand-off much colder and more volatile than the Cold War. Though like the slow dissipation of the Cold War, race is getting to be less and less of an issue.
What happens if you teach a course on race?
The course content may challenge student’s deeply held beliefs and assumptions about themselves and society. It may raise questions regarding who has the right to speak or teach about issues related to race, evoke a wide range of emotions, and foment interpersonal conflicts.