Fromage | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Thu, 05 Jun 2025 14:34:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png Fromage | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Top 10 Food Board Games https://nerdologists.com/2025/06/top-10-food-board-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/06/top-10-food-board-games/#respond Thu, 05 Jun 2025 14:23:37 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9626 What are some good board games to sink your teeth into? We're looking at 10 board games with the theme of food and which are my favorites.

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There are a surprising number of games with food themes. So I’m seeing if I can make a Top 10 Food Board Games list. Now, this is going to include drinks and everything like that as well. If you consume it and it’s real, so no magical potions, it can make the list. This is a list for games with a theme around real foods, and I know that I’m missing a big hitter on the list that I haven’t played yet. Without further ado, let’s see what I can cook up for my Top 10 Food Board Games.

Top 10 Food Board Games

10. Diced Veggies

This is a pretty simple game. And a lot of them that I own really do fall into that category. But Dice Veggies is a board game where you are completing recipes. To do that, you need to slice off veggies from a big block of dice. But the rule is that the veggies can only be up to, I believe, 10 total on their pips. So you might want to try and get a bunch at once, but you can’t get the color you really need because the value is too high.

The big selling point on this game is the chopping off the dice. You get a cardboard cleaver that you use to make you cut. The rest of the game is pretty light, though they try and add in a little bit with some modifier cards that you can use or bonus cards. But I like the game for what it is. It’s a silly little filler or family weight style game that is easy to get to the table.

9. Coffee Rush

Coffee Rush
Image Source: Korea Board Games

Next up for our food themed games we have Coffee Rush. This is one that I have been enjoying on BGA. And you can find my review here. Coffee Rush is another order fulfillment game, this one though works with an interesting central mechanism. You move around a central board to collect ingredients and how far you move is limited each turn. Plus how you move, at least at the start of the game, is limited as well.

But you unlock more that you can do. However, there is a cost to that, if you want to unlock more to do you need to spend points that you already have. And in a game where the points are tight, it’s a very good decision.

Plus, this game comes with amazing artwork and coffee/tea cups where you make you drink. Not just that, but the ingredients that you collect are 3D as well, not just cardboard tokens or wooden cubes. This is a great one for your coffee fanatics in your life.

8. Cafe Baras

But Coffee Rush isn’t my favorite of the coffee or tea themed board games. I like a few better than it including Cafe Baras. The theme is really what gets me for this game, you are capybaras running a coffee shop, get it, Cafe Baras?

This game is from the same company as Dice Veggies, but I like Cafe Baras better. There is a bit more going on as you gather in different menu items that are going to score you points. And you are grabbing them so that you can then grab customers and score them for points. Sometimes you just grab a customer to get more money to get more items for your menu. Other times you try and hold off so you can get them as repeat customers.

This is another pretty simple game. But with a theme that is a ton of fun and very good artwork, it’s a nice accessible game. It is going to feel like a set-up for people who don’t play too many games, but not so complex and not too much reading to learn and play the game.

7. A Nice Cuppa

A Nice Cuppa is one that I played on the Malts and Meeples YouTube. If I didn’t play at night time, I might have had a nice cuppa Earl Grey tea with it. But this is a solo game where you are seeing if you can get the steps of making a cup of tea in the right order. But that’s harder than you think because the actions available to you are limited. I could say more about this one, but if you want to learn more, please checkout the video down below.

6. Vegetable Stock

Vegetable Stock is one that I debated about putting on the list. It is less about eating food, but it is about food. In Vegetable Stock you are manipulating the vegetable stock market trying to grab as many points as you can. As you see, like Cafe Baras and Diced Veggies, it’s another play on words.

The game is simple and I really like it for that. You play out a few rounds of drafting cards with the first player switching each round to draft. To draft you deal out one more card than there is per player. The last card is used to adjust the market. Any veggie symbols push the value of that veggie higher. But if you get too high it is going to bust and go back down to one. So are you able to balance that or bust something early and get it pushed back up by the end of the game.

5. Matcha

Matcha is probably the least known game on the list, this or A Nice Cuppa since that is solo, but Matcha is a two player trick taking and set collection game. You gain resources by winning tricks. But it’s not a standard trick taking game. You don’t play out a card to a single trick. Instead you play out I believe it’s four tricks at once. And where you add cards and how tricks are won is determined by the spots the cards are played. It’s a clever and enjoyable trick taking game.

Now, I do want to add in a caveat here. I like this game a ton. However, the rules are not great for the game. I think that they are overwritten and because of that it causes a bit of confusion as you learn the game. So if it sounds interesting to you, see if there is a how play video out there to learn from, it’s going to be easier than the rules.

4. Point Salad

Now we are to one of two board games that I’m sure everyone assumed was going to be on the list. Point Salad is one of the most popular board games with a food theme. Now, I don’t actually own the regular version anymore. I own the Eevee version because it’s Eevee and the theme is more fun. But Point Salad is a great food game.

Point Salad is an open drafting food game. What do I mean by open drafting? In an open drafting game everyone sees the cards available to take. But it is does something clever. On the back of the cards is scoring. So on your turn you either take two vegetables form six to add to your tableau of veggies, or you take a single scoring card. If you take veggies the scoring cards on top of the deck flip down. And now those are gone from the game.

I love that push and pull of when you grab your scoring cards versus when you just grab veggies. Too many scoring cards are not enough veggies, you won’t score well. Too many veggies and not enough scoring cards, likely the same case. But there are ways to get around both, but you need it play out perfectly.

Fromage
Image Source: R2i Games

3. Fromage

Now we have the cheesiest game on the list, Fromage. Yes, this is a game all about cheese and it uses some awesome mechanisms as you play that I don’t see in many other games. It’s a worker placement game about making cheese. The more cheese you make the better you’ll do in the game. But let’s talk about the unique element of the game.

The main central element of the game is this big wheel, not of cheese but locations where you make your cheese. And that wheel turns each round of the game. Now each round you can use two workers on the board and then potentially your other one, or a couple of them, on your player board as you unlock things. But on the main board everything has a timer. That timer is how long it takes to get back your worker. It is easy to tell that timer though, because when you wedge of cheese worker is pointed back at you, you get it back.

That element is so clever in the game. And the game does a good job of scaling itself for player count. You swap out board parts for each wedge of the board. And, I forgot to mention this, the board is modular. Yes, there are only four modules that make up the whole wheel. But how those go together changes up what comes after each other. I’d love to see this in more board games.

2. Homebrewers

Next up a game that I love to champion. We have Homebrewers a game about homebrewing beer. I love beer and I love homebrewing beer, so it’s a game made for me. But I also love engine building and Homebrewers is a fun engine building game.

In this game you want to be the best homebrewer, not surprise there. So your goal is to be the best at brewing four different styles of beers to gain medals and points as Summerfest and Oktoberfest. But as you brew, you gain ingredients. These ingredients modify your beers. They might give you more money or raise up how good you are at brewing that beer faster or an adjacent beer.

One of the elements that I love at the end of the game is you have a bunch of wild beers. Since I love beer, I always think, would I drink that beer? The answer is basically always, yes, I’d drink it once. But sometimes the flavors are a bit out there.

1. Sushi Go Party!

Sushi Go Party
Image Source: Gamewright

Finally, at number one, we have Sushi Go Party. This is my favorite food themed game that is all about drafting the best meal possible. Everything is going to score you points, potentially, as you draft them. And most of it is pretty simple set collection. Sometimes, though, you get a card with a special power that is going to let you break the rules and swap what you are drafting.

One element that I love about Sushi Go Party is how you tailor it for your group. I make really mean drafting combinations sometimes. When I say that you score points, it’s possible to score negative points. Or I can make it really friendly so that everyone is getting a ton of points. That to me separates it from the base Sushi Go where the game is going to be the same every time. This is one that I really recommend people checkout just for a fun time.

Final Thoughts

Now, I am sure that people are noticing a few missing board games. Food Chain Magnate is a food themed game that just isn’t interesting to me. It’s too big and too much going on that I don’t want to learn it, play it and then need to play it a few more times. Also Vihnos or Viticulture are likely ones people might note as well. I am actually interested in playing both.

I did on my list have a few board games that I didn’t put on there. Fruit Picking is a fun one. I like the mancala style mechanism of the game. Cacao is a chocolate creation game, I guess you could call it, and it’s fun with it’s tile placement element to it. And Charcuterie is another one. I like Charcuterie, the game and the food style, but it’s a super light game that I’ll gladly play but probably am not that apt to pick myself.

What are your favorite board games with a food theme? And which is your favorite of the 10 Food Board Games I listed?

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Ranking All The New Games Played in Q1 https://nerdologists.com/2025/04/ranking-all-the-new-games-played-in-q1/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/04/ranking-all-the-new-games-played-in-q1/#respond Thu, 17 Apr 2025 15:44:59 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9545 How do I rank the new games that I've played in Q1 of 2025? I have played 35 new to me games, and that's a lot, but which are the best?

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I thought let’s do some fun rankings. I’ve played 35 new to me games this year between in person and on Board Game Arena. You haven’t seen all of them yet in reviews from BGA, but I’ll be getting to them. So let’s rank them all and then I don’t want to talk about them all, but I’ll talk about the Top 5 and why there are up there in more detail.

As normal, I am using Pub Meeple to do my rankings. You can find their ranking engine here.

Kado
Image Source: Lumberjacks Studio

Ranking New Games 35 through 5

35 – KADO
34 – Gold’n Crash
33 – Castellion
32 – Harmonies
31 – Pokemon Old Maid
30 – Karvi
29 – Panda Spin
28 – Unsurmountable
27 – Stalk Exchange
26 – The Royal Limited
25 – At the Helm
24 – Ancient Realm
23 – SpaceShipped
22 – ROVE: Results-Oriented Versatile Explorer
21 – Ext: The Game – Lord of the Rings: Shadows over Middle-earth
20 – Circus Flohcati
19 – A Nice Cuppa
18 – Toy Battle
17 – PUSH
16 – Knister
15 – Luxor
14 – Crafting the Cosmos
13 – The Architects of Amytis
12 – 6 nimmt!
11 – Imhotep
10 – Pyradmido: Forgotten Treasures
9 – One-Hit Heroes
8 – Fromage
7 – Schadenfreude
6 – Symbiose

Quick Thoughts

There are a lot of great games in this section. Everything from Old Maid up I’ll gladly play. And I mainly will gladly play old maid because my kid likes it. Also, I realized I have played old maid before growing up, but I never ranked it. So maybe shouldn’t be on the list.

There are some games where I wonder if they would move higher in other circumstances. Panda Spin, for example, at 29 feels low. But it’s also just okay on Board Game Arena. Would it be a better game in person. The downside of that one is downtime as you might not be able to partake in tricks. But that downtime would be way less.

Also there is a huge clump of Button Shy solo games there in the middle. I like those games. There weren’t any where I thought they were actively annoying or not that great to play. At the same time, there are some that are better than the others, and because it’s just 18 cards, they all fall into that similar feeling category, especially the ones that I’ve played on Malts and Meeples thus far.

Pirates of Maracaibo
Image Source: dlp games


Top 5 New Games of Q1

5. Pirates of Maracaibo

This game is great. I love everything that is going on in it and I also love how fast the game is. I wrote up a review of this one already and you can read that here. Just a quick recap, there is a lot going on, but the turns are simple. And there are a ton of ways to explore scoring. I like being able to spend time figuring out new ways to score. And each way to score really does feel good, but you can’t only focus in on one, most likely, you are going to need to get a few working together to do well in the game.

4. The Guild of Merchant Explorers

The next one is another one that I’ve done a review on already. You can read my review for The Guild of Merchant Explorers here. This one I love because I can play it so quickly at two players on BGA, as long as the other player is active. And it is a different puzzle each time you play as you get unique cards for each era. And the scoring objectives, which can easily swing the game, help give the game that more variety as well.

3. Zenith

Yes, another BGA game with a review, but the final of the BGA games, is Zenith and you can read the review here. Zenith is a very fun two player game. And while there are other two player games on the list, the lowest at 34, Zenith stands above with the variety of ways to win the game. It really feels like such a great back and forth two player battle. And that tug of war element where you are trying to get the planets to your side and figuring out how to do that best is great.

Zenith
Image Source: PlayPunk

2. Clank! Catacombs

Next we have Clank!: Catacombs. We already know that I love Clank in all it’s forms. I’ve streamed the digital app this year as well, but Clank!: Catacombs is probably the best version of Clank!. And that’s really driven by the fact that the game is going to change every time. You don’t know how the tiles are going to come out, and you could decide to build things so it goes off into the distance. That is going to make it more replayable without any expansions, and I think it also makes it easier to have expansions.

1. Marvel Dice Throne: X-Men

The final one is another game that I’ve kind of already played, much like Clank!, but it’s Marvel Dice Throne: X-Men. And this one is great for me because it has two of my favorite players. Beyond that, it is still just more Dice Throne, and I love Dice Throne. I need to pull out my other Marvel characters and have everyone battle together and see who comes out on top. That’s another great thing about Dice Throne, it’s really built for a tournament or competitive play. I wonder if there are any shops around me who are doing the Dice Throne league, that could be something fun to join.

Final Thoughts

That’s all of the new to me games that I’ve played this year. And I know that I’m going to play even more. I am trying to learn new games each week on board game arena and I’ve done a very good job of that thus far. It might become harder later, but I think that I can do it.

Based off of these games, are there any that I should be looking out for in 2025 to tryout? Obviously these aren’t all the games that I’ve played, so I might have played your suggestion already. But let me know those down in the comments. And let me know which games you’ve tried for the first time this year?

Looking around me, I have games like Knarr, Finca, Thunder Rolls, Bomb Busters and a whole lot more that I’ve had come in this year. And there are kickstarters as well, like Dragon Eclipse, Lore, Star Realms, Andromeda’s Edge, and The Dark Quarter that I need to get played as well. So I’m at no shortage of games to get played. And I hope to get a lot of those games played this year, plus the oh so many more that have been on my shelf of opportunity for even longer.

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Fromage – I Got A Need For Cheese https://nerdologists.com/2025/02/fromage-i-got-a-need-for-cheese/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/02/fromage-i-got-a-need-for-cheese/#respond Mon, 03 Feb 2025 16:33:22 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9407 Who is the big cheese in Fromage, the game of making cheese by R2i Games? Join me and see if it's a good game.

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This is last weeks game from Board Game Arena. I was excited for Fromage last year when I thought it was going to be at Gen Con. It turned out not to be at Gen Con, but I own it now. And I got to play it a handful of times at different player counts on Board Game Arena (BGA). So is this game going to be a tasty cheesy game or a some stinky cheese that no one wants? Let’s see how Fromage plays and what works or doesn’t about.

How to Play Fromage

Fromage is a cheese placement game. You want to place out cheese every turn to score you the most points that you can. But there are certain rules as to how you can place out your cheese. And that’s where some of the strategy of the game comes in. But let’s dive into the basics of it first.

Placing Workers

On your turn you spend workers to activate different spots. One of things you can do every turn is make cheese. You spend a worker and a cheese token. Then you can also gather resources with another one of your workers. These resources are either livestock, building materials, order cards, or berries. And finally, you can spend a worker to activate a building, if you have a building to activate. When you place down a worker to make cheese you also spend a cheese token that you have. When someone is out of cheese tokens that is the end of the game.

The spots you can place a worker does have another feature to it as well. When you place a worker, it might be pointing across the board, or to the left or the right. The board will rotate after each player has placed each turn. And players place all at once. When your wedge of cheese/worker is pointing at you, it comes back off the board.

The Game Board

The game board is interesting as well and important for how the game plays. The board is split into four sections, so each player is going to have one section that is pointed at themselves. Each section is going to give you points in a different way.

One is more area control where you get benefits for having the most cheese in some areas. The other gives you a choice, more points for putting your cheese on one side of the cheese display, or more resources that you get if you put them on the other side. The third one is about creating pairs of cheese. And the final one is creating a path of cheese around a section of the board.

Scoring Points

So each section of the boards is one of the ways that you will score points. When you score points in a few other ways. One is that you can build a building that will give you points. Then you also get points for completing order cards. Finally, you score points for making cheese that is fruited or that is with jam. The berries will score points for fruiting and jam by multiplying the number you fruited with the number you turned into jam. The player with the most points at the end of the game wins.

What Doesn’t Work

This is a weirdly simple game, but also slightly complex game. I think that getting down scoring for each section, at least on BGA, can be a bit tricky. You want to make cheese and sometimes the best option isn’t to make cheese. Plus you need to think not only about what scores you points but when you’ll be getting your workers back because you can do one action per worker and you really don’t want to get stuck with zero workers one rotation. So what you do is simple but with the scoring it can be a bit more than it feels like. It’s not a real negative, just that you’ll likely learn scoring after a game or two.

What Works

I like the speed and simplicity of your worker placement. You do have choices where you can place your worker, but not too many. And you need to think about getting your workers back, like I mentioned. So a lot of the time how many spots you actually want to move is going to be fairly limited. Add in that everyone goes at once means that the game turns are only as slow as the slowest player that turn.

I like the timing mechanism of placing workers. I could place all my workers out, or as many as I can, turn one and not get them back until turn four if I wanted. That is going to be a poor decision, most likely, but you could do that. Or I decide that I really want to gain, let’s say, three cows. That means because I’m waiting a while for that worker to come back, I’m playing less powerful options or more specific options the next couple of rounds. It’s a great balancing puzzle of when you get a lot of resources or a harder to make cheese versus when you just want your workers back for the next round.

One last element that I like, and I like more in the game, but to highlight, is how you start to become different throughout the game. You might unlock a different building or just have different buildings than your opponents. That means that you get a specific bonus or an extra worker placement spot to use. And that I think is a fun element for a game like this. It doesn’t make you completely different from the other players, but just gives you a different way to hone your strategy.

Who Is Fromage For?

I think Fromage is a pretty solid welcoming game. Like I said in the what doesn’t work, scoring for each section might take a new player a game to figure out. But what you do on your turn is simple enough. Place a worker once to make cheese. Place a worker once to gather resources, and place a worker once to use a building if you have one. It’s really just that simple so it’s a fun theme that I think a lot of people are going to love. But for more seasoned gamers, it’s still going to be fun because you get an interesting strategy as to how you place out your workers and when you get workers back.

My Final Thoughts on Fromage

There’s one element that makes this a very solid game. I like it, let’s start out with that. But I think the best element of the game is how you get your workers back. That timing puzzle of when you put down a worker who might take another turn to get there, versus getting it back next turn, it’s fun. And you generally don’t want to get a turn with no or one worker, but it might be worth it to score a lot of points some time.

And I feel like each way that you score, whether it’s berries, which can be really high scoring, or in a section, they all give you good ways to get points without feeling broken. So one game I might decide to push hard on that area control board and make sure I get as much cheese on there as I can. Or I might play it smart with the adjacency part of the board, or I could just go for fruited cheeses and jams to get the best multiplier score that I can. I decide what type of scoring I want. And the game is fast enough that if it doesn’t workout, you can always just decide to play again.

My Score: B+
Strategy: C+
Luck: D

There isn’t much luck in Fromage. Some luck in what orders you draw, but they are just one way to score that you don’t need to lean into at all, so it’s a low luck game. But it’s also not so heavy in strategy that you are planning out. But, as I said, it’s that nice balance of just enough strategy and easy and fast enough to play that I think it works well for me.

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