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  1. Games
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Monkey Palace: A Lego Board Game review - "Once you have wrapped your head around the rules, it can be a genuinely great time"

Reviews
By Rollin Bishop last updated 13 November 2025
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A collection of Lego bricks with a monkey on
(Image credit: © Rollin Bishop)

GamesRadar+ Verdict

Monkey Palace is a great time once you get going, but actually getting to the point where you and any other players are quickly moving through turns is a bit of a struggle. The rules as written make perfect sense once you wrap your head around them, but it feels like there must have been some better way of conveying the same information. Even with some growing pains, however, actually playing the game is good fun and a few stumbling blocks out of the gate is a small price to pay.

$27.97 at Amazon
$33.59 at Target

Pros

  • +

    Simple to play once you understand how

  • +

    Physically building the palace taller and taller is very satisfying

  • +

    A vast number of possible combinations of pieces, cards, and so on

Cons

  • -

    Initially confusing rules

  • -

    Good luck figuring out how to store all of this in the box

Best picks for you
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  • The best Lego sets 2026 from Star Wars to Marvel, chosen by experts

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  • Gameplay
  • Should you buy
  • How we tested
Recent updates

November 13, 2025: This review was originally published in 2024, but has since but added to with information about (and comparisons to) the newest Lego board game, Brick Like This.

Monkey Palace is an enjoyable, relatively quick Lego board game – once you get past the rules. The idea is to build, as the name implies, a monkey palace of sorts using arches and supporting bricks to go higher and higher. Up to four players must try to literally one-up each other in order to plot the highest path with the largest point total. At an estimated 45 minutes for each individual game, it's a good way to test your ability to think analytically as well as your friendships.

Depending on how high you go, where you started, and how many arches you used, you're assigned a point value that can be redeemed for cards. These cards determine how many blocks you get immediately as well as your recurring bank of blocks – but more importantly, they also have a banana point value. At the end of a Monkey Palace session, it's all about how many banana points you have; as in so many of the best board games, nothing else matters but your score.

If that sounds a bit complicated, well, yes. It does sound complicated, and trust me when I say reading the rulebook isn't going to help you consider Monkey Palace anything but fiddly. There's really no getting around it, however, and once you have wrapped your head around the rules, it can be a genuinely great time.

Article continues below

Monkey Palace: A Lego Board Game features & design

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Price

$39.99 / £42.99

Ages

10+

Game type

Construction

Players

2 - 4

Lasts

45mins

Complexity

Moderate

Designers

David Gordon, TAM

Publisher

Dotted Games

Play if you enjoy

Lego, building games, monkeys

  • A resource management game
  • Build as high as you can
  • Starts simple, gets much more complex

Helpfully, because it's a board game built with Lego, the vast majority of the game's pieces are just… Lego bricks of some flavor or another. (If you're a fan of the best Lego sets, you'll feel right at home.) Mostly this is arches, columns, or single bricks with some additional decorative plants as well as a monkey, toad, and butterfly. And, of course, the base grid itself – which is covered with one of three different possible sheets to produce different kinds of maps.

Beyond the Lego bricks and the three maps, there are four different player trackers in addition to a whole mess of different cards. While the vast majority of the cards are indicative of how many Lego bricks a player should grab on a given round, some are simply meant to tally points with the game's rules being fairly clear on when that actually triggers.

The Lego Monkey Palace board game board, pieces, and cards laid out on a green surface

(Image credit: Rollin Bishop)

As for the rulebook, there is helpfully a QR code on the box itself as well as on the first page of the rules that will likely be far more helpful than the written instructions. But for those folks that aren't able to spend time watching a video, there's honestly nothing better for understanding than playing a couple of times after getting at least a rudimentary concept of what you're supposed to do.

Gameplay

A view of the Lego Monkey Palace board, cards, and pieces laid out on a green surface

(Image credit: Rollin Bishop)
  • Manage resources over several turns
  • Multiple starting points for a variety of outcomes
  • Earn banana points by building as high as you can

The game itself plays just fine and in a relatively intuitive way once you've actually figured it out, but if you're only using the rulebook, there might be a bit of confusion when you get started. More than once, for example, I found myself trying to puzzle out exactly what might count for points when the rules mentioned only five bricks high or more without arches but including decoration would count toward a specific objective.

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The fact that Monkey Palace uses Lego bricks as such an integral part of it is both a blessing and a curse. The vast majority of people that play Monkey Palace are absolutely going to be familiar with the iconic building toy, making it rather simple to understand the fact that the main point of the game is to build up bigger and better than your rivals. But trying to apply a fluid framework to something that many adults might associate with explicit instructions is its own challenge, and it took multiple turns before I really began to understand all the possibilities at my fingertips that weren't simply "put this Lego brick on top of this Lego brick" over and over again.

Building a collection

Hands piece together Lego bricks, while other hands hold onto cards at a table

(Image credit: Lego)

Since Monkey Palace launched, another Lego board game has arrived - Brick Like This. The latter is a party game that's reminiscent of charades, except you're building models rather than acting something out. It's much faster and light-hearted as a result, so will probably be a good fit for anyone that wants something easy-going to play with family or younger kids.

While Monkey Palace can technically be played with just two players, I'd recommend getting as close to the full roster as possible. Because games end when you run out of pieces to grab when refilling, more players means shorter games overall. It also typically means that it's not just you and one other person backstabbing each other on every turn – there are instead multiple folks to sink the figurative knife into.

Adding more players to the mix also increases the impact of all of your decisions. Every single Lego brick you add to the growing monkey palace complicates the next player's decisions that much more. If, for example, you're able to play the little monkey on an arch end because you began in a spot that ended in a golden brick at the highest level yet, that path being blocked for multiple other players is much more significant. If it's just you and one other person trading back and forth, as my first game was, it's just as likely that you'll curse yourself with your previous decisions as you are to give your opponent a headache.

In other words? This isn't going to rank amongst the best 2-player board games anytime soon... but it's a blast with a larger head-count.

Should you buy Monkey Palace?

Monkey Palace cards laid out in a row on a green surface

(Image credit: Rollin Bishop)

If you're really into Lego or want a relatively fast-paced game with familiar pieces, Monkey Palace is an easy recommendation. I'm quite picky about what games remain in rotation on my board game shelf, and Monkey Palace has settled into its own spot thanks in large part to the physicality of building wild structures.

Ratings

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Category

Notes

Score

Game mechanics

This is a fast-paced and surprisingly astute game that encourages you to think analytically.

4/5

Accessibility

The rulebook won't help you grasp what could already be a confusing concept.

2/5

Replayability

There are multiple starting points and potential opportunities branching off them, so you won't get bored soon.

4/5

Setup and pack-down

By virtue of its many, many Lego pieces, this can be a pain to pack away and store.

3/5

Component quality

Unsurprisingly for a game with Lego in it, Monkey Palace's pieces are of a high quality.

4/5

Buy it if...

✅ You enjoy board games where you make something
It's not often that you build a structure of some sort in board games, and that's the whole point of Monkey Palace.

✅ You like light-hearted competitive board games
It's not co-op, but neither is it cutthroat. This game will challenge you just enough to keep most players invested, yet it isn't overly complex. Most family-members should get to grips with it fine.

Don't buy it if...

❌ You hate dealing with a bunch of Lego bricks
There are... a lot of them here. If building a structure out of Lego doesn't sound like your idea of a good time, steer clear.

❌ You really need to read rules and fully understand them before playing
The rulebook is a bit of a headache and might lead to some confusion. It's arguably the game's weakest point.

How we tested Monkey Palace

The arches of Lego Monkey Palace, with clasped hands behind it leaning on a green surface beside cards

(Image credit: Rollin Bishop)
Disclaimer

This review was conducted using a sample provided by the publisher.

We played Monkey Palace several times with the different maps and optional rules. To find out more, see our guide to how we test board games. You might also read our wider GamesRadar+ reviews policy.


For recommendations, don't miss the best family board games.

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Rollin Bishop
Rollin Bishop
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US Managing Editor

Rollin is the US Managing Editor at GamesRadar+. With over 16 years of online journalism experience, Rollin has helped provide coverage of gaming and entertainment for brands like IGN, Inverse, ComicBook.com, and more. While he has approximate knowledge of many things, his work often has a focus on RPGs and animation in addition to franchises like Pokemon and Dragon Age. In his spare time, Rollin likes to import Valkyria Chronicles merch and watch anime.

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