I went to Essen with a rather long
list of games I looked out for but it always proves hard to check everything
you want and luckily you also run into happy accidents
Hyperborea
was a great start to the show. It allows for different strategies, offers some
interesting events and sets up for conflict. It’s rightly been likened to
Eclipse. We went through a few rounds and then decided it was a winner.
Run, Fight
or Die is the umptiest zombie game and I realized I was suffering from zombie
fatigue after a decade of exposure. And although there is some kind of a
challenge in there, it is mostly multiplayer solo.
Spartacus
is one of the first games by Gale Force Nine and although it probably isn’t the
edgiest design, the intrigue is fun. Trash talk flows naturally and you find
yourself booing gladiators that don’t try hard enough.
Theme and the
fact that it is published by a Greek company drew me to Gothic Invasion. How
can you not get excited for the war that inflicted one of the heaviest defeats
on the Roman Empire and saw the death of an
Emperor? The designer gave us an overview. Play is card driven with 2 or 3
options per card. Forces and objectives are asymmetric, so there is a lot of maneuver
on the map. You can see there is a lot of promise in there. Although it can be
played with more than two, there is no rivalry or separate objective. It just
didn’t do it for my friends so I was faced with buying a game that wouldn’t get
played.
Time
Masters tries a new approach to deck building by making time the key unit. It
works, because the game speeds up and slows down. But I didn’t feel like I was
achieving anything worthwhile by building the deck. Somehow I couldn't find a way to hold the cards due to the horizontal design. And who asks €35 for a card
game these days? [edit: apparently I was misinformed at the booth or I misunderstood the price: the publisher has informed me the price in stores should be €30 and would have been €25 in Essen]
The evening
in the bar and restaurant was spent with Unicum, Verone/Council of Verona and Auge um Auge. All
three are excellent for beer and pretzels. Unicum offers a small box for a
short game with a neat betting war hidden in it. This is fun, but I just wish the
‘uniqueness’ argument mattered a bit more. If you can get into the spirit of
bogus arguments that helps.
I think
that Verone is a truly great microgame, with all trying to influence the
outcome of the feud between the Montagues and Capulets. It is worthwhile
getting the French edition because I like the art better (and it automatically
includes the Poison expansion, which is a neat addition). Pic above is the English version.
I’m not
sure about Auge um Auge though. It is mostly a dice rolling fest with an
alliance system. There are some abilities that help you create series, which
you need to inflict black eyes on your opponents. But the alliance system is
what makes the game interesting, because ganging up and keeping the front
runner out of fist fights is the key. It may be a bit long for the amount of
fun it holds. Art work nice, as always with Sphinx games.
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