I played a game of The Golden Ages.
Reply: The Great Dinosaur Rush:: General:: Re: The Kickstarter is LIVE!
by TheGargoyle
Spieleschmiede has it listed as “probably starting next week”.
bboomslang on Let’s talk a little bit about phasing out cards in a LCG
The only formats of MTG I ever had interest in are nonrotating and eternal formats (mostly EDH and Modern), so I completely disagree. The good thing about card games like the named ones are big card pools, the bigger the better, the more fun with deck …
Nachdem Uwe Rosenberg ja an der Zusammenstellung von Viticulture Essentials mitgemacht hat, hatte ich…
Nachdem Uwe Rosenberg ja an der Zusammenstellung von Viticulture Essentials mitgemacht hat, hatte ich im Stillen ja gehofft. Und heute kam das hier auf Facebook von Feuerland Spiele (Uwes Verlag): “Wir freuen uns mitteilen zu können, dass Feuerland die deutsche Version von Viticulture – Essential Edition herausgeben wird!Geplanter Erscheinungstermin ist März/April 2016.” Woot. #boardgames […]
The Gallerist is up on Amazon [$79.99 + Shipping]
submitted by /u/anahuac-a-mole to /r/boardgames[link] [26 comments]
The Gallerist is up on Amazon [$79.99 + Shipping]
submitted by /u/anahuac-a-mole to /r/boardgames[link] [26 comments]
The Gallerist is up on Amazon [$79.99 + Shipping]
submitted by anahuac-a-mole to boardgames [link] [8 comments]
The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game
I played a game of The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game.

Unitymedia. Schickt echte Experten. #youhadonejob
Unitymedia. Schickt echte Experten. #youhadonejob (View on Google+)
bboomslang on Discussion – how important is aesthetic quality to you in board gaming?
It is a great game and the only negative thing I could say about it so far is that the box is just so damn big. But other than that – especially with regard to the aesthetics of the game materials and the actual storage of components in the box – it is…
Reply: Progress: Evolution of Technology:: General:: Re: Game length with 2?
by TheGargoyle
30 plays in, mostly playing 2 player but playing with 4th age, games take us between 1 and 1.5 hours, with tendencies more towards the 1 hour mark. But we are quite knowledgeable of the tech tree and rules by now, so no need to refere…
bboomslang on [WSIG] 4x-style game that isn’t horribly complicated?
I like **The Golden Ages** for that. You explore the world by building the world map, expand your civ by learning new technologies and physically moving on the world map, exploit ressources by controlling areas where they are, turning them into VP and gold, and fight your opponents in wars (although the “exterminate” is rather weak, because they lose control and get their cubes and meeple back to place another turn). Takes round about 2 hours to play, single player turns are quick and there are lots of things you can (and want to) do on your turn. It adds a fun twist that people who pass – because they don’t have any useful options for their turn left – will get gold every time the turn comes back to them while others are still busy doing stuff. Lots of setup variability and scoring variability (for example the first player to pass in an age selects the end age scoring card to use), wonders to build, buildings to construct and with the expansion cults to found and religions to spread, but every action you can take is understandable and logically founded in the theme, with lots of iconographic help on the player boards. A lot of fun to play.
bboomslang on [WSIG] Deck Builders
This. And it has the benefit of being quite easy to teach to muggles, too, because even if they don’t really get the card powers at first, they still will be able to play the game by constructing words.
Reply: Nemo’s War:: News:: Re: WANTED: Most engaged NEMO’S WAR fan to test dive new edition!
by TheGargoyle
Alan Emrich wrote:If they build me 4 more instead of 3, I’ll figure out what to do with the extra.Maybe you need some overseas tester? 😉
bboomslang on LOTR The Card Game – Worth the Investment?
well, the best way to start with some working archetype is to go base + the first LOTR saga expansion and build a hobbit deck with that stuff. It should produce a nicely working deck that you can run against many of the early cycle scenarios without to…
bboomslang on LOTR The Card Game – Worth the Investment?
To this day the Dwarrowdelf cycle scenarios are among my favorites. I love to play Watcher in the Water – the boss fight just feels awesome and cheating the scenario with some scrying deck from time to time evens out getting beaten down with thematic decks ;). Or Into the Pit, which I like because it has an interesting structure that requires a more rounded deck to handle it, much like Journey down the Anduin from the core box (which I still love to play and which is the first adventure I run new decks against). I’m ok with some of the Mirkwood cycle adventures – Conflict at the Carrock for example I think is great. I was a bit let down with the Ringmaker cycle, because the time mechanic is just plain fiddly and annoys me no end when playing, because it is yet another thing to keep track of. The Against the Shadow cycle on the other hand was fine, but I played it with a much larger card pool than when it first came out. The new Angmar stuff is cool and they reduced the usage of time compared to the Ringmaker stuff, so that is acceptable, too. But complexety definitely goes up and makes the scenarios more “work” to handle. For all those reasons, Dwarrowdelf still feels the best to me – tough scenarios with some astonishing variation in the scenario structure, but far less fiddly and complex than newer cycles. But then, Dwarrowdelf was what I started with (I only got Mirkwood for the player cards later on), so it might just be that 😉
bboomslang on LOTR The Card Game – Worth the Investment?
Each adventure pack comes with one scenario and a bunch of player cards. The scenario is based on it’s most recent deluxe expansion (or in the case of Mirkwood cycle on the base game). The base game and the deluxe expansions (and the saga expansions) come with three scenarios. The scenarios are quite different over the different cycles. The Mirkwood and Dwarrodelf cycle were the first ones and the scenarios are quite straight in structure. Starting with the Heirs of Numenor cycle, they extended the scenario structure quite a bit with each new cycle (Numenor gave battle and siege questing, where the quest phase is based on different attributes than in the previous cycles, Ringmaker cycle started with a time mechanic that triggers events based on time spent on parts of the adventure and the angmar cycle has side quests that distract you with, well side quests). So they really feel different and there are quite a lot of scenarios you want to explicitely tune your deck if not even build specific decks to beat them. An alternative is to go the saga expansion route, because those come with three scenarios each and a bunch of player cards and so each one gives you quite a lot of the original LOTR content in game form. Of course the overall structure of quests stays the same – you have essentially a tower defense situation where different cards twist the rules in ways that are most often to your detriment. But those twists are really quite different over different scenarios, especially if you get to the later cycles. Downside: each cycle consists of one deluxe expansion and 6 adventure packs and quite often you will want them if only for the player cards, because many of them have at least 2-3 bombs in it that are really useful for other scenarios and decks, too. To give some context: I myself come from MTG which I totally love and where the most loved part was building decks. But I had nobody to play against and the usual “horde” variants for MTG just felt too samey. So I went into LOTR:LCG and it gave me everything I wanted in allowing me to keep several different deck archetypes pre-built and – with all the scenarios – differently structured “opponents” to try my deck building and playing skills against. It is by far my favorite solo game with time spent on theory-building decks and running wild deck ideas against some key scenarios to try them out. Hours and hours of fun for me. But I did end up with the full collection of player cards for LOTR:LCG. But well, in the end it is much cheaper than my far-from-full collection of MTG cards 😉 (about 1800 MTG cards with a value of something between 3K-4K EUR)
bboomslang on Is the Legends of Andor pretty light? Should I wait for something like Gloomhaven?
We are playing Legends of Andor with one of our groups for over a year now, every 1-2 months another legend. We really like it, but it is far less an adventuring game like Gloomhaven but a action optimization puzzle dressed up as adventuring. It really…
Reply: Cthulhu Wars:: General:: Re: Shipping cost to Europe for OS2 KS campaign
by TheGargoyle
Smuggling. Arthur is on his way on a rowing-boat over the atlantic to make it in time for January delivery.
bboomslang on what are some of your favorite small box games? (and why?)
**Space Hulk: Death Angels** because I can take it with me on business travels and have some fun games to play at the hotel. **Friday** could fill the same role. Number three in that group would now be **Tiny Epic Galleries** because it’s tons of fun to play solo and can be played with multiple players, too. It is more a mood thing than anything else which one I take with me, but TEG feels like it will get much more selected than the other two in the future. **Jaipur** because my wife and I can play it while waiting for our meal at the restaurant or just when out to get some coffee. We overplayed it a bit, so it gets less plays now than before, but it still is the one we throw in the bag when we go out. **San Juan** (the old version actually, because it has fewer cards) because it packs in a typical rummy-package and gives a nice deeper game to have with you when you are out, while not taking up too much table space. It slowly replaced the next one. I hope to “upgrade” this one with my wife to Glory of Rome in the not too far future. **Valley of the Kings** because it is the best deckbuilder in such a small package and small playing foot print. Sadly doesn’t get that much play anymore, Jaipur and San Juan killed it for my wife (she prefers realistic theme, with actions grounded somehow in understandable concepts). **Smash Up** because I can cram three different boxes into one small cardboard box and so have something with me on game nights I can throw on the table if we want to play with higher player numbers and just want to have silly fun. If you go into Smash Up wanting a deep and strategic game, it might turn bad, but I found it to be a real hoot if people play it fast and loose.
GeekList Item: Item for Geeklist “Your Most Played Game (and more): Oktober 2015”
by TheGargoyle
An item Board Game:
Progress: Evolution of Technology
has been added to the geeklist
Your Most Played Game (and more): Oktober 2015