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Showing posts from 2018

Rattlebones

Another game I was introduced to this year is Rattlebones . It is a unique game for 2-4 players that incorporates customize-able dice that help you to move your set of meeples around the game board. The dice are six sided but have interchangeable faces on them. This allows the players to make their dice uniquely their own while you play. The dice themselves come with a tool to pop out the sides (be careful these pieces really can fly) and allow you to put a new piece into the dice face. These new pieces let you change out number faces as well as adding new (non number) faces that you pick up from moving your pieces around the board. The game play is a unique risk/reward system that incorporates a limited betting system and press your luck tactics, with their own interesting twists. There are many ways to change your dice and also many different ways to setup your board with different pieces to ensure lots of replay- ability, without the need to buy additional expansions. I'm

Origins Game Convention 2018

Origins board and tabletop game convention was this past week, and I was fortunate enough to attend this year. There were many great new games, and many great classics on full display. One of the new ones that caught my eye early was from capstone games, called The Climbers . In the game 2-5 players move blocks of varying heights to allow them to move higher up the colorful pile. Each block is a 2 wide square, but the heights range from one high, two high, and 4 high. Players can move any piece they want, but can only climb on the face of the block that corresponds to their meeple's (or player piece) color. Each block has all 5 colors on them, but also a white, or neutral side. These neutral pieces can be used by anyone; however, you may need to make alliances as you make your ascent to the peak. To aid in your climb to the top, players can use a 2 high ladder or a 4 high ladder, in order to skip ahead to higher heights. These pieces are a one time use, so use them wisely. If y

Start Player

This is one of the greatest "games" that I wish I'd thought of first. Start Player  is simply a game that determines who will go first in the next game that you play. The game itself is merely a deck of cards, each with a different prompt that will have one person be the winner, and thus, be the starting player in the next game you're about to play. It's not a necessity per say, but Start Player  does clean up many of the tedious and in some cases social oddities of how many games determine their starting player. Will Start Player , change your life? Likely not... Will Start Player be your new favorite game? Hopefully not... Will Start Player bring some added fun, and end debates at your next game night? Yes. Hands down yes. I was introduced to this game recently and it's exactly what it says it is, and will be an excellent gift for anyone you know that plays games.

Dixit Odyssey

Dixit Odyssey  is a standalone expansion to basic Dixit  and allows additional players to enjoy the game. This version allows up to 12 players to play at once. I have never played a game that's similar to any version of dixit. It incorporates basic storytelling into beautiful artwork, and adds elements of deception and creativity. The game itself is just a deck of cards each with completely unique artwork and design on each. A round of dixit incorporates one player being the "storyteller" an they will say one word or a short phrase that tells a story about one of the cards in their hand, and other players will play a card in their hand that they believe also fits, or fits the best to the same story. Cards are then shuffled and laid out in an order that numbers them identifying them as card #1 card #2 etc. Players then vote on which card played was in fact the original storytellers (while not voting on their own but we'll, get into scoring later). If EVERYONE picks

Spacewalk

Spacewalk  is an older game, that has been used as an educational supplement game in the STEM system. Game play is similar to a version of mancala, the stone moving game into your home goal. Unlike mancala, you want to avoid your ships falling into one of three black holes. To play, each player (2-5 can enjoy this one) receives 3 ships of three different sizes, 9 in total. Players go around in a clockwise motion and place their ships one by one in turn order until each is placed. The game's objective is somewhat battle royal, where you're trying to be the last ship standing. Ships are eliminated from play as they enter a black hole, and cleverly the game board and box is designed so that you put the game away as you play it. On your turn you must move all ships on any one space that originally had one of your ships on it. You are allowed to move your opponents ships as well, but only if they're on the same initial space. Your goal is to try to put their ships into the b

Bears Vs. Babies

You read the title right, This game is called Bears Vs. Babies.   The game is the next in line from the producers of exploading kittens, and the gameplay is just as interesting as the furry box it comes in. You begin play by laying out the play mat and dealing out starting hands to each player. Then you work to build bears (and other monsters) one body part at a time until you feel you're ready to take on a baby army. There are three categories of these baby armies: land, air, and sea; each with coresponding bears and monsters color coded for batteling ease.  When someone is brave enough to provoke the baby army attack, any and all monsters enter the coresponding frey. An example of this is if the land babies are provoked then all land monsters (and wild card bears) enter the fight and the most powerful monster wins. This is of course only if the baby army numbers aren't superior, in which case there are no winners of that round and those babies are discarded, as the babies

AleStone

So the new flagship game from  Dead Box Games  is Alestone. I was able to play this game at a nearby Cider/Wine establishment known as  Bent Ladder  located at the Rittman Orchards just north of Orrville Ohio, when its designer  Frank Tedeschi came to demo it.  A small note, Bent Ladder is a newer gaming friendly Cider/Wine house, and they host a tabletop game night the first Thursday of each month. AleStone is a game that was once never physically played, but was the "game within a game" as it was the game that characters played within a role playing game setting, but the game in now real, for 2/4 players to enjoy. Gameplay, is similar to chinese checkers trying to get your chits into your opponents home base. While you're moving your pieces, you can also battle your opponents, and pin their pieces (preventing them from moving). While moving, you can enter the center square (or side squares in a 2 player game) and pick up various buff items making your pieces more