I had the pleasure of attending the
GameStorm convention in Portland, OR last weekend. I had business
travel on Friday and a Cub Scout Pinewood Derby to run most of Saturday, but
managed to spend time at the con Saturday evening and most of Sunday. I
went by myself Saturday, but brought the whole family on Sunday. KC
Humphrey ran an excellent "Intro to Euros" session on Sunday that I thought
would be perfect for my wife Julie, son Jacob (age 8), and Matthew (age 6).
I had originally planned to just take Jacob, but Matthew became pretty
distraught at being excluded and I decided to take a chance and bring him.
He has played Carcassonne, Settlers, and a few other similar games.
Saturday Evening - Solo
Settlers
of Catan - Cities and Knights
I have played Settlers of Catan as well as the 2 player card game, but never
this expansion. It took a while to understand the mechanics, and I found
myself trailing most of the game (we played 5 players on the 4 player board).
I really enjoyed the added complexity of this expansion - there are more choices
to make and more tension created by the raids. I enjoyed this so much I
bought the expansion from a retailer at the convention. I ended up
finishing in the middle of the pack with 8 victory points but only got that
close when an opponent interrupted one of the two leaders' longest road with a
knight, giving me the new longest road.
Carcassonne
I managed to get in two casual games of Carcassonne in the open playing area.
I played against two opponents that were just learning, and there was some
initial confusion on the scoring, particularly for the farmers. I won the
first game and finished second in the second game.
Sunday - with the Family
Our morning was spent with KC Humphrey and Jay Schindler who were running the
Intro to Euros track, designed primarily to introduce families to German-style
games. We hit it off - KC and Jay were just fabulous with the kids; they
made the day worthwhile.
Liar's Dice
Believe it or not, I had never played this game, and it was the biggest hit
of the day with the kids. Probably because it was the first time they were
able to repeatedly call their mother a liar! This is a keeper and I'll be
looking for this at a thrift store soon. Matthew, Jacob, and Jay won with
5 dice (we stopped when the first player ran out of dice).
Viva Pamplona
The theme was a blast - running with the bulls in Pamplona and accumlating
bravery points. We raced along trying to stay close to the bull, and KC
ended up accumulating the most points.
Wildlife
Adventure
I loved the cards and theme for this game - traveling the world trying to
locate endagered species. We played very cooperatively, and Julie was the
first to go out and accumulated the most animals.
6 Tage
Rennen
I've heard that this game about bicycle racing is fairly rare (it was
published in 1988). It was moderately enjoyable, but I don't see much
replay value. This is a game where a random factor would actually help.
Coming from behind seems almost impossible. Toni, a young girl that joined
us for a while, pulled ahead at the end for the victory.
Aquarius
After finishing the Intro to Euros session and having some lunch, we spent
about two hours at a Looney Labs demo.
I've played Fluxx
and several of the
Icehouse games, so was eager to try a few more Looney games. We first
tried Aquarius, a card game similar to dominos. Very light but enjoyable,
but given a choice between this and Fluxx I think we'd usually choose Fluxx.
Matthew won this one.
Martian
Chess
Jacob and I gave the Icehouse game of Martian Chess a try next - even though
we have several Icehouse stashes we had yet to try this one. We both found
ourselves making bonehead moves - it is hard to get used to controlling the
pieces by location, not color. I sneaked by and won 15-12.
Chrononauts
Jacob and I sat down with two others to try this. It looked a bit
daunting for Jacob given the historical context for the game, but we both loved
it. Definitely a heavier game than Fluxx (in fact, the heaviest Looney
game that I've played). Jacob sneaked up and won this one.
Carabande
I've always wanted to play this - our family has enjoyed carom boards (we
have one and several of our Indian friends do as well), so the combination of a
flicking game with racing was a sure hit for the boys. They spent 90
minutes here and we had to drag them away. Not sure I want to fork over
the $ for my own copy, but I'll give it serious consideration.