GameHead | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Thu, 09 Oct 2025 16:13:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png GameHead | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Top 100 Games 2025 Edition – 60 through 51 https://nerdologists.com/2025/10/top-100-games-2025-edition-60-through-51/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/10/top-100-games-2025-edition-60-through-51/#comments Thu, 09 Oct 2025 15:11:11 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9854 What games are at the top half of the bottom half of my Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition? Join for 60 through 51.

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We’re just getting to the end of the bottom half of games in my Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition. What games make it onto 60 to 51. I talk a bit about the stats for the Top 100 Games (of all time) and what percentage of the games I’ve played/rated make the list. Just to put the numbers into a better frame, I am at 689 games played, slightly lower than I remembered, probably because of expansion. So my Top 100Games (of all time) is 14% of the games that I’ve played. So without further ado, here are games 60 through 51.

Catch Up on the Top 100 Games

100 through 91
90 through 81
80 through 71
70 through 61

Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition – 60 through 51

60. Trinket Trove

Trinket Trove
Image Source: GameHead

Publisher: GameHead
Designer: Rocco Privetera

Buy Trinket Trove

I love how Trinket Trove has pretty simple rules. But it is a game that offers more than just simple game play. You collect cards in your hand that will be your score at the end of the game. There is a twist, though, as those cards you also use to bid on other cards. So you need to bid to get more cards or get cards that you want, but that means you mess up your hand. I think that little twist is clever as well as being able to take the cards others have bid to make for a really fun game.

59. Vampire: The Masquerade – CHAPTERS

Vampire the Masquerade Chapters by Flyos Games
Image Source: Flyos Games

Publisher: FLYOS
Designers: Thomas Flippi, Gary Paitre

Buy Vampire: The Masquerade – CHAPTERS

Now to another one of those big adventure games that I love, we have Vampire: The Masquerade – CHAPTERS. This is set in the World of Darkness/Vampire: The Masquerade RPG setting. And it is a scenario driven adventure game. Now all the scenarios chain together, so it is meant more as a GM-less RPG sort of setting. I like the simplicity in which it plays. And I think balancing things like hunger and abilities is interesting in the game. The story is the element that really gets me though, as the combat itself is pretty simple.

58. Five Tribes: The Djinns of Naqala

Five Tribes
Image Source: Days of Wonder

Publisher: Days of Wonder
Designer: Bruno Cathala

Buy Five Tribes is Not Available Currently

This mancala style game is going to give you a ton of ways to score points. And I like that tension of trying to figure out a good move on your turn. Now, I know for some that might introduce some analysis paralysis and there are people I won’t play it with. But I like that puzzle of figuring out what I think is a good move for me and dropping off workers until I get to that last spot. I also like that everything gives you points in the game as that makes even a less than perfect turn still give you something.

57. Too Many Bones

Too Many Bones
Image Source: Chip Theory Games

Publisher: Chip Theory Games
Designers: Josh J Carlson, Adam Carlson

Buy Too Many Bones

Another adventure game on the list, I own so much stuff for Too Many Bones. This one is about the Gearlocs that you have and leveling them up. Each one is going to play differently. Some of them might let you level up archery as you unlock new dice, others might start to build bombs that you can use in combat. But this game is one with a great flow. You do an adventure piece, you fight some bad guys, you level up and then you repeat. You do that until you feel that you are ready to face off against the boss, and if you are lucky, you are ready and can win.

56. First-Class Letters

First Class Letters
Image Source: GameHead

Publisher: GameHead
Designer: Peter C Hayward

Buy First-Class Letters

I love roll and write games, and I like word games. This one is a bit of both. You roll letters and you need to come up with words that use them. But there is a twist to that because there is a letter that you can’t use as well. And of course that is going to be a common letter to make it tricky. To add to that, there are some spots where they set the letter the word must start with. And all the words at the end need to be in alphabetical order. There is a bunch going on, but not too much to ruin the fun.

55. Super Fantasy Brawl

Super Fantasy Brawl
Image Source: Mythic Games

Publisher: Mythic Games
Designer: Jochen Elsenhuth

Super Fantasy Brawl is Currently Unavailable

I don’t love all fighting games. There are a few that I find great, and Super Fantasy Brawl is one of them. This is a game of fighting against an opponent to knock out their characters and complete objectives. But what I love about the game is the simplicity of the play. I play three cards a turn and do their actions, one for each color. Or, if I use a color for a reaction on my opponents turn, then it’s two cards on my turn. I also like that you score objectives at the start of your turn. So you need to hold that spot through your opponents turn.

54. Century: Golem Edition

Century Spice Road Golem
Image Source: Plan B Games

Publisher: Plan B Games
Designer: Emerson Matsuuchi

Buy Century: Golem Edition

Century: Golem Edition is a great hand management engine building game. Each turn is simple, but the better you are at figuring out how to create a combo with the cards in your hand, the better you’ll do. It’s all about getting games and leveling up those games to get Golems, who are points, in the game. You can get the regular version of this as well, it’s the same game, but I love the Golem artwork and the gems in this are just more fun.

53. Pandemic Legacy Season 1

Pandemic Legacy
Image Source: Polygon

Publisher: Z-Man Games
Designers: Rob Daviau, Matt Leacock

Buy Pandemic Legacy Season 1

This one is for all the Pandemic Games. I love the Pandemic System, though I haven’t played base Pandemic in quite a while. Mainly because I think that Pandemic Legacy Season 1 and Season 2 are so good. The system just works and the story that you get within the legacy games is great. I even played Pandemic Legacy Season 1 solo on Malts and Meeples early on. So you can see that there, if you want to see how it went for me. I almost feel ready to play it again. If legacy isn’t your thing, than maybe Star Wars, Warhammer, or Lovecraftian horrors will work.

52. Mesozooic

Mesozooic
Image Source: Z-Man Games

Publisher: Z-Man Games
Designers: Florian Fay, Alexander Ortloff-Tang

Mesozooic is Currently Unavailable

Back to back Z-Man Games on the list, but Mesozooic is very different from Pandemic Legacy. This one is a small little drafting game where you draft eleven cards to make your zoo. But those cards, you don’t get to decide where they fit in your zoo. Instead, you shuffle them up and then then a sliding puzzle, you race to get them in place in 45 seconds. You do that draft and slide puzzle three times and whomever has the best zoos at the end of that is the winner of the game. It’s silly fun and I like it as something really different.

51. Deception: Murder in Hong Kong

Deception Murder in Hong Kong
Image Source: Board Game Geek

Publisher: Grey Fox Games
Designer: Tobey Ho

Buy Deception: Murder in Hong Kong

Finally wrapping up with #51 we have Deception: Murder in Hong Kong. This is the one social deduction game that I like, and that is because there is deduction as well. You start to piece together the clues from the Forensic Scientist to figure out the murder weapon and clue. Of course the murder and accomplice are trying to keep you away from that, and the witness is trying to subtly point you in the right direction. It’s just a great time and there is always a story in this game.

Join Next Week

Just as a reminder, I am streaming my Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition every Wednesday night at 9 PM Central Time. The next few videos have their links up, so you can click notify on them to know when I go live. Or you can subscribe to the channel and click notify to know whenever a new video comes out. Currently I am playing through Legendary Kingdoms on Monday and then my wife and I are playing Baldur’s Gate 3 on Fridays. So join us for those videos.

And thank you for checking out the video and articles. Let me know what your favorite game from this chunk of 10 is and which one you would love to get played.

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Trinket Trove – Life’s Little Treasures https://nerdologists.com/2025/08/trinket-trove-lifes-little-treasures/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/08/trinket-trove-lifes-little-treasures/#respond Thu, 14 Aug 2025 14:25:27 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9762 Can you scurry around and collect the best doodads for your home? That is your goal in Trinket Trove from GameHead games.

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Time for another review of a Gen Con release. This time it is Trinket Trove. Now Trinket Trove is from the same company that did First-Class Letters which I reviewed last week. Does GameHead have another hit on their hands, at least for me? Trinket Trove offers bidding, drafting’ and set collection. I like all three, but is that enough to make it different from other games? Join me as I look at Trinket Trove.

How To Play Trinket Trove

Like I said, Trinket Trove is a game of drafting and set collection. You score points for the sets that you collect throughout the game. But, that is not where most of the game is. In Trinket Trove, it is all about how you draft.

At the start of the game players are dealt hands of four cards. Then a number of cards equal to the number of players is dealt out. A second card is added to the first card, so there is one stack of two, at lower player counts or two at higher player counts. Then in turn order players bid with cards from their hand to see who picks first.

Bidding

When you bid, you select a number of cards from your hand. This could be 0 or it could be all of them. The number of cards you select is your bid. So if you put out two cards, your bid is two. Now, other players can still bid two, since bidding is for turn order. When you bid you the same number as someone else you look at the numbers on the cards. In the case of a tie, the player who bid first is higher in turn order.

Now, I said you can bid zero. When you bid zero you flip the top card of the deck. That is going to be your bid. But you flip your token over to zero so that everyone knows your bid is zero. So even if you flip a seven and it looks like you have one card, you will not go ahead of players who bid one card.

Drafting

Players in turn order then select two groups of cards. The rules for selecting those groups of cards is pretty simple. You can select any pile, from those flipped or those bid. However, you cannot select the cards that you bid with. If you are the last player in the round and the card you bid with has not been taken, then you can select it.

Rounds

The new turn order is then set for the next round of bidding with the player who bid the most last time going first this time. This is a disadvantage to selecting first the previous round. The game continues until you play either six rounds or five rounds, depending on player count.

The game is clever in that it has you deal out six cards, in a six round game, into a separate pile. The extra card on the first card flipped out comes from that pile. So you use it as a mechanism to count down the rounds.

What Doesn’t Work

I think that the game is going to feel different between player counts. And I suspect that I am going to like it best at higher player counts. Why? Because there is a massive stack of trinkets in the game. Now, it is possible that you could remove some at lower player counts, but that would be a lot of work sorting cards. So instead when you play with two or three, the cards you see is going to be limited. That makes some sets hard to collect, or riskier anyways.

What Works

I love the bidding in this game. I think it is really clever. The idea that your cards, which you are collecting for your set collection are also what you bid with works so well. It reminds me in some ways how Biblios often times has you make tough decisions like that, how do you want to use your cards, for points or not? And it’s a slick system that is easy to keep track of.

Draftable Bids

The fact that you bid is also one of the piles that can be taken is interesting. I always hope to remember what people are taking and then toss out a low bid with something they want. If they take it, that is hopefully going to mean that something I want is available. And then when you bid big because there is something you really want, say two cards or maybe even three, then you know someone else is going to grab that. So do you want to do that.

But, at the same time, a big bid early is interesting. And yes, I know I’m talking a lot about the same thing. It is interesting because if I bid big early, then you might bid two cards so you can get my three. That means, though that I might get two piles or two cards that I like better than what I bid. So there is good strategy in the game.

Game Speed/Set-up

This is a fast game. The slowest element is the bidding and even that is not that slow. I think that someone could spend their time trying to figure out an optimal combination and bid to start. But most of the time, you want to bid as little as possible and not bid anything that would hurt your sets. So I think it is good game in terms of speed of play.

And the set-up is really simple as well. You shuffle up the cards, set 6 or 10 aside, deal out four, and shuffle up player tiles to determine order for the first round. That is it. Now, it is mainly a card game, so I expect the set-up to be fast. But it delivers on that expectation.

Artwork

I want to call out the artwork as well for this game. I think it is great and Sandara Tang, whom I knew first from Flame Craft, is back with some great cute artwork. And I like that the artwork on the cards is always slightly different. But they were smart from a usability standpoint with that art. If a shell is green on one card it might be blue on another, but the shape of the shell never changes. I like that as it allows me to recognize cards very quickly.

Easy Enough to Learn

Finally, I want to talk about how the game is easy enough to learn. I say it is easy enough to learn because I think there is a learning curve when it comes to the bidding. And there is a learning curve when understanding the likelihood of cards coming out of the deck. So while there is a thinky element to the game, overall it is not a complex game to teach others how to play.

Who Is Trinket Trove For?

I think people who like drafting and set collection are going to like the twist of bidding on this game. Mainly because it’s not that blind bidding and it’s not increasing bidding. Plus, it is a good filler style of game. And now, I play a lot of filler style of games, but this one is a good filler game for gamers. There is strategy to the game, but when two groups are playing longer games and one wraps up, this is a good game to keep the brain working, but won’t take too long.

Final Thoughts and Grade on Trinket Trove

Trinket Trove is a great game for me. I like it at lower player counts. And that is where I have played it mainly. I think there is a benefit to playing it with the maximum of six players. Now, it does come with eight character markers, so I wonder if there is a way to play it with eight, or if they plan a mini pack of cards that can bring it up to eight as an expansion.

I want to talk more about the bidding and how great that is. But in this section, I want to talk about how I think that is the biggest hook to the game. That bidding element is where you can really push for what you need, or potentially mess it up. If I were to pick an element of the game that I like best, it is the bidding. The drafting is good, but it is open drafting. And the set collection is interesting because not everything gains you points at the same speed. But that is still set collection. So the bidding is what makes the game.

My Grade: A
Gamer Grade: B+
Casual Grade: B+
Strategy (out of 10): 6
Luck (out of 10): 6

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First-Class Letters – Does It Mail It In? https://nerdologists.com/2025/08/first-class-letters-does-it-mail-it-in/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/08/first-class-letters-does-it-mail-it-in/#respond Fri, 08 Aug 2025 15:45:31 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9753 Can you deliver the best words in First-Class Letters a roll and write word game from GameHead? And is it a good game?

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I wrote about this game already this week, but this time we’re diving into a review for it. First-Class Letters is one of the games that came to me from Gen Con. And one of three GameHead games that I’ve picked up. This is a roll and write word game. Something that there aren’t a ton of, but it’s really more of a word game than anything. Is it a good word game? Or does it fall into any of the pitfalls that others might, aka, pattern recognition or knowing long words? Join me as I review First-Class Letters.

How To Play First-Class Letters

First-Class Letters is a word game played over seven rounds. The goal is to create the words that score the most points while following a few rules that sound simple but aren’t always as easy to complete to maximize your score.

Before the Game

Before the game the three brown dice are rolled. And those are going to be letters that seed three spots on your sheet. When you fill in those spots, the words you play there must start with those letters. This matters, as well because you put them in alphabetically. Any word that you play that isn’t in alphabetical order is not going to score at the end of the game.

The Rounds

Each round is the same, and there are seven in the game. You roll all four dice this time. The red die is going to be a letter that you are not allowed to use in your word. You u se that letter and your word is going to score you no points.

The other three are letters that you want to use in your word. Every time you use one of those three letters you get a point. And if you use all three of them your total points are doubled for that word. So it is possible to use a letter multiple times, and if you do that, it will score you one point each time.

Once you write your word, the first person to do so flips the timer. That is how much time, about 40 seconds I believe, that players now have to get a word written. And it is time for the player who flipped it or any player to try and come up with a better word to replace the one you have.

End Game

So at the end of the game you simply tally up your points. But you also verify that each word is in alphabetical order. If it is not in alphabetical order you cross it out and you do not score points for that word. The player with the most points is the winner of the game.

What Doesn’t Work

This in some ways is still a word game. It is possible to do well enough by just writing shorter words. Especially if the letters are difficult to make a long word out of. But a good vocabulary is going to be very helpful in this game. I think that the timer does help, though to alleviate some of this. As long as that person isn’t getting that large word immediately. The pressure of the timer is going to keep them from just being able to sit there and figure it out.

What Works

The system of the game works really well. I like how there is a letter that you can’t use. I believe on that die it has A, E, I, O, Y, and S (or T I forget which). But it is a common letter for words. So that makes it trickier. Often a A or E would roll and now all I can think of is a word that has them. The letters on the other dice are a good mix of more and less common letters.

I also really like how the game puts pressure on you by locking in some letters you need to use. First-Class Letters is played over seven rounds, so the spots for rows 2, 4, and 6 are the ones seeded with a letter. And it is possible to seed it with N, R, and T. Those are good letters to have, but it makes it really narrow in there as to what letters you can fit between. So the alphabetical order is a good stretch for players as well.

The time is nice how they use it too. I like that it isn’t just a timer that runs and counts down. It is only when one player feels comfortable to flip it. Now this sometimes can be fast because I like the word I got. Another time I might not like that word, but if I flip it, because I wrote a word, it is going to put pressure on the other players. And I get time to come up with another word.

Who Is First-Class Letters For?

I think it’s for people who like a nice fast word game. A lot of the more common ones, Scrabble and Boggle, can take a while to play. First-Class Letters is a very fast game in how you play and it is a game that makes it feel more balanced as you play it than some of those do. So if you know someone who likes word games or you are that person, but it is hard to find other people to play with, this one might be a great option for that.

Final Thoughts and Grade – First-Class Letters

I like this game a lot. I enjoy a good word game. And I appreciate how simple the game is to learn and play. The instructions for the game just take a few minutes and everyone is easily able to jump in and play the game. Is it going to be a highly strategic game, no, but it even says on the box it is a party style game. So you know what you are getting into.

Now, that all said, while I really like the game, it is going to be one that probably hits the table only sometimes. Why, because it is a word game. While I think it’s more accessible, I play games at times with people are not native English speakers. So is that the right game for them, or who have different levels of comfort with spelling. But I think that kind of goes without saying for a lot of word style games.

My Grade: A-
Gamer Grade: B
Casual Grade: B+
Strategy (out of 10): 4
Luck (out of 10): 4

Just one last thought, this game obviously has luck depending on what is rolled. But it is not a lucky game. And there is a little bit of strategy as you fill in words and figure out where you place them. But for the most part, like most word games, it comes down to the words that you can spot/know from letters given. So it is much more player dependent than luck or strategy.

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Gen Con Releases I’ve Bought https://nerdologists.com/2025/08/gen-con-releases-ive-bought/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/08/gen-con-releases-ive-bought/#respond Wed, 06 Aug 2025 14:43:20 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9746 Even if you didn't go to Gen Con you can get Gen Con releases. Which ones have a bought and am I excited to play?

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So if I had gone to Gen Con right now would be when I’d be doing a video about the Gen Con haul of games. But I wasn’t able to make it this year. But I was fortunate enough to have a few games picked up for me and a few that I ordered myself. These are games that got a Gen Con release that I have picked up. And a little bit about why I got them.

It’s worth noting before I start that some of these games were “Gen Con releases”. They were available prior to Gen Con at other sources but Gen Con was the first convention that they were widely at in the United States.

My Gen Con Haul

Tricky Kids

The first three are going to be the ones that a friend picked up from Gen Con for me. Tricky Kids is a trick taking game. The twist on this trick taking game is that the cards do not have numbers on them. Instead when you get your hand of seven cards you write down the numbers, which need to total up to 21 points.

There is more than that as well. As you play out the tricks, the points you get are from the chips that you take. And you know what order those chips are going to come out in. So while everything might give you some points, you may want to avoid winning a trick in hopes of taking a trick later in the hand. This just sounds brain burning and fun.

Slam Throne

Slam Throne is pogs. Yup, it’s as simple as that, but it’s pogs with the Dice Throne theme. I believe it was four characters who were released, granted you don’t know who you get. This one just looks like silly fun and that is what drew me into it. Plus I love Dice Throne so I want to support the company when they make a product that I think looks fun. Is it going to be great, I doubt it, but sometimes fun is just what you want.

First Class Letters
Image Source: GameHead

First-Class Letters

I like roll and write games. But First-Class Letters is not like the typical roll and write game. This is a word game with roll and write elements to it. It’s about creating words and putting them in order. But each time you roll letters you get more points for using all three of the letters. But there is always a letter that you cannot use, and as you can guess that’s generally a vowel.

To add to that you need to put your words in alphabetical order. That might not be too hard, but as you get down to it, you become more and more limited as gaps between letters start to shrink. And at the beginning of the game you seed three spots with starting letters, so that can add to the challenge as well. I think this sounds like a ton of fun, though I can see why some people may not like it because it is a word game.

Trinket Trove

From the same company as First-Class Letters, though I didn’t get this one picked up for me at Gen Con, is Trinket Trove. Trinket Trove is a set collection game. But to collect cards you need to bid to draft them. The twist on this is that as you bid to draft cards, the more cards you bid, the sooner you go. But also, the cards that you bid are now a pile of cards that someone else can take. The set collection aspect looks simple, so it is the bidding that really excites me for this game.

Trinket Trove
Image Source: GameHead

No Loose Ends

Also from the same company, which is GameHead, we have No Loose Ends. No Loose Ends is a trick taking game where you want to win certain types of tricks. How do you determine that, well, you use cards from your hand to indicate what type of trick you are going to take. I like this balancing act as it’s a twist on the normal bidding. I need to decide if I can win a blue trick or two but I need to play out two blue cards are bids, for example. That sounds like a fun trick taking twist to me.

Vantage

Vantage from Stonemaier Games is one of the ones that was released before Gen Con. And I pre-ordered it before Gen Con. But this is an open world adventure game. You get a mission to complete as a group at the start of the game. And then you get dropped into a world.

This is a game where you can win, but it’s more about the experience. What is the world like, what adventures will you go on? I also hear that it is better in that one to maybe three player range. And that is because while it is engaging to be part of the story at the table, it is downtime between turns. So I like it for a one off sandbox game when I want to play an open world game.

Otter

Otter is one that wasn’t on my radar going into Gen Con. It is only because of hearing about it that I pre-ordered this one, or late pledged it, on crowdfunding. Otter is a card shedding game. By that I mean you want to empty your hand completely. But if you don’t, you draw back up and try again.

Each otter has a head and tail that are give you a rule. So it might be something like the next card you play is two or less different from the previous card and it is of the fish suit. If you match both things you can keep on playing on that one until you only match one of the two. And there are three otters in play, so you want to try and match all of them.

I like the sound of this one because it sounds simple to learn but tricky to play.

Tag Team

Tag Team
Image Source: Scorpion Masque

This one the Man vs Meeple channel was the one that brought it to my attention. The game is interesting because it is what is known as an autobattler. That means that you have your two heroes and your opponent has two and the cards just battle themselves. That is not something that sounds like a great game there.

The trick is what as you start you have two cards. You battle both of them out. Then you draw three more cards and you add one of them to your deck. You don’t rearrange the cards in your deck, but you add that one and you decide, do I add it at the top, middle or bottom. Effectively when will cards activate. As you start to know your opponents card you ask yourself, when are they going to activate their big attack, and can I block that time. But they know that, so do they adjust where it is in the deck when they add a new card above it, or keep it in the same spot?

Ace of Spades

Ace of Spades
Image Source: Devir

Finally is Ace of Spades. I won’t say too much on this one because I already wrote a review for it. You can read the review for Ace of Spades here. Devir has another hit game and one that sold out really fast each day at Gen Con. This is a solo or two player game where you battle a boss by playing out poker hands. It is easy to learn and play but offers some fun challenges as you go along.

The one thing that I think keeps this from being more so for everyone is that it is somewhat lucky. Yes you can manipulate your hand with discards and draws, but sometimes you might not be able to beat the boss just because you drew poorly. I still love the game and think that it’s a very good game with fun mechanisms and a great theme.

Final Thoughts

Clearly without going to Gen Con you can still find Gen Con games. And I love that Devir put Ace of Spades on a free shipping sale during Gen Con. So if you were at the show you could stand in line to buy it or you could just order it. And since I wasn’t, I still could get it at Gen Con prices like I had picked it up there. I hope more companies, when they can, follow suit with that. Makes me feel better when I can’t go.

Out of these games that I haven’t played, I think I am most excited for Tag Team. I love the sound of that game and the characters all look cool. But I want to play all of them. And so many of them offer interesting twists on what you do in the game. What is the Gen Con release that you are most excited about playing or did you pick-up?

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