Monday, January 02, 2006

Monday is a day of cleaning up, packing, and heading home.  That doesn’t mean we can’t fit in a few games.

I woke up fairly early to watch the Iowa / Florida game.  By halftime there wasn’t much to see, so I moved back to the table to do my day 3 post and watched Ken, KC, and Rita play the Terrain Game.  This game doesn’t have the highest rating on BGG, but apparently KC has a variant that made the game a bit more playable.  He promises to make a post soon on the ‘geek with some more details.

The Terrain Game

KC recently designed a kid’s game based on the annoying but addictive flash animation Badger Badger Badger.  It is a press-your-luck tile drawing game that the younger kids seemed to like quite a bit, especially Matthew.

Badger Badger

KC and I also played a nice little prototype of Kevin Nunn’s Counter Spy game.  This is the best two-player game prototype we’ve had and will very likely go into another round of play-testing with our local group.  It has a CCG feel without the deck building aspect – lots of take-that and hand management.  I’ve played four times so far and each game has been close with plenty of tension.

Counter Spy

The final game played here for New Year’s 2006 is of course Magic: the Gathering.  The kids continue to enjoy their cards from Ravnica and we look forward to some trading from our sealed deck acquisitions to tune our decks a bit more.

Last Magic Game

Overall the weekend was a fantastic success – we saw much more gaming participation from traditional non-gamers this weekend, a specific goal that KC and I had.  The hit party game of the weekend was a tie between Catch Phrase and Plext.  My favorite gamer-games of the weekend were Atlantic Star and Byzantium.

posted on Monday, January 02, 2006 6:47:17 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1]

A stormy day at the coast means there’s no good reason to leave the house.  More gaming goodness.

I started off the day with a four-player game of Barbarossa with Julie, Ken, and Jacob.  This is a great little game that offers a surprising amount of strategy and subtlety for what appears on the surface to be a light clay molding party game.  The goal is to make sculptures that are guessable but not too easy.  You can see in the picture below our 8 sculptures – take your guesses, and I’ll give answers at the bottom of this post.

Barbarossa

KC had a hankering to get out his beautifully produced copy of Tal der Könige.  This is a pyramid building game that involves some interesting bidding mechanisms and movement-plotting and we enjoyed it quite a bit. Each player has two bosses that can bring workers to construction sites to build pyramids.  The pyramids are built with blocks that are won in an auction at the start of each turn (blind bidding with tiles).  After the auction, players plot moves for their bosses; this is where the interaction comes in.

Tal der Konig

You can move your boss to another player’s building site to steal building cubes from unfinished pyramids or, in special circumstances, steal the site from the player.  We had a decent amount of conflict in the game and it kept the bickering and jabbing at a high but enjoyable level.  There are defensive measures you can take to prevent stealing, but it is costly and can slow down expansion and building.

I went for the many-ugly pyramid strategy (not intentionally) and did decently, finishing second.  Ken was left alone for the early part of the game and stayed strong enough to win the game.  This is a great game that I’d like to play again.

Tal der Konig Closeup

For mid– to late-afternoon, we engaged in a four-on-four Memoir ‘44 Overlord game.  Ken and I took the commanding general roles; Justin, Brandon, and Matthew were my field generals for the allies while KC, Josh, and Jacob were Ken’s field generals for the axis.  We played one of the expansion scenarios, can’t remember the name but it was July 1944 in France.

Memoir 44 Overlord Setup

As the attackers we had to take some risks and try to capture some of the axis forward fortified cities.  It was rough going and we lost 3–4 units in the process.  The game stayed fairly even for the first hour, but once I put a time/round limit on the game (we have to eat dinner, you know!) the axis made a major counter-attack to try and get a point advantage before game end.  Not only did they succeed in that, they accumulated all 12 medals they needed to win the game.  Overlord is a great way to play Memoir and I think everyone had a great time.

Memoir 44 Overlord

 The kids went swimming for a while and upon return we had a small Texas Hold’em tournament.  Ken was nice enough to stay with the kids and keep things in order.

Poker Tournament

All of the players stayed in for a surprisingly long time, but Matthew held his own in the end and won the final pot with a flush (two hearts in the hole).

Matthew Wins the Tournament

While the kids (and Ken) played poker the rest of us played some lighter card games.  First up was Olympia 2000, a light game of olympic sports.  The basic idea is you have a set of cards in your hand and you secretly choose an athlete to compete in the next event.  Very much a luckfest, but there are ways to influence the direction of the game as you can try to finish last in an event which allows you to choose what the next event in the queue will be.  Not my favorite game but a fun little diversion.

Olympia 2000

Julie was the champion in both games and was quite proud of her success.

Julie Wins

Next up was Trendy, the Knizia game of fashion and runway modeling.  There’s some nice balance in scoring and card counts and some great player interaction, especially in trying to shut down the leader.  Overall a fun game and one I enjoyed quite a bit more than Olympia.  Maybe that’s because I won. 

KC, Rita, Justin, and I also played another game of Tichu.  This game is getting more fun the more I play – reminds me of my early years playing spades and how much I enjoyed the team aspect of that game.  I’m improving but still very green on strategy, but the game has been a blast.

Trendy

The final game of the night was Atlantic Star.  This was a cheap pickup at Essen (about 10 Euro) and having played it I think it was my best purchase of the show.  This was easily one of my favorite gaming experiences of the weekend.  We played with six and this easily ranks as the best six-player game I’ve played.  Plenty of player interaction, minimal downtime, and some decent but not too heavy strategy involved.

Atlantic Star

I did pretty well, finishing two points behind the winner KC.  Everyone had fun and I think we’ll see this game coming out again soon.

Answers to Barbarossa Puzzle: Clockwise from front center are shovel, cell-phone, brick, peach, kite, bottle, camera.

posted on Monday, January 02, 2006 3:56:33 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3]
 Sunday, January 01, 2006

First, Happy New Year!  We’ve had a great day of gaming at the coast, including some 3–on–3 basketball action down at the outdoor half-court.

Highlights for today: Byzantium, Oltremare, Electronic Catchphrase, and a sealed deck Magic: the Gathering / Ravnica tournament.

The kids took it on themselves to play a five-player game of Shadows Over Camelot with the traitor, with Jacob explaining the rules.  Chelsea turned out to be the traitor but the boys assured me the knights reigned victorious.

Shadows Over Camelot

One of my as-yet-unplayed titles from Essen was the Martin Wallace title Byzantium.  It is 2:30am on Sunday morning here and hard to go into too much depth here, but rest assured that there’s a lot going on in this game.  There are also some very creative characteristics to the game that I haven’t seen before, but that might just be my limited exposure.  KC, Ken, Justin, and I played a four-player game that lasted close to four hours.

Each player has the ability to control factions of Arab and Byzantine forces in conflict in the middle-east and Asia minor.  Progress you make for Arabia and Byzantium are tracked on independent scoring tracks, and there are some constraints that encourage balancing VP generation between the two.  Typical of Wallace games, there are many choices players can select, causing initial confusion / dilemma as players learn the various moving parts and basic strategies.  The first turn (there are three in all) took close to two hours as we figured the basics out.

Byzantium

Each player controls an Arab and a Byzantine army and (usually) has a pawn on the board representing the current location of the army.  The essence of the game is using your armies to attack cities controlled by the other side (Arab armies attack Byzantine cities) to gain victory points, though there are exceptions that include civil wars against your own kind and an inability to attack yourself (remember you are on both sides!).

Byzantium Closeup

Actions are short enough that downtime was limited, a big bonus in my book (that’s why I like Antike so much).  In our game it looked like KC was in the running for the win for most of the game, but Justin surprised us all with an Arab mad dash across the north of Turkey to take a shot at Constantinople.  While the attack failed, the damage he did along the way was enough to secure a tie with me in VPs at the end of the game, with Justin winning the first tie-breaker.  The game was tight overall, with KC finishing a single point behind and Ken only about 5 behind him.

I think I’m more inclined to play this again than the others, as I think much of our frustration was from first-play confusion rather than any problems with the game itself.  This is a deep Wallace game after all and you need to get in 2–3 plays before it starts to sink in.  I’m rating it a 7 right now but that might increase.

We all took a break 6 of us walked the half mile to the basketball courts for some 3–on–3 fun and exercise.  I mention this to make it clear that we do get outside from time to time.

Most of the kids decided to go for a swim after dinner, so Ken, Brandon, KC, Rita, and I played my new copy of Oltremare from Essen.  I’m a big fan of this game, though after my first play with five I wonder if it is much better with 3 or 4.  I felt that the game ended too quickly (i.e., with too few turns) and exaggerated some of the luck of the draw differences.  Case in point: I never drew a card with more than 2 cargo markers and was unable to trade for anything better.  This made it very difficult to get enough cards down to make long sets.

Oltremare Board

Still, it was fun and I think Rita and Brandon (first time players) enjoyed it very much.  The bits in the new version are largely gratuitous and hardly helpful.  As you can see in the photo above we replaced the ships with color-coded bits (wooden trucks in this case) so we could actually see what color was where; those ships are completely worthless.  KC pulled out the big victory; Brandon and I tied for last.

Oltremare

While I organized the start of our Magic tournament, all of the women gathered around the Mystery of the Abbey board for some deduction goodness.

Mystery of the Abbey

For our Magic tournament, I provided a tournament pack plus three boosters from the Ravnica set.  We were all completely ignorant of the set, adding to the excitement of exploring a new set of cards and mechanics.  I’m not a big CCG fan, but this is still one of the best games ever made.  And it keeps on going…

I was hoping to try something different this year, perhaps involving blue or black as I tend to lean towards creature decks (green) or direct damage (red).  The cards spoke for themselves though, and it was fairly obvious that I should play green/white given some of the guild combos and hybrids in my set.  Ravnica introduces cards that can use either/or of two different mana types (green/white, white/red, blue/black, etc.).

Matthew Prepares His Deck

I did well in the swiss-style tournament, going undefeated and claiming the victory crown from Ken (he won last year).  Ken and Brandon finished tied for second and will have a playoff match in the morning to see who claims second place.  The games were a blast and everyone enjoyed the new set.

While we finished the tournament the rest of the crowd started a game of Electronic Catch phrase that lasted from 10:30pm until 1:30am.  This was a blast and by 12:30 we had almost the whole crew engaged.

Catchphrase

If you’ve never played this, run to Target or Toys R Us tomorrow and pick up a copy – just about any group will enjoy this game.  It was especially nice to see different generations deeply engaged, laughing, and enjoying such a great party game.

Julie and Josh Playing Catchphrase

I don’t know what tomorrow will bring – maybe another play of Indonesia or some prototypes.  You’ll know soon enough…

posted on Sunday, January 01, 2006 7:51:37 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Saturday, December 31, 2005

Friday was the kickoff day for our weekend gaming at Salishan with the Rude and Humphrey families.  That makes 13 bodies in all, so there are plenty of opportunities for a wide range of gaming.  Our goal is usually to bring out games we haven’t played yet or rarely get played in our normal sessions.  Here’s an example of the games with the potential of coming out this weekend.

Games to Play

I picked up Ra at BGG.Con in a trade with Keith Blume.  My first play of this was less than favorable, but given how popular the game is I figured I was missing something and took a chance on getting my own copy.  KC, Rita, Ken, and I sat down to play it as our first official game of the weekend.

Playing Ra

KC and Rita have played this game quite a lot, but Ken and I were essentially playing for the first time so we took some time to learn/explain the rules.  I must admit the mechanics are very simple, the game is streamlined and easy to learn, and I quite enjoyed playing.  The fact that I edged out KC for the victory 44–42 might have something to do with it.  I really did enjoy the push-your-luck element combined with the auctions.  There’s a decent amount of luck in the game but that’s OK as you can take steps to mitigate this effect through the bidding process.

Ra Closeup

Julie and Justin committed themselves to resuming their speed duels. Justin tells me he’s up by three games now.

Julie and Justin Prepare for Speed

After our game of Ra, I suggested we try out the Sid Sackson classic Venture.  This is a copy I purchased on eBay from Sid’s personal collection.  Not a bad little game – there are some similarities to Acquire in that players build out corporations, there are takeover mechanics, etc., but the game certainly does stand on its own.  There were a few oddities in the rules that don’t make much sense – money from proxy battles goes to the bank, not the player you steal the corporation from.  Shouldn’t the money go to the player?  Also, as you run low in cards you get penalized even further, because if you can’t afford to buy anything you must discard a card.  I realize this is a mechanic intended to force players to keep cards in their hands, but it seems a bit harsh.  The game went on a bit longer than we would have liked, but it was enjoyable and might be worth trying again with some rules tweaks.

Venture

Justin, Josh, Rita, Julie, and I then played the SimplyFun game Plext, an interesting little word game that was challenging and fun.  You shuffle a set of 14 dice and reveal them arranged in a linear sequence.  Players are then challenged to come up with a series of words that use all of the letters in sequence order, inserting as many letters as needed.  For example, if the sequence was “EQRPI” then you might write down “EQuestRian PIe”.  As soon as a player thinks he has a competitive (small) number of words that use up all the letters, he can call out his bid (the number of words), puts down his pencil, then starts the timer.  The other players then have that much time to come up with their own bid, which can be any number of words.  When the timer runs out, whoever had the first lowest bid gets the first shot at solving.  If his solution was correct (valid words, used all the letters), he wins victory points totaling 10 minus the number of words.  Repeat for eight rounds to determine the winner.

Plext

While we were playing Plext, KC and Ken played a game of Jambo.  I think KC won.

Jambo

We gave Barbarossa as a gift to the Rudes, so Julie, Jenna, Chelsea, and Brandon decided to give it a try.  Brandon says he enjoyed it very much, possibly influenced by the fact that he won.

Barbarossa

KC was eager to pull out McMulti, one of those hard-to-find holy grail games that often goes for $200+ on eBay.  The game took us close to 3 hours to play and while it was enjoyable, it is a bit too much of a luckfest for my tastes, especially for a game that long.

McMulti

There are some creative mechanics in the game, especially for a game from 1974.  My favorite is the cross-referenced die rolls that give production to the players on the right and left of the active player.  The economic system is pretty cool as well, though we played with a variant that throttles the economic cycle a bit.  KC, Ken, and I were all pretty close to each other, all surpassing the $1MM mark by the end of the game.  KC ended up the victor with Ken a close second.

McMulti Near Endgame

Our last game of the night was partnership Tichu, Ken/Chris vs. KC/Rita.  This was my first time through a whole game of this, so it was nice to get the rules and basic strategy ingrained.  I’m ready to try again, especially to get a chance to avenge our loss to KC and Rita.  It was a close match with both teams close to 600, but they shut us down two hands in a row pulling out the victory.

Tichu

 

posted on Saturday, December 31, 2005 7:19:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2]
 Friday, December 30, 2005

My grandmother Brooks passed away earlier this week.  While she was my father’s step-mother (his mother passed away at age 11), she was always my grandma Brooks and she will be missed.  This is her obituary; services were held earlier this morning.

Meta Jane Brooks, 91, of Shelbyville, died Monday, Dec. 26, 2005, at Morristown Manor, in Morristown.

Born Oct. 8, 1914, in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, she was the daughter of the late George and Imogene (Virden) Masters. She married Louis Brooks Dec. 8, 1951, and he preceded her in death Dec. 25, 1981.

Survivors include four sons, Michael (wife, Lynne) Brooks of Shelbyville, Tom (wife, Linda) Brooks of Cedar Falls, Iowa, John (wife, Ann) Brooks of Green Valley, Ariz., and Dan (friend, Jeri) Brooks of LaSalle, Ill.; five grandchildren; two stepgrandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; and two stepgreat-grandchildren.

Mrs. Brooks graduated from Iowa Wesleyan College, where she received a bachelor of science degree in home economics. She was later awarded an honorary doctorate degree from that school for her work in developing the science building on campus.

She was a home economics teacher, retiring in 1985 after 16 years in education.

Mrs. Brooks also was employed as a county home Extension director in Iowa; as director of home economics for Borg Warner Corp.; as a home economics teacher in LaSalle, Ill., where she founded the food service vocational program; and as a school bus attendant in Melbourne, Fla.

She was a member of the PEO and Alpha Xi Delta sorority.

Mrs. Brooks moved to Shelbyville in 1999 and was a resident of McKay Manor until she moved to Morristown Manor two years ago.

Friends and family may gather at 10:30 a.m. Friday at Carmony-Ewing Harrison Street Chapel, Freeman Family Funeral Homes, 819 S. Harrison St.

A memorial service will be at 11 a.m. Friday at the funeral home, with the Rev. Dr. Mary Lundgren and the Rev. Corlis Dees officiating.

Interment will be in Forest Home Cemetery, in Mount Pleasant.

Memorial contributions may be donated to Hospice of Shelby County, 110 South Harrison St., Shelbyville, IN 46176.

posted on Friday, December 30, 2005 5:36:17 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [4]
Scott Hanselman indirectly reminded me of the cool DasBlog feature showing the year of posts in calendar view.  I found it helpful, maybe you will too…
posted on Friday, December 30, 2005 5:14:00 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]

Last week before Christmas a group of us drove up 101 past Cascade Head (we hiked there earlier this year) to try out the Harts Cove Trail.

Harts Cove Trail

Karen woke up wanting to take a “mad hike”, whatever that is.  We came to learn this means running as much of the trail as possible.  The entire crew included, left to right, Karen, Mike, Powell, Julie, Dave, Lisa, and me (taking the picture).

Group Shot Before the Hike

The first 3/4 of a mile or so is straight down via switchbacks, about a 900 foot drop in all.  We started the trail with a brisk walk, but soon Karen turned it into a jog and Mike and I joined her.  We ran for about the first 1.5 miles or so, slowing down as we started to encounter a lot of tree fall.  The trail closes down on January 1, and I see why as the trail will soon be impassable.  The trail passes through beautiful stands of giant sitka spruce and groves of the ferns all too common on the Oregon coast.

After about 2.5 miles, the trail opens into the final meadow revealing the coast and Harts Cove.  Karen and I continued down to the volcanic rocks bordering the rough coastline.

Chris, Mike, and Dave

You can see the stream flowing into the cove in the background of the picture below – this cascading stream is how Cascade Head got its name (Harts Cove is on the northern side of Cascade Head).

Chris and Karen Near the Falls

On the way back we walked for about a mile then Mike and I resumed our jogging.  I fell twice, bruising my knees, and twisted my right ankle something fierce (it swelled up into a baseball sized lump later that night) but managed to run about a mile or so and walked the final death march back up the car. A fun but difficult hike and highly recommended.

 

posted on Friday, December 30, 2005 5:04:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2]

I continually tweak my podcast subscription list based on interests, quality, word of mouth, and time budget.  I posted previously giving an assessment of the boardgame-related podcasts, but the landscape has changed quite a bit and my subscriptions have expanded.  One of my favorites has disappeared completely… will it return?

Gaming Related

This remains my favorite category and occupies most of my car listening time.

  • The Dice Tower – Somewhat begrudgingly, this is my favorite podcast.  Tom and Joe grow on me and I believe they are just genuinely good guys and fun to be around.  They are diligent about their production schedule and I like their top 10 lists.  If you can get past the mispronunciations, there’s a lot to like about this show.
  • Boardgames-to-Go – Mark has tailed off during the holiday season but I’m confident he’ll sustain a good production schedule in 2006.  I like his intelligent, self-deprecating approach and meeting him at BGG.Con only confirmed that he’s such a nice guy with interesting things to say about games.
  • Have Games Will Travel – I’m glad I discovered this one, as I get more out of Paul’s RPG reviews and commentary than boardgames.  His reviews are encouraging me to consider leaving the D20 realm with my RPG gaming group as soon as the kids are old enough to explore some more advanced themes and systems.
  • Pulp Gamer – A bit too much of a beer-and-pretzels game focus, but I love the interviews they’ve landed (James Ernest, Margaret Weis) and the show continues to improve.
  • Geek Fu Action Grip – On the fence here, as Mur is a bit too much on the comic / sci-fi fringe for me.  She’s an outstanding writer though and her essays keep me coming back.  I wish she would do more game reviews.
  • Board Game Speak – Where art thou?

Digital Photography

I’ve committed to myself to increase my photography skills dramatically in 2006, both on the shooting front and digital dark-room post-processing front.  These podcasts along with some reading study are helping me along the way.

  • Tips from the Top Floor – Still my favorite photography podcast, somewhat reinforced by the fact that I got to meet Chris in Germany last December.  I am concerned that Chris spends too much time on meta-speak about the podcast itself – he needs to stay focused on photography and his tips, perhaps putting meta-speak at the end of the show.
  • Secrets of Digital Imaging – This one got off to a rough start, with Dennis having similar meta-speak issues, but this one gets better and better.  I especially enjoyed Dennis’ workflow series and I even bought his Photoshop Elements workflow reference card.  Keep up the good work!
  • Two Minute Photoshop Tricks – A nice podcast focused on Photoshop, it would be better if I would listen to it while at a computer instead of in the car.

Technology

  • Ruby on Rails – Whoa, this one had a rough start in terms of audio quality and content, but Geoffrey Grosenbach continues to improve with each show.  I especially appreciate the recent post on Smalltalk / Seaside, a nice change from the “cult of Rails” insularism that may be imminent.

Comedy

  • Ricky Gervais – I’ve listened to  a few of the shows and give it about a B.  I’ll likely unsubscribe to this as I just got… an XM radio for my birthday!  Woot!

If there’s anything else I should be listening to based on what you see here, post it in the comments!

 

posted on Friday, December 30, 2005 4:43:06 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [4]
Alfred’s Best of the Blogosphere is moving to a new location – Best of Boardgames.  Subscribed.
posted on Friday, December 30, 2005 4:06:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Thursday, December 29, 2005

Greetings from the Oregon coast, again.  I’m back here for New Years weekend so expect to see some more posts with gaming goodness.

Last night I had the opportunity to try out Mesopotamia at Mike’s annual between Christmas and New Years game day.  I arrived about 3pm and joined Carey and George in this new Mayfair / Phalanx release while others played Medici.  Sorry, no pics for this session.

Mesopotamia is at its heart an exploration and pick up and deliver game.  The initial setup has a temple in the center of a set of six interlocking tiles that form a ring around the temple.  The players start with villagers and a hut on a tile adjacent to the center.  Tiles are forests, quarries (or some other stone producing land), volcanoes, and plains.  The objective of the game is deliver four offerings to the temple, with each offering requiring a different “mana” level for the offering (2, 4, 6, and 7).  Players start with a mana cap of 3 so must increase that cap through the game by helping to build the center temple with stones, presumably increasing their favor with the gods.

On your turn you get to move villagers a total of five spaces, divided up as you choose amongst your villagers.  This is how you explore new tiles (by moving off the map), pick up wood, stone, or offerings, and deliver offerings or stone to the temple at the center.  You are not allowed to carry resources through the temple, which causes some interesting movement restrictions to the game effectively dividing the board space in half.  This is because the initial setup involves impassable volcanoes on opposite sides of the temple (I didn’t know there was such an abundance of volcanoes in Mesopotamia, but whatever).

After movement is complete you can choose from any of four actions:

  • Build a new hut on a plains tile with 0 or 1 huts on it.  When you build a hut, you secretly choose one of your offering counters and place it under the hut.  This is what you’ll need to pick up and deliver to the center temple.
  • Build a holy place – if you have two villagers on an empty plains space and one of them is carrying stone, you can build a holy place there.  Holy places are one of the ways you produce mana.
  • Reproduce new villagers – if you have two villagers at a hut (presumably for the privacy), you can spawn a new villager at that hex.  You can do this as many times as you want as long as you have enough villagers to reproduce.  You can only do this if huts on the space have no offering counters under them.
  • Draw a card.  There are a number of cards that grant special actions or opportunities to screw the other players (such as relocating a hut).  You can only draw one card per turn, and then only if you do no other actions.

We played the first half of the game completely wrong – we didn’t realize you had to choose from one of these four actions, so we started off by doing a number on the same turn.  This sped up the game considerably and made game decisions very straightforward.  Once we realized the error, things slowed down quite a bit and decisions became quite difficult.

I managed to draw a few cards that helped me slow down George considerably, and he was my closest competitor.  I managed to finish my offerings first, about 1–2 turns ahead of George, giving me the win in this initial game that we played incorrectly.  Still, this is a decent game and I hope to try it again soon.  It feels similar to Lost Valley, but this game is quite a bit lighter and easier to explain.  It is MUCH more abstract though – the theme didn’t really do much for me.  The components are first rate and the rules are quite well written despite our problems – that was operator error and not a reflection on Phalanx or Mayfair.

If you are a fan of light, fairly abstract euros and like exploration mechanics then you should try this game.  It plays in about an hour and had some nice mechanics and I had fun.  I’m a bit worried that the cards are too strong (and unbalanced) and that victory might just come down to who draws the better cards, but I very well could be wrong.

posted on Thursday, December 29, 2005 11:35:43 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]