Mar
04
2016

Imperial Settlers

I played a game of Imperial Settlers.

Mar
04
2016

Progress: Evolution of Technology

I played a game of Progress: Evolution of Technology.

Mar
04
2016

Imperial Settlers

I played a game of Imperial Settlers.

Mar
04
2016

Progress: Evolution of Technology

I played a game of Progress: Evolution of Technology.

Mar
04
2016

Reply: Paperback:: General:: Re: Paperback – Deutsche Ausgabe Paperback – German version

by TheGargoyle
Whenever that KS will start, I am definitely in. It’s one of my favorite games for our weekly open game meet, because I can get almost anybody into the game. Super easy to teach, great to play for first timers, just a wonderful game.

Mar
03
2016

/u/bboomslang on Simultaneous Deck Building

can’t you just open it in two different windows, having them side by side (or as tabs in your tab bar)?

Mar
03
2016

/u/bboomslang on Simultaneous Deck Building

can’t you just open it in two different windows, having them side by side (or as tabs in your tab bar)?

Mar
02
2016

San Juan

I played a game of San Juan.

Feb
29
2016

Progress: Evolution of Technology

I played a game of Progress: Evolution of Technology.

Feb
29
2016

Paperback

I played a game of Paperback.

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

Well, first: they all were games of 2015 for me! But quite a few of them were new in 2015 in Germany, too (german versions often coming quite a bit later than english versions).

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

Well, first: they all were games of 2015 for me! But quite a few of them were new in 2015 in Germany, too (german versions often coming quite a bit later than english versions).

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on In the Name of Odin by NSKN Games – same makers of Exodus: Edge of Extinction, Mistfall and Simurgh

Probably getting this when they come out with a german version (several of their games were translated already, so changes are good). They are the creators of Progress: Evolution of Technology, too, one of my favorites.

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on In the Name of Odin by NSKN Games – same makers of Exodus: Edge of Extinction, Mistfall and Simurgh

Probably getting this when they come out with a german version (several of their games were translated already, so changes are good). They are the creators of Progress: Evolution of Technology, too, one of my favorites.

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

Xenoshyft is fun, but the setup/teardown is far too long for a game like this. It’s deck-building castle defense, but you put out little stacks of cards from little slots in the horrible insert and afterwards sort all the cards into their little stacks and put them back into the little slots …

I was very happy when I got the digital implementation. And if I get it back out for play with my friends, I probably go for some “epic” variant that at least allows me to cut down on item shop setup (will still leave the troops board to set up, though).

I mean, it’s not that bad, it’s mostly like Dominion or Thunderstone. Only that you set up two friggin shops in Xenoshyft and not just one …

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

Xenoshyft is fun, but the setup/teardown is far too long for a game like this. It’s deck-building castle defense, but you put out little stacks of cards from little slots in the horrible insert and afterwards sort all the cards into their little stacks and put them back into the little slots …

I was very happy when I got the digital implementation. And if I get it back out for play with my friends, I probably go for some “epic” variant that at least allows me to cut down on item shop setup (will still leave the troops board to set up, though).

I mean, it’s not that bad, it’s mostly like Dominion or Thunderstone. Only that you set up two friggin shops in Xenoshyft and not just one …

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

Steampunk Rally was one I was very close to backing, but some of the cards carry text and therefore it sadly was a pass (my Wife doesn’t speak English). If they ever produce a german version, I am so into that one. The theme alone is something that easily grabs me.

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

Steampunk Rally was one I was very close to backing, but some of the cards carry text and therefore it sadly was a pass (my Wife doesn’t speak English). If they ever produce a german version, I am so into that one. The theme alone is something that easily grabs me.

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

By far and away the most plays with my wife: Progress: Evolution of Technology. It’s the game that turned a “ok, I play with you today” wife (which already was hard to achieve with her, because before she was “eww, no, thanks”) into a gamer wife who discusses game strategy with me.

For my weekly game group, because they are great intro games I can play with allmost everybody: Paperback and Waggle Dance. With Paperback being one of my wife and my favorites, too, and one of our preferred travel games (the whole thing fits into a 100+ deckbox unsleeved). It’s just great to have some games you know you can bring to the table if 2-3 noobs show up for the evening. And Paperback actually became a very common game at the weekly meet, even with the regulars. Since I started that group in 2015, definitely an important game for me.

The Golden Ages we are slowly getting into, it has a bit more moving pieces than other games we play, but it’s a great 4Xish civ builder with some neat twists. Very tight and strategic. And one of the games I want to play much more often (and one I hope I can get my wife into, too – she allready asked for it some times herself).

For solo play it’s allways LoTR: LCG for me. Still by favorite game of all those years, only maybe topped by MTG, but that doesn’t get played due to missing play partners for it. LOTR I can play on my own. I don’t see my love for that game ever waining, unless someone creates something in the same vain with a more generic theme (which would allow me much more to mix-and-match power cards – in LOTR I often stumble over “can’t put Steward of Gondor on a Noldor, dammit!”).

A great surprise with regards to it’s solo play was The Gallerist – I only played it solo first to learn the rules, but it’s a very nice take on the “beat your highscore” mechanics for solo play. The solo opponent essentially is a nasty clock that takes opportunities away from you, combined with a roster of predefined goals to reach. And the game is gorgeous, really looking forward to the day I can bring that out for multiplayer. Still some way to go, since it is tons heavier than my game groups are used to. It’s the game that made me look into heavier stuff than we normally play, because I discovered that heavy games not necessarily have convoluted mechanics (quite the opposite of something I write further down where I spread into war-games, which are the epitome of convoluted mechanics 😉 ).

With another group we are playing through all of Legends of Andor and the travel to the north really is a very good big-box expansion to it. It’s a companion for allmost 2 years now for us and a great way to spend an afternoon and evening with friends – some good meal, some Legends of Andor and some chat and maybe another, quicker, game.

Some other notable games were 7 Wonders: Duels (nice two player drafting that actually works) and Kashgar: Händler der Seidenstraße (interesting take on deck-building combined with ressource-gathering and contract-fullfillment). Both haven’t caught on as much as I would have liked, so don’t get as much play time as I would like. But both trigger some of my favorites easily with the drafting (well, more like “picking”) mechanics of Duels and the deck building (in this case public with three “hands”) in Kashgar.

One that took me really by surprise is Polis: Fight for the Hegemony. I got it for cheap in a group buy and boy is that a great game. Didn’t really expect that. It got me to look into other games on the border of euro-game to war-game, too, which lead to me discovering COIN games and CDGs. So definitely had a big impact on me in 2015.

Another one for solo, honorable 11th mention: Legends of Andor: Chada and Thron. I got it, because it is written in the game world of Legends of Andor and uses the public deck building mechanic from Kashgar, but is a good solo and coop game. So far only played it solo, it’s quite interesting. Kinda in the same league as Friday, but gives more of a story feel.

Feb
29
2016

/u/bboomslang on What were your 10 favorite board games of 2015?

By far and away the most plays with my wife: Progress: Evolution of Technology. It’s the game that turned a “ok, I play with you today” wife (which already was hard to achieve with her, because before she was “eww, no, thanks”) into a gamer wife who discusses game strategy with me.

For my weekly game group, because they are great intro games I can play with allmost everybody: Paperback and Waggle Dance. With Paperback being one of my wife and my favorites, too, and one of our preferred travel games (the whole thing fits into a 100+ deckbox unsleeved). It’s just great to have some games you know you can bring to the table if 2-3 noobs show up for the evening. And Paperback actually became a very common game at the weekly meet, even with the regulars. Since I started that group in 2015, definitely an important game for me.

The Golden Ages we are slowly getting into, it has a bit more moving pieces than other games we play, but it’s a great 4Xish civ builder with some neat twists. Very tight and strategic. And one of the games I want to play much more often (and one I hope I can get my wife into, too – she allready asked for it some times herself).

For solo play it’s allways LoTR: LCG for me. Still by favorite game of all those years, only maybe topped by MTG, but that doesn’t get played due to missing play partners for it. LOTR I can play on my own. I don’t see my love for that game ever waining, unless someone creates something in the same vain with a more generic theme (which would allow me much more to mix-and-match power cards – in LOTR I often stumble over “can’t put Steward of Gondor on a Noldor, dammit!”).

A great surprise with regards to it’s solo play was The Gallerist – I only played it solo first to learn the rules, but it’s a very nice take on the “beat your highscore” mechanics for solo play. The solo opponent essentially is a nasty clock that takes opportunities away from you, combined with a roster of predefined goals to reach. And the game is gorgeous, really looking forward to the day I can bring that out for multiplayer. Still some way to go, since it is tons heavier than my game groups are used to. It’s the game that made me look into heavier stuff than we normally play, because I discovered that heavy games not necessarily have convoluted mechanics (quite the opposite of something I write further down where I spread into war-games, which are the epitome of convoluted mechanics 😉 ).

With another group we are playing through all of Legends of Andor and the travel to the north really is a very good big-box expansion to it. It’s a companion for allmost 2 years now for us and a great way to spend an afternoon and evening with friends – some good meal, some Legends of Andor and some chat and maybe another, quicker, game.

Some other notable games were 7 Wonders: Duels (nice two player drafting that actually works) and Kashgar: Händler der Seidenstraße (interesting take on deck-building combined with ressource-gathering and contract-fullfillment). Both haven’t caught on as much as I would have liked, so don’t get as much play time as I would like. But both trigger some of my favorites easily with the drafting (well, more like “picking”) mechanics of Duels and the deck building (in this case public with three “hands”) in Kashgar.

One that took me really by surprise is Polis: Fight for the Hegemony. I got it for cheap in a group buy and boy is that a great game. Didn’t really expect that. It got me to look into other games on the border of euro-game to war-game, too, which lead to me discovering COIN games and CDGs. So definitely had a big impact on me in 2015.

Another one for solo, honorable 11th mention: Legends of Andor: Chada and Thron. I got it, because it is written in the game world of Legends of Andor and uses the public deck building mechanic from Kashgar, but is a good solo and coop game. So far only played it solo, it’s quite interesting. Kinda in the same league as Friday, but gives more of a story feel.

Feb
28
2016

Progress: Evolution of Technology

I played a game of Progress: Evolution of Technology.

Feb
28
2016

/u/bboomslang on Eagle-Gryphon Wipes their Hands | Tumblin-Dice Kickstarter Fiasco

Yeah, I have problems to see the reason for the outrage, too. Ludo is europe-run, even if production is in China. European manufacturers actually are quite good at replacement management, because our customer laws require them to be for quite some time…

Feb
28
2016

/u/bboomslang on Eagle-Gryphon Wipes their Hands | Tumblin-Dice Kickstarter Fiasco

Yeah, I have problems to see the reason for the outrage, too. Ludo is europe-run, even if production is in China. European manufacturers actually are quite good at replacement management, because our customer laws require them to be for quite some time…

Feb
27
2016

Progress: Evolution of Technology

I played a game of Progress: Evolution of Technology.

Feb
27
2016

Progress: Evolution of Technology

I played a game of Progress: Evolution of Technology.

Feb
26
2016

Progress: Evolution of Technology

I played a game of Progress: Evolution of Technology.

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