holidays | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Fri, 22 Dec 2023 12:40:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png holidays | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Games to Play at the Holidays https://nerdologists.com/2023/12/games-to-play-at-the-holidays/ https://nerdologists.com/2023/12/games-to-play-at-the-holidays/#respond Fri, 22 Dec 2023 12:39:07 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=8623 What games work well around the holidays? You might need some for a number of different reasons. Happy Holidays from Nerdologists.

The post Games to Play at the Holidays first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
Your holiday plans are finally set. You know what is going to happen each of those days, including that bit of extra downtime that no one knows what to fill it with. If you’re like my family, you like to find some games to play in the evening. It’s something to do, but you might need evening, you might need all day, what are some good games for the family, kids, and whatever groups you might have.

Games to Play with the Kids

Ice Cool – This is a dexterity one and I’m going to lean in that direction. A lot of kids games aren’t that fun for kids because they are very simple. But Ice Cool is a great dexterity game that works with kids of a lot of different ages. Who doesn’t want to make a cool shot as you try and get a penguin around a high school? Probably some people, but they’re wrong, and this one because that’s mainly what the game is, is really simple to play.

Ice Cool Box
Image Source: Brain Games

Beat the 8-Ball – Another one that works well with kids. Beat the 8-Ball is a simple game as well, most games for kids should be. But it’s also one that’s fun for adults. The game is basically a big game of chicken. There is an 8-Ball coming down a funnel, you want to be ahead of the 8-Ball but not the first person ahead of it. So how long can you wait? If you’re the first person ahead of it, no points, but if you’re after it, negative points.

Games with the Whole Group

Wits and Wagers
Image Source: Board Game Geek

Deception: Murder in Hong Kong – The young kids are in bed and now you want a big group game. But a lot of the big party games are not that fun, like your classic Taboo or Catch Phrase. If you want something with a bit more on it and a lot of fun, try Deception: Murder in Hong Kong.

This is a game of figuring out who the killer is. But one person is helping the murder to throw suspicion in other directions. Another knows who did it but not how but they don’t want to get caught. And someone is sending up reports to try and help point everyone in the right direction. It’s really a bit social deduction game, but with more going on because you always have a stream of real information.

Wits & Wagers – If you want a more classic party game, Wits & Wagers is a great choice. This one plays a pretty high number and is a trivia game. Now, normally I don’t recommend trivia games. But this one works. Two things that make it work are that it’s a numbers based game. So every answer is a number which everyone is guessing. So that automatically helps set a range. Then you bid on whose number you think is right. If you’re right, you win money and you want to win the most money. So even if you know nothing about, let’s say baseball, if your uncle does, you can bid on their answer.

Games with Family

Sagrada – Again, the young kids are in bed. You want to play a game, but you don’t have enough for want to break out a party game. That’s the type of game I’m looking at here. Sagrada is a good choice because it’s pretty but also it has some choices to it. You are drafting dice to make a stained glass window. But you can’t have the same number or same color next to each other, except diagonally. So can you make the best stained glass window?

The Crew Mission Deep Sea
Image Source: Kosmos

The Crew – A lot of the older generation, so into their 60’s and 70’s now, or older, grew up with some of the more common games being trick-taking. Well, The Crew is going to give some trick-taking without them having that much of an advantage at it because it’s cooperative. Each round objectives are given or drawn depending on the version you have. You need to complete those, and generally a specific person needs to complete them.

So using trick taking knowledge you now need to figure out how to empty out hands the right way so that all the cards are played out. But I might need to not take a trick with pink in it. You might need to take the first trick, how can that all be set-up?

Happy Holidays from Nerdologists

With those suggestions, I just want to say a big Happy Holidays to everyone. Thank you all for reading and joining with me. There are more articles queued up and ready to go next week as I start to look ahead to 2024.

Do you find you have any family traditions that are nerdy that you love? For my family, it is board games, we generally play an evening or two around Christmas and New Years. But let me know yours.

Send an Email
Message me on Twitter at @TheScando
Visit us on Facebook here
Support us on Patreon here

The post Games to Play at the Holidays first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
https://nerdologists.com/2023/12/games-to-play-at-the-holidays/feed/ 0
Board Game Holiday List – 12 Roll and Writes https://nerdologists.com/2022/11/board-game-holiday-list-12-roll-and-writes/ https://nerdologists.com/2022/11/board-game-holiday-list-12-roll-and-writes/#respond Wed, 09 Nov 2022 12:50:27 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=7523 What are my 12 roll and writes that I would recommend to add to your list or maybe give to someone this holiday season?

The post Board Game Holiday List – 12 Roll and Writes first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
It’s time to continue the holiday lists and we’re looking at 12 roll and writes. Now, if you aren’t familiar with a roll and write, something like Yahtzee. You roll some dice (or flip some cards) and fill in something on your sheet. That might be a number, it might be a shape, but you’re putting something down. And yes, there are enough that I can do a list of 12. These also work great for stocking stuffers, at least some do.

Board Game Holiday List – 12 Roll and Writes

12. Super Mega Lucky Box

I talked about this one on Monday with my Top 100 Games list, Super Mega Lucky Box is a bingo style game where you are trying to get a “blackout” on your cards. But each time you fill in a row or a column it gives you a bonus. It might be crossing off a specific number on any of your cards. Or it might be getting you more ways to score points. Either way, it gives a lot of light fun play, but for a very simple game, more choices than you’d expect.

11. Isle of Cats Explore and Draw

Isle of Cats Explore and Draw is the roll and write version of Isle of Cats, which in the US you can find in Target. Explore and Draw takes the same concept but you are activating a column of cats and scoring objectives. Each player is doing that while trying to get families of cats onto the board all of the same color. Pick the scoring cards that work well for themselves. And, at the right times, use bonuses that allow them to break the rule of using only a column to get what they really need.

10. Super-Skill Pinball 4-Cade

A lot of roll and write games are pretty abstract. And this one is to some extent as well, but at the same time, there are also surprisingly strong elements of playing a pinball. You roll two dice and use one of them to bounce around the board in this game. The ball moves in specific ways as it bounces and it’s all about trying to get those combos, complete certain shots and see how many points you can get over two balls. And each set of boards, well, they are a different pinball machine.

There are three versions of the game, I’d probably recommend either the base game, or if you like Star Trek, there is a version like that as well. And, I believe soon, a fourth version, with holiday themed boards from classic holiday movies.

9. Sonora

Sonora is the most different of the “and write” games because it isn’t flipping cards, it isn’t rolling dice, it is flicking discs onto a board. That determines what number and area you get to fill in. Sonora isn’t the best introductory roll and write game. But if you like roll and writes that give you combos, Sonora might be the perfect game for you. Sonora gives you combos upon combos and is amazing for that. And it manages to feel different in the different scoring area. I’m still waiting for a new scoring sheet for this game to give more and different experiences while playing.

8. Paper Dungeons

Paper Dungeons is one that you can see a full playthrough of the game over on Malts and Meeples. I’ll like a video below, but it’s a roll and write with a “campaign”. I say that loosely, but you can play through a story. What Paper Dungeons tries to do, and I think does pretty well, is try to be a dungeon crawler.

You level up your heroes, go fight boss monsters, get treasure, and craft items. All in an attempt to get the most points and not to die. Now if you die, thankfully, you aren’t out of the game, but it is a lot of negative points. It’s a bigger roll and write but a ton of fun.

7. Patchwork Doodle

Patchwork Doodle is on the small side. You are making a quilt in this game. But really you are trying, at the end of each round, to have the biggest square possible. A 4×4 square scores 16 points, whereas a 3×5 rectangle scores 3×3=9 + 2 for each additional row.

I could have picked Second Chance as that game is really similar to Patchwork Doodle, But Patchwork Doodle offers a few powers and a few more choices. Not to the point where it is too complex, but to the point where it feels less like, flip something and fill it in. There are decisions to be made every time.

6. Ganz Schon Clever (That’s Pretty Clever)

I’ll start out by saying, this could be any of the Clever games. They are all a lot of fun, and I like playing all three in an evening. When you do that, well, you can find the “ultimate champion”. But if you are starting with one, Ganz Schon Clever is maybe the easiest to understand.

The mechanics are simple, roll some dice, pick one to use. Cross off something or then fill in a number. But, it does two clever things. Firstly, any number lower than the one I pick goes on a platter. So when you roll next time, you roll three times, you are rolling fewer dice. And those dice on the platter, at the end of the round, your opponents get to pick one of them to use. The game is clever and fewer combos than Sonora but still offers a lot.

5. Welcome To

Welcome To is another bigger roll and write. But kind of a classic roll and write game at this point. In Welcome To you are making your perfect Stepford neighborhood. White picket fences all go in the right spot, and house numbers all counting up the best that they can.

But, really, you are trying to build out neighborhoods, designated by fences, to score points, complete objectives, and build parks and pools. All of which give you points. One thing I like is that you have three combinations. A number and an action on each turn. So while this can play an infinite number, you feel like you can try really different strategies.

4. Metro X

Metro X is a game about building a bus route. Another one that I’ve played on Malts and Meeples, but I’ll let you find that one. In this game you are building out your routes, crossing off stops. But for each route you can only use so many numbers to cross it off. And route overlap. This means you need to plan out your routes carefully.

And as the routes overlap, they create short little bits. If that happens, now you’re dealing with filling in those spots. Because every time you hit a spot that’s been filled in, you stop. So if you fill in three spots and could have filled in six, but you hit a station that’s already filled in, you stop. It’s a light game, but clever.

3. Trek 12

Trek 12 is a game about mountain climbing. Who am I kidding, it’s one of those roll and writes with a theme, but the theme doesn’t matter. It’s about creating sets of numbers and runs. But it does so with a fun scoring way. How you score is based off of the highest number of a run or the number of the set. So a run of 4, 3, 2, 1 scores you 4 points, plus an additional one for each number in the run, so 7. And the same idea with sets, a 4, 4, 4, 4 is 7 as well.

But how you fill in numbers is what makes the game fun. You have a grid of options, and as you pick an option, you cross it off meaning you can do them only so many times. You can pick the high or the lower of the two numbers, easy enough. Or you could do the difference, combined total, or multiplied total on the dice, but each of them can be done only so many times. It’s a great puzzle.

2. Railroad Ink

Railroad Ink or Railroad Ink Challenge are great roll and writes about completing train routes and roads. You are trying to get your area as connected as possible. What I really like about it, compared to say Metro X which is about routes as well, is that Railroad Ink, you are rolling dice and those dice show you the specific type of route that you are adding.

I personally like the Challenge version of the game a ton. While the original is fun as you connect up routes. It’s simpler. The Challenge version gives you goals. If you can complete a whole column by the end of round 4 you get bonus points. Either way, though, I think it’s a simple roll and write that people can really enjoy.

1. Cartographers

Finally we have cartographers. And while most of these games are pretty solitaire, Cartographers has monsters that work best with others. Cartographers as the name suggests is about building out maps. But, as the cartographer, you are also putting where monsters are on the map. It’s silly, but monsters are bad and give negative points. Everything else, they can help you score.

What stands out about this game is the scoring. You score two things in the first round of the game, spring, let’s say goals A and B. But then when the fourth round comes back around, you are scoring D and A. So each goal is scored twice, and you need to balance how hard you go after a given goal. Because after summer, round two, B is never scored again.

Final Thoughts

Roll and writes are a great genre of game. Not all of them will be for everyone, but I really love them. I personally think that there are levels of difficulty for everyone if people gives them a chance. I have heavier ones than I listed, most of these are pretty light or medium weight, on my shelf. And I have ones that are even lighter as well.

Which of these games would you want to get as a holiday gift this year? Or are there any you’d want to give someone because of a theme you know that they’d love?

Send an Email
Message me on Twitter at @TheScando
Visit us on Facebook here
Support us on Patreon here

The post Board Game Holiday List – 12 Roll and Writes first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
https://nerdologists.com/2022/11/board-game-holiday-list-12-roll-and-writes/feed/ 0
Board Game Holiday List – Top 12 Stocking Stuffers https://nerdologists.com/2022/11/board-game-holiday-list-top-12-stocking-stuffers/ https://nerdologists.com/2022/11/board-game-holiday-list-top-12-stocking-stuffers/#comments Mon, 07 Nov 2022 13:30:23 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=7514 The holidays aren't too far away. And board games should be big, but what is a good small board game that would work great for a stocking stuffer.

The post Board Game Holiday List – Top 12 Stocking Stuffers first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
We’re a week past Halloween, and I know Thanksgiving is still coming up. But let’s face it, Target, Wal-Mart, and other places gave into the holiday season well before Halloween, or at least some before it. Shame on them. But I do think think it’s good to think about what board game you might want to find for your friends and family or ask for, for yourself.

This year we are digging deeper, or being a bit more thematic, depending on how you look at it, but what are the Top 12, you know 12 days of Christmas, for each category. I’m going to get through them all quickly over the next two weeks, so join with me on making your list and checking it twice.

Board Game Holiday List – Top 12 Stocking Stuffers

List is in no particular order.

12. Orchard

Orchard is the only solo only game on the list and a fun one. The game is pretty simple, you are taking two cards and stacking them onto an existing card. Where you cover up a card, matching fruit trees, you place a die. And the more layers you can get, the higher that die value goes. But because you are getting random cards, it makes it tricky to layer them too deep. Can you create patterns that are easy enough to build on. Because you can “cheat” twice, but that blocks off those non-matching spots from being built on.

Orchard is a great little solo game. And it does two things that I like. Firstly, it does make you think, because you want to figure out good ways to stack the cards and cover up parts of the other ones. But at the same time, you are limited in options, so you can’t over think it too much. And it is a fast game. You play out nine cards total, so you can sit down and play a number of times in a single sitting.

11. No Thanks

No Thanks is more of a classic game in terms of how long it’s been around. But it’s one that holds up really well. It is a push your luck game of trying to get cards with the fewest points possible on them. You have chips which you can use to say “No Thanks” to a card, so a 22 is flipped you pass on it, but then everyone else does too, and you keep on putting chips on it until someone takes it.

Why would you take it, a few reasons. You might be getting low on chips. All the chips on it come to you so that means you can pass on higher numbers. Or because there are enough chips on it, because chips are worth -1 points to your total at the end of the game. If there are 11 chips on it, now that 22 is only worth 11 points, when you take it. Also, it might be part of a run. If you have the 20, 21, and 22, you only score the first number of a run. So getting the 22 doesn’t change the fact you’re scoring 20 points, plus you got some chips.

It’s a light game, but really fun to play. And it is an easy one to pick up as well, which I really enjoy. Of course, it also comes in a really small box, just some chips and cards, so easily fits into a stocking.

The Crew Mission Deep Sea
Image Source: Kosmos

10. The Crew: Deep Sea Adventures

The Crew, either version, is a great option, as it and the next one are both cooperative trick taking games. This works best if you are playing with more than two, the one is a two player game only. But The Crew: Deep Sea Adventures, is going to give you a series of challenges. It starts out easy and then builds up over time as you level up doing better, the challenges become harder.

The first game you might have something like, the person who takes the challenge needs to win the green four. That is pretty easy, but requires some thinking. It becomes trickier a few challenges down the road when a person needs to win the green four. Another person can’t win any pink tricks, and maybe a third person can’t win the first two tricks. How do you figure all of that out at once with limited to no communication.

9. Fox in the Forest Duet

The Fox in the Forest Duet is also trick taking, but for two players. Limited communication, you are trying to move a fox around a board and pounce on leaves. How far the fox moves is based on the difference in fox paws of the winning card to the losing card of the trick. And the fox always moves towards the winner. If you can collect all the leaves in three hands, you win the game.

Again, this works because of limited communication. It also works because if you go off the board, you block off a space on the board. Now you are even more limited in where you can move. So any mistake might push you off the board again, and too many times you lose. But until then the board becomes even tighter. That might seem very challenging, but you also can manipulate the trump suit and other aspects of the game with powers on the cards. So can you get that balance right?

8. Similo

Similo is one of two party games that work well as a stocking stuffer. In Similo one person is a clue giver to get you to narrow in on their card and eliminate the ones that aren’t their cards. But it’s not as easy as you think. If you get one pack, say historical figures, you are using other historical figures to say if your card is or isn’t like other historical figures.

And the first round isn’t too bad. The other players just need to pick a game to eliminate. But the next round it’s two, then three, and finally four. And by the time you eliminate four that is going to only leave two options. And the clue giver can just play down a card to say if their card is or isn’t like that figure. It can get even more challenging. Maybe you have historical figures out on the table, but now you give clues with animal cards. Is or isn’t Bonaparte like a bear?

Similo
Image Source: Horrible Guild

7. Floriferous

Floriferous is one of a few very pretty games on the list. This is a drafting game and a bit bigger because of how it works. Now, don’t worry, it’ll fit in a stocking just fine, but in terms of what you are doing, you’ll need to think more. The game is set-up in columns and players are drafting a card from a column at a time. That might be a flower card, or it might be a scoring card. Say, a card that says I get 1 point per daisy at the end of the game. Each time you take a scoring card you pass on a flower, and vice versa.

Plus, there is one really cool mechanic in the game. The drafting isn’t too different from something like Point Salad, just missed the list, but as you draft you place your color on the column where you took the card. The higher on the column, the sooner you’ll be drafting next round. So maybe you take a flower that is just okay for you because the next scoring card is perfect for you. Or do you hope that you can draft it later? The game can be a bit mean, but mainly it’s pretty.

6. Arboretum

Arboretum on the other hand is a very mean game. You are picking up cards and then building out numerical rows of trees. It really only matters that you start with a low number of a tree type and end with a high number of that tree type. As long as the number in between count up, you are going to be doing great. But, of course there is a twist.

To score a type of tree you need to have the highest point value of that tree remaining in your hand at the end of the game. If you don’t, well, then you don’t score any points. So you have to hold onto cards, which means that you might not get as many points but you do that to guarantee that you can get any points. That is where the game is mean, you might have a great collection of trees of one type, but if I have the most at the end of a game, you can’t score it.

5. Medium

The other party game on the list, Medium is in the biggest box out of all of these games, or at least the squarest box. In Medium you try and get the most points by matching words with the other players, on your round. But it’s not as easy as guessing what word they’d write down to a question. Now, instead you both play out a word, well, let’s give an example.

If I play out the word “stick” and you put out the word “wind”, we need to come up with a word, and the same word that links those two together. I might say “kite” if you say “kite” we both get a point tile from the highest point section. If I instead say “rustle” and you say “kite” now we try again with the new words. It’s a great party game that leads to a lot of laughs.

Medium
Image Source: Greater Than Games

4. Ohanami

Ohanami is another drafting game on the list, but this one is more simple than something like Floriferous. In that one you think about how or when you are going to draft next round and when to draft scoring. Here you are just drafting two cards at a time to put them in columns in numerical order. You can only ever add to the top or bottom of a column though.

There are two areas that this game offers some really interesting fun. The first being the scoring. In the first round only blue scores and only a few points. But any blue you get scores each round those few points. Green scores more but only the second and third round. And grey only the last round. And finally pink only scores the last round, but the more you have the higher that they score.

The other area is when you “flip” columns. Now you don’t flip over the cards, but you want to keep numbers close together. But as one columns low gets closer to to another columns high when do you make the jump so that instead of going up 40, 42, 43, do you jump it up to 52 or even 62 going past a 60 in another column so you can optimize your points. Wait too long, you will score lower, do it too soon, you might lock yourself out of being able to play certain numbers.

3. Hero Realms

Hero Realms is another bigger game on the list, only in the number of cards that the game has. Size wise, it’ll easily fit into a stocking. Hero Realms is a deck building game and a head to head fighting game. You buy cards to either get money to buy more cards or to deal more damage to your opponent. Your goal, get them to zero health.

One thing I really like about Hero Realms is how quickly it ramps. You can play a strategy where you gain a lot of life to keep from dying, but you don’t take long to buy powerful cards. So even with health starting at 50 or 60, you can deal out 10-15 damage by turn five. And when you can deal 20% of someone’s life total in a turn, you need to build up fast.

It doesn’t do a ton unique. If you can combo factions you can get more money or damage. We see that in a lot of deck building games. But for a small one and a good two player one. Hero Realms is tough to beat. And I haven’t played Star Reams to compare.

Silver
Image Source: Bezier Games

2. Silver

Silver I think makes the list fairly often. This is a bluffing game, kind of, mainly it’s a hard to explain game. In Silver you have a village of cards in front of you. You know what two of them are to start the game. And you need to manipulate them to get as few points as possible in your village.

The fun bit comes from each card having it’s own power. It might be allowing you to peak at another card. Or it might be giving your opponent a higher value card into their village. The whole thing is that tricky puzzle to figure out. And the round doesn’t end until both 0 cards are face up in a village or someone calls for a vote.

To call for a vote you need to have less than your five cards in your village and the only way to get rid of a card from your village is to trade two of the same number. So there is some sneaky strategy with that as you might trade out two lower numbers for a slightly higher number if you can then trade out even more next turn. How you do that with all the cards is a lot of fun.

1. Age of War

Finally we have Age of War. This one is a die rolling game that has been out for a while. But it’s a good little game of set collection, push your luck and trying to get as many points as you can. In Age of War you roll dice to get symbols that match those on different castles. If you match all of the castle that you are going for, then you get to take it. However, even when you take it someone can steal it from you, it is just a bit harder.

But if you get all of a type of castle though, red, green, etc. you flip them over. That makes them worth slightly more points. But the big thing, is once they are flipped, they can’t be stolen. So that means that you end up with direction as to what you want to do in a good way. And it also means that you might really want to “fight” someone else on your turn to get their castle that’d complete your collection, of course they might do the same to you.

Age of War
Image Source: Fantasy Flight

Happy Holidays

Hopefully this list gives you some ideas. There are a ton of good small box games out there that work wonderfully for stocking stuffers. I could have picked probably 12 roll and write games which is why I haven’t done that. Since I can pick 12, well that is going to be the next list that I create. A lot of those will work on both lists but it’s fun to split them up.

Let me know what sort of game lists you want to see covered. And my goal is to do a good 8-10 of them so you have a ton of options, probably around 100, for different games. But depending on who you are buying for, or asking for a gift from, you’ll be able to find a list that works for that.

Happy Holidays!

Send an Email
Message me on Twitter at @TheScando
Visit us on Facebook here
Support us on Patreon here

The post Board Game Holiday List – Top 12 Stocking Stuffers first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
https://nerdologists.com/2022/11/board-game-holiday-list-top-12-stocking-stuffers/feed/ 1
Board Games for the Holidays – Adventure Games https://nerdologists.com/2021/11/board-games-for-the-holidays-adventure-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2021/11/board-games-for-the-holidays-adventure-games/#respond Wed, 10 Nov 2021 20:11:46 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=6295 What board games give you a good sense of adventure? I have a few that might make good gifts for that board gamer in your life.

The post Board Games for the Holidays – Adventure Games first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
I’m going with one of my favorite genres of games, and I think it’s a genre of game that a lot of people can get into pretty easily. The idea of playing a massive adventure is fun and different from your normal one off board game. But those games can be a bit trickier to figure out what you want to get. A lot of the games cost a fair amount, so let’s talk about some different games that give you a sense of adventure, so cheaper and some more expensive. What are some good adventure board games?

Gloomhaven

No shock I’m adding this one to the list. I love Gloomhaven. On my 2019 and 2020 Top 100 Games (of All Time) it was #1 both times. And the 2021 list is on-going. But this is a great big box game that is probably intimidating. In it you take different heroes or mercenaries and go off on missions, fighting monsters and unfolding story as you go. The game is spendy, but it’s worth it for what you get in the box.

You could also jump in first with Gloomhaven: Jaws of the Lions. This game can be found for a whole lot cheaper and it brings you into the game nicely. It teaches you the game over a few scenarios, and while your characters won’t retire, you still get to level up and have the Gloomhaven experience, just in a much smaller and cheaper package.

Image Source: Fantasy Flight

Mansions of Madness

Mansions of Madness is one of two Arkham related games on the list from Fantasy Flight Games. This is the bigger one of the two. This is an app assisted game where you are investigating a mystery. In the introductory scenario you are trying to find out what is happening at a Mansion, where the owner has gone, and then how to stop the ritual that has been started.

The app works nicely because you can play a scenario a few times without it being identical. The story might unfold the same way as before, but the rooms will have moved around. And the app makes the game work really well. Plus this game is scenario based not campaign based. That means that you can play a single scenario and call it good and then pick up months later without missing any story.

Arkham Horror LCG
Image Source: Fantasy Flight

Arkham Horror: The Card Game

The second of the two Arkham and Lovecraftian games from Fantasy Flight Games, Arkham Horror: The Card Game is a great little experience much like Mansions of Madness. You are exploring Arkham or Dunwich or Carcosaa, where ever it might be, trying to stop rituals. The game, however, doesn’t have an app and is just cards.

What is so amazing about this game is that you explore just using cards. And the game is different as you go through linked scenarios. At the start you might be trying to find a way out of your house and fight a ghoul. The next scenario you are hunting down cultists. The game just has a lot of fun to it and feels so unique with just using cards.

Image Source: Portal Games

Detective: A Modern Crime Board Game

This one is a completely different theme, but it’s an adventure in it’s own right as it’s a great deduction game. In the base game you are solving linked cases that tell and unfold a story of a murder from long ago. This is done with the use of a computer with a database you can look things up in, as well as cards that unfold the story.

I call this a procedural cop show, but it’s fun. You are the cops, or the investigators. If someone you know really loves stuff like NCIS and CSI, this game might be a great one to play with them. It’s five scenarios long and 3 hours per scenario. So you can get a lot out of the game and it’s one of the most immersive games in terms of theme that I’ve ever played.

Aeons End Legacy Game
Image Source: Indie Boards and Cards

Aeon’s End Legacy

Finally we have a Legacy game on the list. A legacy game means that there are components that you destroy or permanently alter. Gloomhaven has a little bit of that, but Aeon’s End Legacy has a whole lot more. This is going to be a good game for someone who wants to build out their own character. While others on the list do that to some extent, Gloomhaven mainly, this one really gives you big choices on what you do.

This game also teaches you how to play Aeon’s End. Much like Gloomhaven: Jaws of the Lion brings you up to speed for Gloomhaven, Aeon’s End Legacy will teach you how to play Aeon’s End in all it’s forms. And th ere is a lot more content. But in the game you work together, build your characters, and fight off monsters coming through breaches. The story is lighter on this one but it’s still a lot of fun.

I have a lot more of these games on my shelf. I won’t recommend Deep Madness as it’s hard to find, and if you can it won’t be cheap. But Nemesis will give you a sense of adventure as well as Roll Player Adventures that just came out and Reich Busters thought both might be harder to find again. There are a lot of these big box games that tell you story, but I hope I gave you a good variety to checkout and for a number of different budgets. Do you have a favorite adventure game?

Email us at nerdologists@gmail.com
Message me directly on Twitter at @TheScando
Visit us on Facebook here.
Support us on Patreon here.

The post Board Games for the Holidays – Adventure Games first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
https://nerdologists.com/2021/11/board-games-for-the-holidays-adventure-games/feed/ 0
What I Look For In A Party Game https://nerdologists.com/2021/09/what-i-look-for-in-a-party-game/ https://nerdologists.com/2021/09/what-i-look-for-in-a-party-game/#respond Thu, 09 Sep 2021 15:04:17 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=6125 What do I want when I look at a party game? Are there certain party games that are better than others?

The post What I Look For In A Party Game first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
I’m going with another genre of game that I really don’t like that well. I think party games are fine and they have a place, but a lot of party games overstay their welcome and end up being boring. But there are some good party games out there. I want it to be a really good party game, though for me to play it, so let’s dive into party games.

What Is A Party Game?

A Party Game is a game that works well with large groups, it can create laughs and generally encourages the conversation and interaction while playing the game. Another way to put it is, if someone isn’t paying attention until it’s their turn, might not matter. Side conversations can happen and it’s not a big deal.

Yet another way to put it is to think about the holidays. Maybe you have a gamer family and friends, but for a lot of families, these get pulled out. They are the ones that cousin Timmy can play and Grandma Bev and everyone can play at the same time.

What Do I Look For In A Party Game?

  1. Variety
  2. Creativity
  3. Conversation
  4. End Point

Variety

This one I think is something people often overlook when it comes to party games. A lot of party games are just a deck of cards, like Cards Against Humanity and Apples to Apples. If there aren’t enough cards, or variety in cards, the game can quickly become repetitive. So I want the game to feel different often, whether that’s because there are a ton of cards in it or because the cards are only part of the game.

Creativity

And when I talk about them being part of the game, I want a chance to be creative and clever. Stipulations, a game I talk about often, doesn’t have that many cards. But it does have a lot of creativity in it. I write down that stipulation for your super power of flight or your dream job of being a dentist. That means that every time I play the game it’s going to feel different because I’m going to write something new and so is everyone else.

Conversation

This one is a bit odd, I don’t mind conversations that happen in board games. They are fine, as long as you are paying enough attention to your turn. With a party game I want to have moments where people are surprised and talk about what is happening, laugh at what is written, try and guess who wrote it. Plus, between rounds as people are picking or writing something new. I don’t love party games where players are trying to figure something out. Those shut down conversations.

End Point

The game ends at some point in time. I mean, technically all of them do, but a massive game of Apples to Apples can go on for way to long. If a game doesn’t have a great end point, I will create one. Because it’s very important with a party game to end while people are still having fun. For Just One that can be 13 rounds, but for Cards Against Humanity in a big group, once around the circle no matter what the rules actually say.

Are All Criteria As Important?

End Point is the only one that I question. Mainly because that will depend on your group and depend on what you decide. For a lot of party games I pick an arbitrary point. In my Cards Against Humanity example, in the rules there is literally no end point, and no winning. Set your own end point or if a game has too long and end point, shorten it up. It’s not that an end point isn’t as important but it’s flexible to what you can do.

Let’s Do An Example

I’m going to pick one that I haven’t talked about yet in this post and that’s the game Medium. I’ve played this a few times and it’s been a good time, but let’s not do a review, let’s talk about how this works.

Variety

In this game you and your fellow player are putting down two cards and trying to come up with a word between them. Whatever that might mean. For example “Pink” and “Cat” could be the words and the word I’d get in my head would be the word “Panther”. But next game I could get “Pink” and “Toilet” as a combo and “Cat” and “Waffle” as another combo So even though it is a finite number of cards the combinations are extremely high.

Creativity

There is a good amount of creativity in this game. You need to be able to think fairly quickly to come up with a word in between. Though, that definition is going to be different for everyone. So you need creativity and some ability to read what you think your teammate that round might say.

Conversation

Yes, the two people working on words won’t be talking too much, but I’ve found that this is a game that people just talk through. Even the players who aren’t up right now will be coming up with words in their head and then telling everyone that they got one. It’s just a good time that leads to a lot of laughing and fun.

End Point

Medium
Image Source: Greater Than Games

This one I love less. They have some crystal ball cards that can be shuffled into the deck and when a certain number of them come up then you are done with the game. Well, kind of, you are done once everyone has had an even number of goes. I’ve played this with six or so people, and everyone matched up with everyone once, I believe, and that was a great length, then I did the same with five. I think with larger groups you’d maybe want to say that everyone goes 4 times or something like that.

Overall, this game does meet a lot of my criteria. And you can see how I kind of just determine how/when these games should end a lot of the time. Especially something like this where everyone isn’t always engaged all the time.

Will This Work For You?

Well, I would say that it should work for you. I think that for some groups it won’t work as well though and it’ll be the creativity piece that trips them up. It seems like pressure to have to come up with something instead of letting the game kind of play itself. However, in my opinion, basically everyone is capable of playing a game like Medium or Stipulations. And once people start laughing, it’ll have worked really well. Just make sure you end the games before people are tired of them.

What is your favorite party game?

Email us at nerdologists@gmail.com
Message me directly on Twitter at @TheScando
Visit us on Facebook here.
Support us on Patreon here.

The post What I Look For In A Party Game first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
https://nerdologists.com/2021/09/what-i-look-for-in-a-party-game/feed/ 0
Holiday List – Stuff the Stockings with Board Games https://nerdologists.com/2020/11/holiday-list-stuff-the-stockings-with-board-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2020/11/holiday-list-stuff-the-stockings-with-board-games/#respond Tue, 10 Nov 2020 15:47:07 +0000 http://nerdologists.com/?p=4922 Yesterday I talked about games that would work well for that just slightly too competitive person in your life. You still want to get them

The post Holiday List – Stuff the Stockings with Board Games first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
Yesterday I talked about games that would work well for that just slightly too competitive person in your life. You still want to get them board games, but which ones, today I’m looking at smaller games. These are the games that are going to be able to be stuffed into a stocking with less than 68% of it sticking out of the top of the stockings. Now, I don’t know how big your stockings are, but I’m assuming that wi-fi is spotty at best for Big Foot, so I’m going with more of a standard size. Also, right now I’m starting with board games but I’ll be moving onto other holiday lists as well.

Fox in the Forest/Fox in the Forest Duet

Two different versions of a trick taking game. But both are two player only only games. In Fox in the Forest, you are trying to take tricks, but scoring is more challenging than just taking all of the tricks. Certain cards have certain powers on them. In Fox in the Forest Duet you are working together, trying to keep the fox moving along the board and picking up tokens, more tokens you get the better you do, but it’s still trick taking. There are paw prints on the cards, or fox symbols I forget which, and that is how much the fox moves, but which direction depends on who wins the trick. Both of these are clever little games and good for 2020 if you have a limited number of players you can play with.

Zombie Dice

While the previous ones were for casual gamers, I think that this one is one you can pull out with anyone. It’s a simple push your luck game where you are grabbing three dice from a cup, rolling them, keeping brains, seeing if you’ve been shot, and then deciding if you want to draw more dice and roll those. There is a bit more going on than that, but that’s basically it. Once someone hits the point total to win, everyone else get’s one shot to push their luck. It’s like a simpler version of the game Farkle, and it has a theme. I think that the theme and the simplicity of the game is going to draw people in, even though the theme is just goofy fun versus involved in the tactics. It also is really small and needs about no table space, just enough to roll the dice, so it’s good for at a bar, or a picnic.

Onirim

I’ve done two player, any number of player, and now a solo board game. Onirim is one of the best known solo games. It’s all about playing out cards, matching colors and changing symbols so that you can get doors out and escape the nightmares. It’s really an abstract game, but it’s a lot of fun. Plus, the new printing has all the expansions in the base box, which I need to learn all of them. The game is clever in what it does, because there are very powerful key cards, key cards can be played like any other card to find a door, but if you flip a door from the top of the deck and you have a matching key color, you can just spend the key and immediately get that door, or you can use it to look at the top five cards of your deck, discard one, can’t be a door, and order the rest how you want, or finally you can use it to stop some other affect from a nightmare being drawn. And the nightmares have as many things they can force you to do as the keys. It’s a really interesting puzzle to see if you make the right decisions with those really important cards.

Hanabi

Maybe you like the idea of a cooperative game, Hanabi is a very small box cooperative game where you are trying to put on the best firework short. You want to display all five colors of fireworks from 1 to 5, playing down their cards in order. However, you can’t see all the cards, in fact, you can’t see your cards, but you can see everyone else’s cards. On your turn, you can do one of three things. You can spend a clue token to give another player a clue as to what they have in their hand. The clues would be something like “This and this card are blue” or “That’s a two and that’s a two”. You have to give the person all of the information for a given color or number. You can also play down a card to one of the rows of fireworks, but if you get it wrong, the fuse gets shorter. Or you can discard a card to get another clue token to use. The game is somewhat lucky as you try and give specific enough clues to be helpful, but are stuck some on the draw. But the more you play, the more you know how to give good clues that mean something, even if it might not be as obviously straight forward.

Image Source: Board Game Geek

Ganz Schon Clever

There are so many roll and write or flip and write games that I could say. Silver & Gold, Railroad Ink, Patchwork Doodle, Floor Plan, Second Chance, Cross Cross, Cat Cafe, and Cartographers are all ones that would pretty easily fit into a stocking. But I’m picking Ganz Schon Clever because that’s the one that I’ve been playing a lot of recently. It’s an interesting little puzzle of a roll and write, where you have five different areas where you are placing die values. Each of them scores in their own different way, and each of them has their own way you want to place the dice. It’s an interesting challenge and it’s based so much off of combos and how you can fill in a spot in one row to then be able to fill in a spot in another. It’s very satisfying that way.

Now, there are a lot more small games out there that’d work well, obviously I tossed out a bunch of roll and writes. But if none of those work for you, you can also find games like Stipulations, Parade, The Lost Expedition, Not Alone, Love Letter, Hanamikoji, Marrying Mr Darcy, Point Salad, Gloom, Arboretum, and so many more. There are a lot of good small games out there that are a lot more than just just a take that sort of game, or the classics like Uno, Skip-bo, and Pit.

What small game would you like to find in your stocking at the holidays?

Email us at nerdologists@gmail.com
Message me directly on Twitter at @TheScando
Visit us on Facebook here

The post Holiday List – Stuff the Stockings with Board Games first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
https://nerdologists.com/2020/11/holiday-list-stuff-the-stockings-with-board-games/feed/ 0
Cozy, Campy, and Cheesy: The Wonderful World of Christmas Movies https://nerdologists.com/2016/12/cozy-campy-and-cheesy-the-wonderful-world-of-christmas-movies/ https://nerdologists.com/2016/12/cozy-campy-and-cheesy-the-wonderful-world-of-christmas-movies/#respond Wed, 21 Dec 2016 06:47:19 +0000 http://nerdologists.com/?p=1400 Somehow, it seems like the holiday season gets busier every year — and that’s no different this time around. But despite all the running around

The post Cozy, Campy, and Cheesy: The Wonderful World of Christmas Movies first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
Somehow, it seems like the holiday season gets busier every year — and that’s no different this time around. But despite all the running around and buying of far too many items (and trying not to get so caught up in the hullabaloo that I miss the whole point of it all), I still seem to find time to sit back and enjoy what this season has to offer. One of my favorite ways to do this is to watch Christmas movies — both old favorites and new discoveries.

Because of this, I’ve seen a lot of Christmas movies in my day — enough, you might say, for me to start noticing some patterns. There are three types of Christmas movie, as I see it: old stand-by, cheesy Hallmark-style, and contemporary classic. What follows is my (by no means comprehensive) list of what each type needs in order to be truly great.

Image Credit: TV Tropes

Old Stand-by

  • More elaborate song and dance numbers than is advisable within 90 minutes
  • Ladies who have perfect hourglass figures, impeccably coiffed hair, and pristine makeup at all times (even at bedtime)
  • Bing Crosby
  • Costumes that anyone who has even the slightest interest in clothes will be dying to wear
  • Red lipstick. ALL THE RED LIPSTICK.
  • A suspiciously thin plot
  • The most Santa-y Santa that ever was
  • An unfortunate misunderstanding
  • Sparkles and spangles for days
  • Old-timey slang that makes you go “Say whaaaa?”
  • Pratfalls

Image Credit: Yahoo TV

Cheesy Hallmark-style

  • An uptight businesswoman who visits a tiny town (her hometown or otherwise) to “recapture the Christmas spirit”
  • A struggling town/small business/Christmas tree farm just waiting for someone to rescue it
  • An improbably cute single man who is the proprietor of said establishment
  • Snow that just happens to fall at exactly the right moment
  • Winter clothing that is far too stylish to actually keep our heroine warm
  • An old man dressed as Santa who may or may not actually be Santa (he’s definitely Santa, though)
  • A boss with not an ounce of Christmas spirit or plain old sympathy
  • So many festive sweaters. And flannel. Flannel all around!
  • A romance that happens so quickly it’d make a Disney princess blush
  • Getting a boyfriend or getting proposed to just in time for Christmas
  • The tastiest-looking hot cocoa you could hope to imagine
  • A scene where the protagonists get snowed in together
  • “Wait…is that really [insert name of semi-popular actor whom you haven’t seen in anything for the last five years]??

Image Credit: Hotflick.net

Contemporary Classic

  • Compelling yet morally questionable romantic relationships
  • A crotchety old man who comes around in the end
  • Big-name actors (starring in roles that may or may not be a total departure from literally everything else they’ve done)
  • The most jaded adults and most adorable kids you have ever seen in your life
  • Someone being forced to wear an elf costume/sing Christmas carols/otherwise begrudgingly engage in Christmassy activities
  • An old flame and/or unrequited love
  • Christmas traditions that you have definitely never heard of
  • A somewhat blase soundtrack that somehow manages to be charming
  • An abundance of comfy-looking yet stylish sweaters
  • Elements that are somehow already dated (they let that kid just run right through security at the airport?? Inconceivable!)
  • A reminder that, no matter how uptight, jaded, or tired out you are, Christmas will always come through for you

So there you have it, folks! The necessary components of any bona-fide Christmas film. Based on my criteria (and, okay, sure, the images), you can probably tell which movies I’m talking about — but what are your favorites? Would you add anything to my lists? Share the merriment in the comments!

For extra fun: I have to admit, I co-opted a few of my items for the Cheesy Hallmark-style list from Addie Zierman, one of my favorite bloggers, who cooked up a Hallmark Christmas Movie Bingo game last year. Check it out here! Be sure to take a gander at her blog as well, as it is utterly fantastic (albeit vastly different from this one!).

———————————

Share questions, ideas for articles, or comments with us!

Email us at nerdologists@gmail.com
Follow us on Twitter at @NerdologistCast
Message me directly on Twitter at @Kefka73
Visit us on Facebook here.

The post Cozy, Campy, and Cheesy: The Wonderful World of Christmas Movies first appeared on Nerdologists.]]>
https://nerdologists.com/2016/12/cozy-campy-and-cheesy-the-wonderful-world-of-christmas-movies/feed/ 0