Players
2–6
supported
A free score keeper and score calculator for Power Grid — tally every round, track totals, and find the winner. Plus how scoring works in this strategy.
2–6
supported
120 min
typical
3.3 / 5
BGG weight
2004
Friedemann Friese
Enter names and points — totals, the current leader, and the winner update instantly. Add as many rounds as your game runs.
Enter the points to tally the Power Grid scoreboard.
| Round | ||
|---|---|---|
| Round 1 | ||
| Round 2 | ||
| Round 3 | ||
| Total | 0 | 0 |
In this game the highest total wins.
Power Grid was designed by Friedemann Friese and published in 2004 for 2–6 players, with a typical play time of about 120 minutes. Power the most cities in the final round.
Power Grid ends when a player connects a set number of cities; the winner is whoever can actually power the most cities that final round, with leftover money breaking ties. The score is simply cities supplied with electricity.
Hover the bars for exact values.
Hover the markers for the values.
Winning totals usually land between 14 and 20 points.
Hover the bars for the values.
100+ score keepers and calculators for the most popular board games.
Browse all gamesPower Grid ends when a player connects a set number of cities; the winner is whoever can actually power the most cities that final round, with leftover money breaking ties. The score is simply cities supplied with electricity.
In Power Grid, the highest total score wins. Power the most cities in the final round.
Winning totals in Power Grid usually fall between 14 and 20 points, with a typical result around 17.
Power Grid supports 2–6 players. This score keeper tracks up to eight columns at once.
Yes — the keeper runs entirely in your browser. Enter names and points and the totals and winner update instantly. Nothing is stored or sent anywhere.