Treasure Quest is another single-player logic game by Thinkfun. It’s great for those times when one treasure-obsessed child needs to be kept occupied, but no one else is free to play a game with them.
Included in the game are the grooved game tray (similar to Rush Hour’s), 40 challenge cards, and 21 game tokens. The game is also supposed to come with a storage bag, but we got our game used and it was missing our bag.
Treasure Quest Level 1




The 21 game tokens include the hero, 4 gold masks, 8 arrows, and 8 stationary blocking tokens. To play, choose your level, and place the card in the slot for it on the game tray. Set up your pieces as the card shows; the spot with the red X is where the hero piece starts.
This is Level 13. You need to get both gold masks out.
How to Play Treasure Quest
Move the hero piece around the game tray, always sliding up, down, right, or left. He can’t move diagonally and can’t jump over obstacles. He can push the arrow pieces (in the direction of their arrows only) and the gold mask(s). The only pieces that can be pushed out of the game tray are the gold masks and the hero.
Cards progress in difficulty, so start with the first one and do each in order. If you get stuck and really need the solution, the answers are on the backs of the cards.

Not my Favorite Single-Player Game

I think Treasure Quest is my least favorite single-player game we have, but my son has long been obsessed with treasure and it was cheap from the thrift store. That said, it’s still a great game, and worth it if you can find it cheap.
This is Level 37.
