Endless Games Murdle Board Game | Based on The Crime Puzzle Book | Murder Mystery Game for 2-4 Players, Ages 12+
$21.99 Original price was: $21.99.$8.88Current price is: $8.88.






Detective Logico is on the case! Using your logic grid and deductive reasoning, narrow down the list of suspects, weapons, and locations to figure out exactly what happened here. Your fellow detectives all have different information, so you’ll have to decide what evidence to share and what you’ll keep to yourself. Who will catch the killer first in this mind-bending game of crime and critical thinking? Includes 1 Logic Game Board, 100 Note Sheets, 4 Evidence Folders, 16 Evidence Cards (Tabbed), 16 Murdle Cards, 48 Tokens (12 ✓ Tokens, 36 X Tokens), 12 Discovery Cards, 3 Accusation Tokens, 4 Privacy Screens, and Complete Instructions. Recommended for 2-4 players, ages 12 and up.
Based on the best-selling crime puzzle book comes a board game where murder mystery meets deductive reasoning
Solve a different mystery every time you play
Use the logic grid and the power of deductive reasoning to correlate suspects, weapons, locations, and, of course, verdicts to catch the killer before anyone else
Includes 1 Game Board, 100 Note Sheets, 4 Evidence Folders, 16 Evidence Cards (tabbed), 16 Board Cards, 48 Tokens (12 ✓, 36 X), 12 Discovery Cards, 3 Accusation Tokens, 4 Privacy Screens, and Complete Instructions
Recommended for 2-4 players, ages 12 and up

Sarah Ren –
LOVE
Seriously so much fun, great for game night!
Jaqui –
Great for a family, not an adult game night
This is a fun game for a family or 10-15 year olds, but it leaves a little to be desired for those who are used to Murdle’s typical difficulty level. It’s boxed very nicely and is high quality overall, but ultimately it’s a process of elimination game with fewer options than Clue.
JMmedeiros –
Great game
My kids really enjoy this mystery game! We play it as a family and it’s gets them away from screen time, win-win!
Lauren P. –
FUN Game
Very fun game for my 8 year old. She loves mysteries and this game has kept her occupied for hours. Very fun to play, easy to learn and great value for the money.
Haley –
Great gift!
Gifted to a friend that loves the puzzle books, true crime and board games!
Alice Cooper –
Great game for family. Design could be better.
This is a great game for our family. My 17 year old, whenever there is a few minutes available will say “Murdle? and we’ll sit down and play. Each time we play takes about 15 minutes. It is a bit of ‘game of luck’ tho, so you want to be the lucky one! Per the instructions, we played the first time as an open book and that helped us learn the fastest.It’s ok value for the money. The game itself isn’t put together the best. For example, the papers don’t fit entirely into the paper holders and the ‘for your eyes only’ cards get stuck into their holders. Kind of odd that they wouldn’t have designed that better.
Victoria Biehn –
Fun game for the family
Fun game. Bought for my 13 year old and he absolutely loves playing the game. Easy to learn, gets a little repetitive but fun for preteens and even as family.
Ashley White –
Husband loves this book. It has kept him busy by the pool on holiday. Have had several other murdle books. Would recommend.
Sophie –
Such a great gift and we love playing it, a good intro to the game before you get the book
Matt –
A great adaption of the Murdle puzzle game into a competitive multi-player board game.We found that the rules as described meant that the optimal play was just to keep drawing for wild cards to reveal verdict cards fishing for a guilty verdict and then completing that folder’s set to achieve a win. This rendered making deductions and grid completion sort of redundant.One situation arose where a player drew a wildcard on their first turn, looked at the verdict for the folder they had gained their initial two clue cards from, which turned out to be guilty. They only needed the remaining clue on their second turn and they won on the third turn. The game had barely started and it felt very unsatisfying.So we tried a few games where wildcards don’t allow you to look at verdicts, the only remaining way to check them being revealing a matching pair (a tick on the grid). This made the game much more interesting, and brought making grid deductions back into being the primary focus of the game, and giving the revealing of truths to search for verdicts a sort of finale or endgame feel to it.I very much recommend playing with this house rule: Wildcards don’t let you look at verdicts. It turns an okay game into a great game.
john ellis –
Excellent mind bending puzzles.
S R –
My son & friends loved this last Xmas. Good pressy