Holiday List | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Wed, 04 Dec 2024 16:35:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png Holiday List | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Holiday List – Trick Taking Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/12/holiday-list-trick-taking-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/12/holiday-list-trick-taking-games/#respond Wed, 04 Dec 2024 16:32:58 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9300 So many people know trick taking, what are some new games that you can add to a holiday list that do that well?

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Another type of game that I enjoy a lot is trick taking. And while there are a ton of good trick taking games out there, there are some that are less than ideal, or some that are more derivative other games. So let’s find some newer ones or some more unique trick taking games to play and add to your holiday list.

And for other ideas check out the previous lists.

Two Player Games
Campaign Games
Solo Games
Party Games
Welcoming Games
Medium Weight Games
Thematic Games
Deck Building Games

Trick Taking Games

For Northwood!

We’ll start off with the most unique trick taking game. This is one that already is on a list, but it deserves to show up twice. For Northwood is a solo trick taking game and if that sounds odd and unique it should. How do you make a solo game work for trick taking?

Firstly, you play against the game itself. But it’s not just about getting the most tricks. You need to win at different forest locations all which require a specific number of tricks to be won to succeed there. If you succeed you gather points and allies to use at other locations. Because you play against a random card, you need to use different helpers, you start with a few, to limit or increase the number of tricks you win so you succeed at the location.

The game itself is a great challenge. But then it also comes with some challenges that you can do as well. So once you are done with the regular game and feel comfortable with your strategies in that, let the game challenge you even more.

The Crew: Mission Deep Sea

The next one on the list is The Crew. I put down Mission Deep Sea, but you also can pick the space one. The Crew is a cooperative trick taking game. And you need to complete certain objectives to win each hand. However, you are not able to communicate which is going to be provide a bit of a challenge.

I like how it works because the challenges change for each hand. And for Mission Deep Sea they can change each time you play a certain level or hand. And it might be that I don’t want to win any blue colored cards. You need to win the red six. And another person has another thing they need to do. So how do you play out the hand to keep me from getting any blues. How do we get the red six at the right spot? That is the challenge in this game, and without communication it’s a fun puzzle and really teaches you trick taking strategy around how to win and lose a trick.

Fox in the Forest

Now we get to one of the two two player trick taking games on the list. Fox in the Forest is a head to head game where you want to get points by winning certain numbers of tricks. Win too many it can be bad, win too few, well the points vary across the range. So how can you manipulate the tricks and your opponent to get the number you want.

I enjoy the strategy of not always going for the most tricks. In fact, if you shoot the moon, so to speak, that can be bad. I also like how in the game, you do more than just play cards for their number. Some cards have powers as well. This might let you swap cards with your opponent, or change what the trump suit is. It offers a good puzzle to see how you can control what is going on so you can lock in that number of tricks.

Rebel Princess
Image Source: Bezier Games

Rebel Princess

Next up is the newest one on the list. It came out in the United States at Gen Con this year. And I really enjoy this game. It’s shot up my list of games that I always want to pull out and play because of h ow enjoyable it is. And because it’s probably the most familiar of the games on this list.

Rebel Princess is just Hearts in disguise. But it is a really good disguise. Like hearts you don’t want to take a certain suit, in this case the princes, because you are princesses and you are rebels. So you want to avoid them if you can. And you certainly want to avoid the frog prince, in the animal suit, because that’s a lot of proposals that you’ll have coming your way.

So all of that is normal, but let’s talk about what isn’t normal. Each player has a princess that they can use once per hand that gives them some sort of power. It might change the number of the card they play, or steal leading a trick, or several different things. And at the start of each hand how you pass the cards and some other rule are added to the game. It might be that you will win the trick if you are furthest away from the card led out. Or it might be the lowest card wins the trick and even more oddness as well could happen. All of those things make the game silly fun and good.

Claim

Finally another two player trick taking game. I believe there is a way to play with more, but this one works really well at two. Claim is played over two hands. And instead of counting tricks, you want to get majority in the suits. But each suit has it’s own power and the first hand you play, well it’s not going to help with that majority too much.

The first hand is going to be about building your second hand. You play out cards to win a new card from the deck of cards. And it might be a face up one, or it might be face down. If you win the trick you get the face up card. So sometimes you want to lose that trick because the face up card isn’t that good. But you also are taking the tricks that you win, because sometimes those cards will help later or give you some other ability to use right then.

The second hand plays out more like a traditional trick taking game. But you are trying to still get that majority. And again, there are a lot of powers and abilities of the suits that you need to keep track of. Like some suits just beat others, so you need to be aware of that. Or sometimes if you lose with a suit, you still get to keep that card you played to help get majority.

Final Thoughts

I really enjoy all of these games and there are a lot more that I want to play to get onto the list. So let me know your favorite trick taking games. And are there any from this list that you want to add to your holiday list or maybe you want to give to others this holiday season?

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Holiday List – Deck Building Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/12/holiday-list-deck-building-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/12/holiday-list-deck-building-games/#respond Tue, 03 Dec 2024 15:33:02 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9298 What deck building games may you want to give or get this holiday season? I have five that I think are great options.

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One of my favorite mechanisms in board games is deck building. I think the reason I like them is because they are very versatile. And so as I make this list of deck building games to checkout, I want to be intentional about offering up a lot of different options. Because some of them are big experiences, and others are much smaller. So let’s explore deck building games that you might want to ask for or gift.

And for other ideas check out the previous lists.

Two Player Games
Campaign Games
Solo Games
Party Games
Welcoming Games
Medium Weight Games
Thematic Games

Deck Building Games

Mistborn

Mistborn is the newest one on the list. And in fact, I played it solo the week of Thanksgiving. But this is a good new deck building game with a theme that I think a lot of people will enjoy. Brandon Sanderon’s series Mistborn is popular and this game does a good job of bringing in elements of that.

You get to play as a Mistborn and either battle other Mistborn and try and advance objectives to either win by completing those objectives or knocking the other Mistborn out of the game. Or you can play cooperatively against the Lord Ruler of the Final Empire. And you need to take him out, either as a group or in solo play, before he can squash the rebellion and take you out.

The standard mechanisms of get funds and spend those to get new cards in the same. But it does a few things differently. Firstly, you have a level up track and at the start of each turn you level up. So you ramp in power as you go. You also can’t just attack one person, no ganging up, and I like that as when you get close tot he end of the game it means everyone is low on health. Plus you burn metals, thematically, in the game, which works really well as well.

Hero Realms

Let’s now go to the smallest deck building game on the list, Hero Realms. This one is a two player head to head battling game. Though you also can face off against some solo options as well. This is another good game of building up your attack but also wanting to build up your resources so you can get stronger attacks. It’s a question as to when you flip from getting resources to getting attacking cards.

The ramp in this game is fast as well. By that I mean you start the game doing small amounts of damage to your opponent. But just a few turns in you’ll be able to swing for a lot of damage. That’s nice about the game because you are able to play a few times in a sitting instead of it being the game that takes all evening. And it’s small enough, just with the core box, that you can easily travel with it.

Lost Ruins of Arnak

We go from a small game to a very large game. Lost Ruins of Arnak is a deck building game but also so much more. In Lost Ruins of Arnak you are exploring, well, ruins. And you want to be the one with the most fame at the end of it. You do that by collecting resources, buying cards – the deck building part – and researching the ruins.

The game offers so much more, like I said. There is the worker placement element of the game. And there is the research track that you are spending resources you have gathered. But the main driving engine behind the whole thing is the deck building. Because as you buy cards they don’t go to the discard pile, they go to the bottom of your deck, and it’s a smaller deck, so you cycle through it fast.

Plus, there are two ways that you add in cards. Some being that you buy with gold. These are supplies that are shipped over to you for your expedition. So they go to the bottom of the deck. But there are artifacts that you find as well. You get to use the artifact immediately when you purchase it, but it’s at the cost of explore tokens versus gold, and explore tokens are used more often than gold is in the game. It’s a clever system and thematic as to how quickly found versus shipped items get to your hand.

Aeon’s End

Now for a cooperative game in this category we have Aeon’s End. A game of fighting against big monsters and hoping that you can outlast them or take them down before they take out the town of Gravehold.

This game has a ton of expansions and core boxes, and you will do find picking any core box. I like Aeon’s End Legacy, as well, as a way to jump in. In fact, I played through a full campaign of that on stream on Malts and Meeples if you want to check it out.

But this is a game that offers a ton of variety. While the cards in the market are fixed for a single game, you can change it up every game. Plus each Mage, the character you control and play as, has a special card and special abilities. And then each Nemesis you face off against, the big bad guy, is going to be unique as well. Some you can’t beat with damage, so you need to play it smart and outlast the smaller minions and attacks they throw out. Some are more straight forward and you’ll be attacking them a lot. They do a great job in being creative with the game.

If pure fantasy isn’t your style for this. There is also a newer, and slightly different version you can checkout called Astro Knights with more of a sci-fi and anime feeling theme.

Ascension

Finally, I think you need to put one of two games on a deck building list. I put the one that I like better, Ascension, as compared to Dominion. For me, Ascension’s theme and mechanisms for deck building are just a little bit better.

But it’s very much a straight forward deck building game, at least as you start. You certainly are able to buy expansions and change it up. But you buy cards that give you points and then either attack or purchase power. And your next turn with your next hand, you again buy cards, or you attack the enemies on the board gaining points for them.

One element I really enjoy is how everything kind of works together with synergies. Each faction in the game synergize a lot and you can lean into card draw or attacks if you want. You decide. And there are constructs as well, another element that I like. These are cards that just don’t get played, but they stay in play. Certain things will mess that up, but I love building up the combos and powers of those constructs as well, which can be game breaking if you aren’t careful and let someone get them all.

Final Thoughts

I want to add more games to the list. There are a lot of great deck building games out there. And I know people who their favorite game is Dominion. So while it isn’t on my list, or a deck building game that I love, it’s one that yes, you should checkout if you haven’t already. And I love how deck building can do so many things as well. Is there one of these games that you’d like to get? Or one that you’d think about giving to someone?

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Holiday List – Thematic Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-thematic-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-thematic-games/#comments Fri, 22 Nov 2024 16:22:27 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9287 Do you want a game that immerses you into the theme? Here are some thematic games to get or gift for the Holidays.

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People often fall into two different camps, though this is generalizing, with board games. They either like games with little luck and are something to be figured out how the game works, so mechanisms forward. Other people like games with a ton of theme. Really, most gamers fall somewhere on that scale as to which they prefer and how they enjoy them. But today we’re talking about Thematic Games. And I am not going to repeat anything that I had on the Campaign Games list, though those tend to be thematic games as well.

And for other ideas check out the previous lists.

Two Player Games
Campaign Games
Solo Games
Party Games
Welcoming Games
Medium Weight Games

Thematic Games

ISS Vanguard

Now, I said that all my thematic games weren’t going to be campaign games. But I’m starting off with one of them that I’ve played some on Malts and Meeples YouTube. This is a big space adventure and exploration game. Let’s get you intrigued, possibly, by the pitch.

A message was decoded on Earth that gave us the coordinates to what looked like an empty spot out in space. The ISS Vanguard was sent out there to figure out why those coordinates were important. When they got there, they realized that wasn’t the case, there was something out there that was hidden away.

In ISS Vanguard you play as the crew of the ship exploring planets and dealing with maintaining morale and researching and improving your technologies. The game really has this interesting divide between exploring the planets which is one type of game play. And managing the ship which is another type of game play. But Awaken Realms did a great job of managing to make both of them feel important and thematic as you play.

Dungeon Kart

Next up is a racing game. Racing games often aren’t the most thematic games. But Dungeon Kart for me is a great Mario Kart style of racing game that works. It is quick, you get spells to sling around, and it feels like you are playing Mario Kart on the table top.

Each player is one of the characters from the Boss Monster world that Brotherwise has created. And they are driving around in a kart trying to get around the track the fastest. But each character has their own special things that they can do. And each vehicle has their own special ways of handling. I forget how much overlap or how static that is. But you also, at the end of each round, check to see who is where, and the further back you are, the more spells and things you get to cast and try and cast up. I love that catch-up mechanism in the game, because it makes it feel like no one is ever out of it.

Super-Skill Pinball
Image Source: WizKids

Super-Skill Pinball 4-Cade

Now for the smallest of the thematic games on the list. This is a roll and write game that is pinball. You each get a board, a ball, and dice get rolled. Depending on the numbers on the dice, that determines where the ball is going to go. It always is going to move down, with a few exceptions, just like a pinball table. Then you use your flippers, launch it back up, and keep on going.

The game is all about how well you can use the dice. Two are rolled and you just use one so you generally have options. But if you need to, they offer thematic options like nudging the table. Of course, you nudge too hard, and there is a chance that you get a tilt. And the bumpers, generally three in the middle of a table, the ball can rattle around in there without needing to drop down.

They also sell a lot of options for the game. There is the base game, which I have. But there is an expansion that adds more tables. There is a Star Trek version or maybe DC is more your thing, or you want to play it at Christmas, you can buy Christmas pinball tables. You decide what makes the most sense, or intrigues you the most.

Roll Player Adventures

Now we’re onto another campaign game. The final one for the thematic games is also kind of a campaign game, but I’ll get to that. I love Roll Player Adventures, though, and it has a fun story to it. Roll Player is a thematic game about making a D&D character. Well, they took what they made in that game and created a whole world around it that you can play in Roll Player Adventures.

In this game, it’s a shorter campaign game than some. You play through stories with a map, move around that map, but the game is mainly built around dice placement and dice manipulation. You build up a hand of cards for your character, and then use those cards to get dice onto skill checks and or for fighting monsters. But you need specific color dice to do that, so you need to spend your attributes to pick the dice to get the right colors. Or maybe you just risk it and draw from the bag. There is this great balancing of resource management in the game.

I really enjoy this game. I like the game play a lot, and the story is also great. And I appreciate that it’s not that long a campaign. The game is probably best at 3 players. At 1 or 2 it is going to be harder. My play was a 4 player game, and it became a bit easy. So know that, but if you are up for a challenge at lower players or just want to enjoy the story, grab this fun, big game.

Detective A Modern Crime Board Game
Image Source: Portal Games

Detective: A Modern Crime Board Game

Finally for thematic games, I want to share Detective: A Modern Crime Board Game. This is the kind of a campaign game and kind of not game. Mainly because the core box is a campaign. It’s five cases that are tied closely together that tell a really good story. But they also sell single castes or a box of cases that don’t all link together.

In this game you play as detectives trying to solve cases, no surprise there. But it is more than just that. You investigate different locations, meet up with people to question them, and you even gather DNA samples. This is a very in-depth detective game. I take so many notes when I play, over the five cases in the base box, I think I ended up with 12-15 pages of notes. And you use a computer to query against the system to see if you find DNA matches, look up details from old cases, run finger prints. And you even, once in a while, look up things online to gain historical context to what is being talked about.

Now, if you want to try different versions of this you can as well. Maybe crime isn’t your thing, no big deal. You buy the Batman set, or there is Dune, or 1980’s, or other one off cases that you play as well. This is just one of the best, if not the best thematic deduction game that I’ve played.

Final Thoughts

I love so many thematic games. I even now see a few more that I could have and should have mentioned. Things like Marvel Champions is a great thematic Marvel game. Rock Hard 1977 let’s you live out your rockstar dreams. And of course I own a lot more campaign games like Stars of Akarios, The 7th Citadel, and more that I want to talk about here as well.

What are your favorite thematic games? And which one would you want to add to your holiday list or gift to someone?

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Holiday List – Medium Weight Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-medium-weight-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-medium-weight-games/#respond Wed, 20 Nov 2024 15:55:29 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9283 What's the next step board games or medium weight board games that I'd recommend getting or giving for the Holidays?

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Yesterday I did a list of Welcoming Games. Today, let’s find some games that are a bit more complex. These are going to be that type of game you need to play maybe more than once to really get the game. But it isn’t going to be that heavy game that is a bear to teach. Medium Weight Games tend to be those games that you can still teach pretty fast, but they offer more things to do on a turn. The definition is pretty loose, really, but let’s look at some of those next step up in complexity games.

And for other ideas check out the previous lists.

Two Player Games
Campaign Games
Solo Games
Party Games
Welcoming Games

Medium Weight Games

Now, I know that some of these games are going to feel pretty light to people who play heavier games. I mean Medium Weight Games as those next step level of game, where you know some games but you haven’t played a ton.

Heat: Pedal to the Metal

Let’s start out with a racing game for our medium weight games. While Heat: Pedal to the Metal follows a nice system of what actions you take, there are a number of actions to keep track of. That’s what kept me from putting it in my welcoming game list.

Heat: Pedal to the Metal, like I said, is a racing game. And it’s one that moves along pretty quickly as you gun it down straightaways, slam on the brakes and hit corners. You paly out cards for how far you want to go each turn, depending on what you have in your hand and what gear you are in. But if you blast around a corner, or need to accelerate or brake too quickly you build up heat in your engine. This clogs things up, and while you can drop down in gears and start to cool down, you’re costing yourself speed potentially.

This game is a great balancing act of trying to push it as fast as you can while managing the heat as well. And as you play more, you can do tournaments or cups through several races. It even has a solo mode which is fun to play as well.

Dice Forge
Image Source: Board Game Geek

Dice Forge

Dice Forge is a dice building game. There aren’t that many of that type of game out there. But you roll dice to collect resources and then spend those resources to buy cards or upgrade the faces of your dice so that they are better.

I like how this game has a nice pivot point. You want to improve your dice. But at some point you pivot to getting more cards for points. When do you pivot, though, is the question that determines how well you do in the game. And you also need to figure out the strategy that works the best with the faces of the dice you have. Some cards might be more unattainable than others, but you might be generating points in other ways.

I also appreciate that you do something on your opponents turns. You don’t do much, but you roll your dice. So it’s not a slow resource generation. You can generate a lot of them quickly, and there are rules for two players to roll more so that it doesn’t slow down the game there as well.

Asking for Trobils

Next up we have a worker placement game. But this one is a bit friendlier and goofier than most. It parodies a lot of classic sci-fi stories and shows.

Basically, Trobils are causing troubles. So you need to catch them, and you get points. But of course you need to build the traps to get them. And everyone is racing around to do that. The worker spots are limited, but the number of ships you have to place out is limited as well before you need to pull them back. And you can recruit pirates or do other things to mess with players, but it’s not really a take that sort of game.

If the idea of this worker placement and almost contract fulfillment, building the traps to get the trobils, interests you, Asking for Trobils is on the lighter side of worker placement games, but will still feel like there is a bunch to do.

Clank! In! Space!

Now we’re moving to a slightly heavier game in Clank! In! Space! In this game you are racing around, building out a deck and trying to get treasure before the evil Lord Eradikus takes you out. But of course, the faster you go, the noisier you are.

I like this game a lot because it offers fun deck building. You buy cards that help you buy more cards, or fight bad guys, or race around the board. And I like how in Clank! In! Space! the board is modular. I know that Clank Catacombs offers that as well, but I need to play that one still. You compete with the other players to get in, get a treasure and get to an escape pod. But if you just get to the bay, you are rescued and can win the game. But you might not even make it out and will be out of the running.

Any version of Clank is good. Regular fantasy, Clank Catacombs with it’s even more modular board. Or Clank! In! Space!. And there is a good app for it if you want to try out the game because you aren’t sure.

Slay the Spire Board Game
Image Source: Contention Games

Slay the Spire

Finally a cooperative game to wrap up the medium weight games list. I put this one on here because it’s cooperative, it’s based off of a video game, and it’s a lot of fun to play, both the board game and video game.

This is a rogue like deck building game. You battle against monsters to gain more and new cards for your deck. You heal up, upgrade cards, and buy more cards as well as you go along. Can you climb all three levels and win the game?

The game is also a ton of fun because it takes what’s a solo computer game and makes it multiplayer in a way that works really well. I love how it builds up towards that. And it still offers you the unlocking experience that you get in the video game as well. There’s so much going on and it’s just a very fun time for deck building. And you play three acts, but it’s easy to stop between and save if it gets too long.

Final Thoughts

These are just some oft he games that I could put down for next steps. The list is long and there are a lot of great classic games that could work on here as well, things like 7 Wonders would make sense, for example. But which of these games would you want to get and play or do you already have that you love?

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Holiday List – Welcoming Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-welcoming-games-2/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-welcoming-games-2/#respond Tue, 19 Nov 2024 16:46:50 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9281 What are good games to get or give when you want to welcome people to your table? Here are five welcoming games.

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You might describe these games as “gateway games” or “simpler games” but I really like the term Welcoming Games. These games aren’t just games to get you into heavier games, but it’s to welcome you into the hobby of board gaming. And more so, welcoming games are the games that welcome you to the table. Come join with me in something that I really enjoy. So let’s talk about some welcoming games, and I’m going to pick some that are maybe less on the radar than the classic welcoming games to give you more options.

And for other ideas check out the previous lists.

Two Player Games
Campaign Games
Solo Games
Party Games

Welcoming Games

Bonsai

Bonsai is a pretty game about growing Bonsai trees. That’s a theme that is going to be a lot of fun for a lot of people and less “nerdy” which a lot of the games that are welcoming games try to be. That is, they are attempting to be less nerdy to be more welcoming.

In Bonsai you grow you tree by collecting pieces for your tree and then placing them out onto your tree. You pick either of those actions to do. Now it’s a bit trickier than that because as you play there are card abilities that let you hold more or place more tree pieces. Or you grab scoring cards to add to your end game scoring. There is a good amount going on, but it’s not too much because your actions are either take a card or add to your tree, meditate or cultivate as it calls them. And in the end you have an interesting looking bonsai tree.

Draftosaurus

The next fun theme for welcoming games is Draftosaurus, a dinosaur drafting game. In this game you build out your best dinosaur zoo for points, but you do that by drafting dinosaurs and placing them into different pens that will score in different ways.

On a turn the person who is in charge of the die, that passes each turn, rolls it and that determines where the dinosaur you pick has to go. Except for the person who rolled the die and can place it anywhere. Then you pick a little wooden dinosaur from your hand and add it to one of the pens. Some pens will give you points for pairs of dinosaurs, or maybe it wants all different dinosaurs or all the same. Each one is going to give you points in a unique but simple way.

Cafe Baras
Image Source: Kids Table Board Games

Cafe Baras

Another welcoming game is new this year and it’s Cafe Baras. You are capybara baristas making your best coffee shop. There is cute artwork and some in jokes in this game about the different board games that the company has made. But it’s a nice easy game.

You either are adding more food and drink to your menu, which costs you money, or you are getting customers which gives you money. And you want to get the customers that give you the most points too, at the end of the game, because if you give the customer exactly what they want you can get a customer for life. Plus there are some other ones who will give you points at the end of the game if you have your menu built out in the way that they like it or your coffee shop set-up like they like it.

Cafe Baras is another game that really keeps it clean and simple and easy to play. And these first few have basically no reading to them which makes them quite language independent.

Castle Combo

Castle Combo is the first of our welcoming games that does have more reading to it. In this game you build out a three by three grid of point scoring fun. And all you do on your turn is buy a card and add it to your grid.

I love how easy this game is for being one that offers some good challenge. But each card tells you everything you need to know about it. First you know the cost of the card, how many coins it’ll cost you to buy it, then there is a bonus. The bonus might be getting you more money or keys. Or it might be a permanent discount on buying cards. And finally, there is the end game scoring, how you need to play it to get points. That is it.

Now, there is one last element, the element of the keys. The keys just allow you to change what you can buy. You either wipe all the cards in one row. Or you move where you can buy to the next row. The game is so simple, fast and friendly that it’s a good welcoming game experience.

Mountain Goats

Finally the lightest game on the list, Mountain Goats. This one is very simple to teach and play but also a lot of fun. Mountain Goats is a dice chucking game as you climb up a mountain to grab points.

The game has six different spots where your mountain goats climb. Each column has a different number and different points that match the number. You roll four dice and then you combine them to move mountain goats up towards the top of the mountain. When you get there, you get a point token. And you stay up there and can get more points if you roll that number or combine dice for that number again. But if someone else gets there it bumps you all the way to the bottom and you need to climb again.

That is all there is to the game. This one is again language independent and one that is going to be the easiest for younger kids to play as well. You just need to be able to think about the different combinations of numbers you make. Once a kid figures that out, it is easy to play.

Final Thoughts

You also can’t go wrong with the classics. Games like Catan, Carcassone, Ticket to Ride, and Small World are still great options. But I want to let you know there are new fun options as well out there. And this isn’t even a complete list, I know I could find a whole lot more.

Which of these games do you think a non-gamer or rarely gamer friend or family member would play out of the welcoming games?

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Holiday List – Party Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-party-games-2/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-party-games-2/#comments Fri, 15 Nov 2024 16:29:46 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9277 Need new party games to play with friends and family around the holidays? Here's a list to ask for or gift.

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Probably the most common category that people will be looking for games is party games. Maybe not people who are steeped into the hobby, but people joining the hobby or even those who just want something else to play with family and friends. Party Games is great for that an there are a lot of really good ones that people can checkout.

And for other ideas check out the previous lists.

Two Player Games
Campaign Games
Solo Games

Party Games

Just One

Just One is the first of two cooperative party games on the list. That in and of itself is fairly unique. But these games are great for when you have that person or people you play with who get too competitive or into even party games.

In Just One you give a one word clue to the person who is trying to guess a single word. The trick comes that players aren’t able to know what the other people are writing. And you want to give a different clue. Clues that are the same, both of them are erased and the person guessing gets neither of them. I like that element of the game because you want to be unique, but if you are so unique and far out there it could point someone in the wrong direction. And it is possible that people will completely skip the normal clue or the best option as well.

So Clover

The other of the cooperative party games is So Clover. Both of these games are actually from the same company, Repos Productions, who makes an interesting party game seemingly every year.

This is one that is trickier to explain than Just One. But it reminds me of a Venn Diagram in some ways. You get two words and you need to figure out how those words overlap. But you do that four times, like the shape of a four leaf clover. Each overlap is going to give you a unique combination. And after you pick your words and write them down, you remove the cards with the words, which have four words on them, and add a random other one. The other players need to work together and figure out how to put it back in the right orientation.

This game also has a nice benefit of the flow of the game. Each player can write down their combinations at the same time. And then you just go around taking turns being the person to present your set-up of words.

Ready Set Bet

This is very different from what people think of when they think of party games. But it has the excitement that I expect when I play a party game. Ready Set Bet is a horse racing bidding game that is played in real time.

One person is going to be running the race. They, in real time, are rolling dice which moves horses down the track. The other players are all betting on the race in real time. Once someone takes a spot that spot is gone. So rolling two dice you think that 7 would win most of the time, it might, but if you roll the same number twice in a row, it causes it to surge ahead. And of course, there is luck of the dice.

This game is a bit more of a game than a lot of the other ones. Those tend to be experiences. Here you need to learn a few rules and be up for adding in a bit of complexity as you go. But it still has those stand-up moments as people are racing for a betting spot, or at the end of the race, everyone is holding their breath or cheering loudly for their horse, or the one they bet the most on, to win.

Medium

Now we go to more traditional party games, though this one is still unique. In Medium you and another player partner up for a turn. It isn’t a cooperative game, but you both want to match up. That is common for party games. But here, it feels more unique because you each pick a word to play, and then you both need to come up with a word that connects the two. If you don’t on the first try, you use the words you just said and try again. You get three tries with fewer and fewer points you get each time. After a few rounds, player with the most points wins.

I like this game because it leads to weird situations. You might go in two opposite directions with what connects or is between the two. Or you might both pick different synonyms and now you need to make that work for the next guess. And as the person who is watching people guess you always know what they should say. But as the guesser you second guess yourself so much.

Blank Slate

Finally for the party games we have Blank Slate, the most traditional of the party games. In this one you are filling in a blank, so it’d be like [your word] Slate for example. And you want to match with one person with the word you write down. If you watch one with person you both get three points. Match with no one and you get no points. Or match with more people and you all get one point. The game is a race to 20 points or so, and it’s a lot of fun.

I like this one better than a lot of games like it though. It almost has a Apples to Apples feel to it, but you get to be creative. You pick the word you want to play, not some random words that you have in your hand that might not match. And you play the people around the table as well. I might find a great sports word to fill in, but if that doesn’t match the interests of the people at the table, probably not the best play.

Final Thoughts

There are a lot of good party games out there. I still even enjoy the classic party game of Scattergories. But a lot of people have played the few party games from the 80’s and 90’s a lot at this point. So these games are all newer, sometimes familiar and sometimes different, add them into your gaming rotation with friends and family around the holidays. Or give them to people so you aren’t always stuck playing the same games over and over again with them.

What is your favorite party game?

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Holiday List – Solo Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-solo-games-2/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-solo-games-2/#comments Thu, 07 Nov 2024 15:28:41 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9259 What solo games can you cozy in with this holiday season? Here's a list of a few different varieties to try.

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Nothing says the holidays like a list of solo games. What games can people give you so you can then go play those games and leave them alone? Or maybe it’s because they know where you live you don’t have a game group, or you travel a lot, there are a lot of better reasons than to get you to leave them alone. But let’s be fair, I had fun with that one went talking about solo games. So what solo games make a good holiday gift?

And for other ideas check out the previous lists.

Two Player Games
Campaign Games

Solo Games

Final Girl

Final Girl is not one of the solo games that has a great theme for the holidays, unless that holiday is Halloween. But for a person who loves board games and horror movies this is a great game. Because this game is all about being the final girl who survives or at least makes it to the end of the horror film. Can you survive to the end?

But there is more beyond that. This game has some really fun mechanisms to it. It’s all about spending energy to play out cards. Of course you spend too much you won’t be able to buy more cards and you’ll end up with a weak turn. It’s this really fun balancing act of actions you try and do, and then you hope that you roll successes.

The game also has so much variability in it. You don’t need to get it all, but you buy a base box, that is the core game for the whole thing. And you buy what they call feature film boxes. Basically boxes that have different final girls and horror bad guy tropes. So you can pick your favorite tropes or buy a bunch for a lot of fun variety.

Grove

Grove
Image Source: Side Room Games

Grove is a small game even when it comes for solo games. This one is about building up your best and most productive fruit grove. It does it by having you overlap cards. A lot of games do this and Grove, in my opinion does this best. Orchard is the simpler version, and Sprawlopolis does something similar, but it isn’t as small

Like I said, in this game you are trying to overlap cards so you get the right types of fruits covering the other up. In fact, you can’t mix fruits as you overlap. It’s a good and thinky puzzle that way as you play. And the game is done with only nine cards. So even for a solo game it goes fast. The game does come with 18 cards, though, so you can easily play twice quickly before you even need to shuffle up again.

For Northwood

From the same company as Grove and in the same size box we have For Northwood. As far as solo games go, this one is very unique. Mainly because it’s trick taking. How do you do trick taking as a solo game?

The trick taking is pretty simple. You play against a deck of cards, you know what cards aren’t in that deck because they are in your hand. And you need to win tricks like normal. You play the same suit, you win the trick if you have the higher number. A lot of the fun, though comes from the fact that you don’t want to win tricks sometimes. You activate a different location each time and that tells you how many tricks you need to win.

That sounds very lucky. But it’s less lucky because as you play you start with powers that you can use, and as you win at locations you activate and get the opportunity to bring in new powers to use. Some help you get that target of winning seven tricks I believe it is. Other powers let you dump cards and lose tricks when you can’t win any.

The Isofarian Guard

Now we’re into the big solo games. Though just for this one game. This also could cross over onto the campaign games list. But The Isofarian Guard is a big campaign game with a big footprint, voice acted (or might be just narrated) story, and it’s a fun time.

I have a play of the game, at least the start of it, you can checkout on Malts and Meeples. But the main mechanisms are around you exploring the map, going to locations and sometimes you get story, other times you fight monsters, and then you build up your home base as well. The combat can become a bit repetitive with you stumble across it too often. They might have changed that up in the 2nd edition or 1.5 edition they crowdfunded.

The story is the element that really drives the game. This is not going be one of the easier solo games to find. I suspect they might have a few around as they are fulfilling their latest crowdfunding campaign, but this is a good big solo campaign game that you can play. It also does work two players as well, but was built for solo because you can’t explore separately.

Snowfall Over Mountains

Snowfall Over Mountains is probably the best thematically for the holidays. This is about building out the landscape of the surrounding areas to a little log cabin. And that’s really how it works, you take a card and figure out where you want to place it around the cabin or with what you’ve already built out.

But I like how relaxing this game is as a solo game. It’s one where you don’t feel the pressure to do well because you are just seeing how many points you get. And you get points by completing objectives to the best of your ability. Each objective scores for a different thing, and there are multiple of each scoring so you can vary up how the game plays every time.

This one is really for that nice peaceful, maybe not your family or friends sending you away, but when you want to get away and do something that still stimulates your brain sort of games. And I enjoy that for a solo game because it gives a nice relaxing experience. And it’s another one that I’ve played on Malts and Meeples.

Final Thoughts

I really enjoy solo games. Though, I find that I like them best when I’m streaming them. Mainly because I like to have someone to talk to, so a camera does the trick for that. Let me know what some of your favorite solo games are.

And which of these solo games would you want to get or give?

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Holiday List – Two Player Board Games https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-two-player-board-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/11/holiday-list-two-player-board-games/#comments Tue, 05 Nov 2024 16:42:28 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9255 What board games do you want to add to your holiday list that are great at two? It's time to think about that shopping for people or yourself.

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Miniature Market, with their deals, keeps on reminding me how close we are getting to the holidays. So let’s start doing the list with two player board games. These are for you and that special someone to cozy up with and play on a winters night when it’s all snowy. Or maybe you’re not in a cold spot, but these are fun games that work great at two players that are totally worth checking out and giving or putting on your own holiday list.

Two Player Board Games

Lord of the Rings Duel

First one on the list is for the big Lord of the Rings fan, but you don’t need to be a Lord of the Rings fan to enjoy this game. Lord of the Rings Duel is a really fun back and forth game as players act as either the Fellowship or the forces of Sauron.

There are a few great things about this game. Firstly, it’s a two player drafting game and it works really well. It uses the 7 Wonders Duel drafting system. Plus there are a few spots in the game that you are competing over. There is area control on one board. You want to gain the favor of all the people’s of Middle Earth on another. And you can also win by getting the ring to Mount Doom, or if you are the forces of Sauron catching the ring before it gets there. Really good two player game.

Hanamikoji

Now maybe you want something that’s a bit faster but still has a really good back and forth tension. Hanamikoji is a great game for that. In this game you want to win the favor of Geisha. To do that you need to bring them gifts. Whomever has the most gifts next to a Geisha wins that Geisha’s favor. And you win the game by either winning the favor of four Geisha or 11 points worth of Geisha.

But the game has a great and simple twist to it. You only play four actions per round. And the actions you can use each of them only once. So it is a real puzzle to figure out how to use those actions to the best of your ability. And that’s what I love about the game and why it’s such a good two player game. It is easy to learn but there is a lot of thinking going on in it.

Star Wars Unlimited
Image Source: Fantasy Flight Games

Star Wars Unlimited

I only put one TCG (Trading Card Game) on the list, and it’s my favorite right now, Star Wars Unlimited. This is such a fun game and one that I think non-Star Wars fans can enjoy. But you probably need a passing knowledge of Star Wars which makes this one a bit more focused. Star Wars Unlimited is a nice tight back and forth game without the baggage that comes with some of the older and more complex ones.

You take your turns back and forth and it moves really quickly which is great. Plus you have a leader and that leader determines some of the cards you use, but also gives you an ability and idea to build around. And I find that to be great with how it works. And you never are short on resources, well you might not be able to play everything you want, but you never go turns without being able to build up to play your more powerful cards. That is what makes the game work really well.

Star Wars not your theme, there are other solid options like Lorcana (simpler), Magic the Gathering (more complex) or One Piece (similar complexity) out there as well that might fit your interests more.

Dice Throne

Dice Throne is another consistent one on my two player board games lists. This is back and forth battle Yahtzee style of game. But each character has their own unique powers and abilities. And there are so many characters out there. You can dive in and grab 2 or go all in and get 16+ if you want. And there is even Santa vs Krampus to fit that holiday theme.

Like I said this is battle Yahtzee. But each character does their own thing. The Barbarian heals and does a lot of damage on basic attacks. The Shadow Thief can dodge damage while the Pyromancer hits you back for more damage. And you can upgrade that as well as you go, so you get stronger as you play the game and try and knock your opponent out. Or you can just shoot for your ultimate ability and do a ton of damage that way.

The game is also great because of the different themes and packs. You can mix and match anything. So if you find you like the game it is easy to add in more. And there is Marvel content for the game as well which is a theme that likely works better for most people than the general fantasy theme.

Fox in the Forest Duet

Finally we have two player trick taking which is a unique idea. But I really enjoy this version, or the competitive version, or the other competitive two player trick taking game Macha. But Fox in the Forest Duet is a cooperative game which makes it even more unique for a trick taking game.

You play out tricks like normal, but whomever wins the trick, the fox, who is trying to collect leaves, moves towards them. But you don’t want it to fall off the board or it makes the board smaller and easier to fall off. Do that too much and you won’t be able to collect all of the leaves. But there are cards that offer ways to manipulate that that you play out as well. But can you get in sync with the person you’re playing with and how well do you know how to manipulate and fish for information in trick taking?

Final Thoughts

I love two player games. I don’t play all of mine a ton because a lot of the times I play with more. But all of the games on the list come out and get played every no and again. And I gave a handful of extra options as well in there.

Do you find yourself consistently playing games at two, then these are probably great options for you? And do you have games you already like at two players that I missed? Let me know what those games are. And let me know which ones are making your holiday list, for giving or receiving.

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Holiday List – Party Games https://nerdologists.com/2023/12/holiday-list-party-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2023/12/holiday-list-party-games/#respond Fri, 01 Dec 2023 13:48:00 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=8550 How do you find the good party games that are out there? I have a list of ones to checkout to give or play around this holiday season.

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Sometimes you want a game that you can open up Christmas Day, or what ever day you open presents, and start playing immediately. If you’re like me, that can be any game, but party games are a great option. People at the holiday gathering might not want to learn a whole new game. But party games are great, easy to teach, and they don’t have to be not safe for work or repetitive. Let’s look at some party games that will be fun for the whole group.

Party Games

Just a quick disclaimer. I picked party games for the party game list, that makes sense. What I didn’t do was pick games that work well in big groups, though all of these do. That’s because there are some games that work well in big groups but aren’t party games. That list will come up soon.

Doodle Dash

Let’s start out with a drawing game, and a speed drawing game. If you feel like you can’t draw, that’s fine Doodle Dash is about speed too. In Doodle Dash, one person doesn’t know what everyone else is drawing. And they want to guess it on the first try. But everyone else is vying to be that first try, so they are drawing as fast as they can to be the first one ready.

When you think your picture is good enough, you grab the first player marker. The second person, who will get their picture looked at next, grabs a die and starts rolling. That die has a stop on it, once that stop is hit, everyone else stops drawing. Then the guesser sees the first and fastest picture and see if they can get it. If not, they go to the second one, and if not, they go to the rest of them to try and guess it. But the points get lower the further you go.

This game will have everyone laughing as they play it. It’s light, it’s made to be silly, and it’s a drawing game where how good you are at drawing really doesn’t matter.

Fun Facts

Next up we have Fun Facts, a new party game as well. Repos Productions has two other games on the list coming up. Fun Facts is all about how well your group knows each other because this is a cooperative game. But it isn’t one where a single person can decide everything. Every player is making the choice on their own even though you win a whole group.

The game asks you a question about yourself, like on a scale of 1 to 100, how much do you like the season fall? I don’t know, maybe 47, I like the temps but not that winter is coming here in MN. Then the person who read the question puts theirs face down. Everyone goes around adding theirs to the column of face down. All the time hoping they are putting it in the right spot. The more in the right order you get, the more points you have.

It’s a simple game, it’s kind of an ice breaker, get to know you sort of game. But it works a whole lot better than a lot of ice breakers. You find out about people and there are some good laughs too as someone widely overestimates how much they like fall or how much more than everyone they’d pay to go actually visit Jurassic Park.

Medium
Image Source: Greater Than Games

Medium

Now we’re onto a game that is about working together but is not in the cooperative party games category. Medium is about matching up with the person that you teamed up with. You play a word, I play a word and we need to come up with the word that connects those two.

It’s not bad if it’s “cat” and “baby”, we’ll both likely end on “kitten”. But if we differ, now we need to come up with a new word that connects are two new words. Hopefully we got closer than we were before. Because if we didn’t different directions on it, it might be even harder to connect now. And if we miss a second time, we have a third and final shot at it. The sooner you get it, the high points you get. And if you don’t match at all, no points.

Most points at the end of the game wins. But that’s not the fun of the game, the fun of the game is watching people try to come up with a word knowing you’re doing just as poorly when it’s your turn. And when people just miss by going robber and criminal when the words were “steal” and “burglary”, everyone one having a good laugh. Or wondering when the two people take it opposite directions how they’re going to get “cactus” and “car” to work together.

So Clover

Now we’re back for some more cooperative party games. The next two are that, actually before I end on a competitive one to make an even three and three in each area. But So Clover is a great cooperative party game of having a grid of words, might be “cactus” and “car” and needing to come up with a word that connects them.

This sounds a whole lot like Medium. But the player don’t just have one of those two do, they have four of them, one for each side of the clover. And on the card there isn’t just one word, there are four, one for each side of the square card. So you need to get four clues written down one for each. Then those cards come off, a random one is mixed in, and everyone else is trying to figure out how to put it back together.

It’s fun to see how crazy some of the clues have to be to try and connect things. Or how you figure out what goes on one side, like if it’s “steal” then “robber” and “burglar” might make perfect sense. But those cards share overlap with two other clues, one on the left and one on the right, so how do you get those clues to match up right?

So Clover Board
Image Source: Repos Productions

Just One

Then there is Just One, which might be my favorite party game, for sure is my favorite in the cooperative party games category. Just One is about giving a one word clue, one per player, to the person guessing their single word without overlapping on any of the clue words.

You see, players write down their clues and without the guesser looking all the players compare. If there is any overlap, well, those two or more that overlap are all gone. The player then only gets to see the remaining words to guess as to what their word is.

So you want to be creative as you play, you want to give a clue that others won’t likely think of, but also not too obscure that it throws off the whole guess. It’s possible to get a really confusing one in there if you aren’t careful, one that makes everything else feel different to the guesser.

Just One has those moments where you’re really happy with a clever clue that you’ve given. Or those moments where you wonder if the guesser will be able to get it because there could have been six clues and now it’s down to just two. Are those two enough for them to be able to get it? And then the moments of elation when someone gets some weird clues but still gets it anyways. A great fun time.

Blank Slate

Finally we have Blank Slate, and I think that Blank Slate is one of those party games that works well with everyone. The system is simple and it feels familiar so it’ll work well with people who maybe played games like Balderdash before or others along those lines. But this time, it’s even simpler.

In Blank Slate you are given a word and either a blank spot before or after it. You might get the world “truck” followed by a blank. Everyone writes down a word to fill in that blank. If you match with no one, you don’t get any points. If you match with just one other person both of you get three points. And if you match with more than just one person, all of you get one point.

I really like this system of wanting someone to match with you but not wanting everyone to. It’s that question, like with Just One, of how obscure do I go or how much of a stretch do I go for, versus do I play it so safe that I’ll likely overlap with more? You just never really know how it’s going to go because you might find that you’re just thinking too much like everyone else.

Final Thoughts

I know that as someone who likes board games a lot, you’re probably reading this or looking at this list wondering if these games are for you. Or you remember when party games came out before and how disappointing they were. Well, I do want to say that these aren’t your parents party games, they aren’t like Taboo or Catch Phrase or the dozen other games that were about the same.

I think that party games have come a long ways in a lot of good ways. These all feel familiar, but add in more fun. And I think with party games, that is a big thing. You want the game to be fun without being repetitive. And with the cooperative games in there, it’s a chance for even very competitive people to join in.

Do you play a certain party game around the holidays? Do you think that any of these could bump that one from the rotation?

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Holiday List – Two Player Games https://nerdologists.com/2023/11/holiday-list-two-player-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2023/11/holiday-list-two-player-games/#respond Mon, 27 Nov 2023 14:50:57 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=8535 What board games are some of the better two player games, or at least play really well at two players. I have a holiday list of some fun options.

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Two player games gets it’s own category on my list. Not because a lot of games can’t be played two player, a lot of them can. But there are a lot of games that don’t work the best at two players. I think of games like trick taking games or Birds of a Feather or Ecosystem. They give you extra rules to make them work as two player games. That isn’t what you want in one, you want to be able to sit down and play. So not two player only games, but games that are very good at two players for this part of the list.

And checkout the Stocking Stuffer games holiday list as well.

Two Player Games

Hanamikoji

The only two player only game on the list, but Hanamikoji is the first one that pops to mind when I think of two player games. This is a game of influence as you try and win the favor of Geisha by giving of gifts. The theme might not be up your alley there is also Jixia Academy which is the same game and a different theme.

Either game, Hanamikoji or Jixia Academy, is simple to play. You get four actions and you do one each turn. After both players have done all four of their actions you see if someone has the favor of four Geisha or eleven points worth of Geisha.

So what are the actions? You either keep one gift hidden that you’ll use to influence favor. Or you’ll put two gifts face down that won’t be used. You give your opponent the choice of three cards, they pick one and you get two to give as gifts immediately (and revealed). Or you create two groups of two cards, and your opponent picks one. That’s the game, it’s about trying to get that combination right or letting your opponent make tough decisions that influence or show you what to do. Or trick your opponent into taking that you want them to.

Dice Throne

Now we’re onto Dice Throne, a game that some people might say is only a two player game. I think it works at higher player counts with the newer king of the hill rules. But Dice Throne, as a two player game, is a head to head battle game. And how do you battle, you roll dice. You are looking for straights or different combinations of symbols to do damage.

That might sound simple, and I think the first couple of times you play, it is easy to think it’s just the luck of the dice. But you get combat points to use as well. Those combat points (CP) are used to play out cards which is wherein your strategy lies. The cards offer different things, clearing off negative status your opponent might have placed on you, changing up your attacks, or manipulating the dice. So it’s a push and pull of how you try and hold back your cards and actions as you play the the game.

It’s not the thinkiest game, even with that, but there is more going on than you’d think of just rolling the dice and hoping to get lucky. And it’s also very fun because you get a lot of different characters to play with. There are your fantasy characters like dwarves or paladins. But you can mix that with the gunslinger or an artificer. And now they even have Marvel sets that you can play with as well.

Marvel Champions
Image Source: Fantasy Flight Games

Marvel Champions

Speaking of Marvel, this transition was not intentional, we have Marvel Champions. Marvel Champions, again, can be played with more. But I like Marvel Champions best as a solo or two player game. Why, too much downtime others. Marvel Champions is a game for the person who wants to play as a super hero and feel like their hero. There are other superhero games out there, but Marvel Champions, for me, captures it best.

In this game you try and stop a villains scheme. To do that, you need to be your super hero self, but when that happens they stop scheming. Instead their now trying to just knock you out. That means that you need to spend time going between being your super hero version, let’s say Spider-Man, and your alter ego, Peter Parker, so you can heal up. But when you are Peter Parker, you don’t want to blow your cover, so you can’t stop their scheming.

It’s a cool balance that brings in the super heroes moves as well as allies for them. I really like that balance of pushing to be the best hero and getting in their and just punching the villain down. But then also letting them work on their scheme so you can heal back up. It’s a good thematic element to the game.

Magic the Gathering (or other TCG)

This one is a bit of a catch all and the example I give is one that I don’t mind at all playing at higher player counts. Magic the Gathering is a great trading card game. A lot of trading card games, I’ll put Lorcana and One Piece on this list as well, are two player games or best that way.

Most of them give you pretty simple objectives that might be similar in a few ways. It’s either reach a certain number before your opponent or take out your opponents health fastest. But there’s too much to go over for all of them, so I’m going to drop some links in for you to checkout.

Magic the Gathering

Lorcana

One Piece

Spire’s End: Hildegard

Spires End Hildegard
Image Source: Favro Games

This is another game that can be a two player game or a solo game. It’s meant to be a solo game, but I think that it’d be very good two player as well. It’s kind of a choose your own adventure story experience. But done through a deck of cards that plays through chapters. Spire’s End is also another solid option for this.

The big reason that I think this would work is that I like my story games as a two player experience. Not all the time, but it’s very fun to share a good story with other people. Spire’s End Hildegard gives you a lot of story with some dice rolling and that’s basically the game.

This is going to be a good game if you and the person you’d play it with, or the people who would play it together really like story driven games. And the aesthetic, while unique, really makes the game pop. It’s what drew me to the game, and for a light, mechanism wise, but fun story wise game, Spire’s End Hildegard really works.

Ascension: Deck Building Game

Finally, another game that you can definitely play with more. But I’ll say this about Ascension, I really like it at two. Deck building games generally move pretty quickly if you know what you’re doing. So you can play with more people who know what they are doing. But when you have multiple people who are needing to learn every card, it can drag on.

That is much less of a problem at two players. The game goes fast with two players in a good way. You get your turn, you play out your cards and you go. Even if you need to double check everything, the downtime isn’t that bad.

I think you could substitute other deck building games in here as well. Dominion would be another one that I think works well, or Aeon’s End. Basically anything that keeps the game moving in terms of deck building. I think that Ascension is more interesting than Dominion and simpler than Aeon’s End which is why it’s the one that makes my list. But if you want to go cooperative, Aeon’s End is a great choice.

Final Thoughts

There are a number of two player games that I need to play. I own 7 Wonders Duel, the most popular two player only game and I just need to get it played. So I don’t think that you can go wrong with that.

I also think that there are a lot of games that work well at multiple player counts. You can see that on my list I have a number that can play at higher counts. But they might be best at two or, often times, they just work really well at two. So if you don’t want to lock yourself into a two player games that only play two, there are still a ton of good options out there.

Do you have one of those that sounds the most interesting to you? Is your favorite game to play with two on the list?

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