1 – 5 players | 90 – 120 minutes
Play the role of a brave Emberling on a mission to rebuild your home and win the hearts of your people.
Learn how to play Emberleaf by watching a video or download the rulebook for the game here.
Find answers to frequently asked questions and get clarifications on how specific cards work here.
Emberleaf is a competitive card-dancing and tile-placement game for 1-5 players.
Watch Emberleaf being played and hear from independent reviewers about their thoughts on the game.
Please keep comments friendly, any rude or degrading comments will be removed.
6 comments
Kimberly
28th September 2024 at 9:38 pm
If I back the game on kickstarter, when is the estimated date of shipping?
Frank West
29th September 2024 at 12:08 pm
Hi Kimberly, the shipping date is estimated to be August 2025. I hope this helps!
Bianca
27th November 2024 at 12:22 pm
I missed this one. Any chance of getting a late pledge or obtaining this via a German localisation?
Thanks a bunch!
Frank West
27th November 2024 at 3:53 pm
Hi Bianca,
At present there are no plans for translations of Emberleaf, and while this may change in the future, it means it would be at least a year away. For the English version, late pledges will open in the next two weeks on gamefound. This website will update once the late pledges open.
I hope this helps!
claudio cavalensi
26th August 2025 at 6:55 pm
Loving the game. I wonder if the only way to acquire new hero cards is only by homing first villager of each species of if there is any other way to do that. Seems a bit reductive to be able to acquire only 4 hero card per game. Thanks for your reply in advance!
Frank West
26th August 2025 at 9:17 pm
Hi Claudio, I’m glad to hear you’re enjoying the game!
You are correct that you can only recruit 4 extra hero cards each play. They are designed to be powerful, so limiting them to a few each game pushes you to optimise, and still leaves lots of room for combos and strategy. Over multiple plays you’ll see different heroes appear, so the full variety of the deck comes through in the long run.