Rise of the Unfolders | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Wed, 05 Feb 2025 16:12:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png Rise of the Unfolders | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Top 15 Campaign Games I Still Need To Play https://nerdologists.com/2025/02/top-15-campaign-games-i-still-need-to-play/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/02/top-15-campaign-games-i-still-need-to-play/#comments Wed, 05 Feb 2025 16:08:24 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9412 What campaign games do I want to get played? I have so many that I should and too little time. So which one should I think about next?

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I love campaign games. We all know that a campaign game is probably my favorite type of board game. But we also generally all know that campaign games can be hard to get to the table. Why, because they take a lot of time. And so while I have a couple of campaign games going now with friends, Frosthaven and Vampire the Masquerade: CHAPTERS, I get them in faster than I can play them. So what campaign games do I really want to get to the table, maybe sooner rather than later.

Top 15 Campaign Games I Still Need to Play

15. Ticket to Ride: Legends of the West

I know that I’m going to like this game. So why is Ticket to Ride Legacy lower on the list? Some of it is because it is a legacy game. The two “legacy” games that I have on the list are the bottom two. But also because while I like Ticket to Ride a lot, it’s not a game that I play all that often. I think that the legacy version will likely breath new life into the game for me. But it’s more of a comfort food pick than a really exciting new bite to try. And for that reason it’s lower on the list.

14. Clank Legacy 1 & 2

The other legacy game is actually two legacy games. So did I cheat, I’ll let you decide. But this one is lower on the list because I know that I love Clank! already. And I really like the Acquisitions Inc guys as well, so that is a great theme for me. But it’s like I said for Ticket to Ride: Legends of the West, this is more comfort food. I already know that I will like both of the games. But it’s higher on the list because I like Clank better than I like Ticket to Ride, and because I think the writing is just going to be a great time that’s a ton of fun.

13. Tales from the Red Dragon Inn

Speaking of fun writing, I expect that Tales from the Red Dragon Inn is going to be another game with fun writing. This one is supposed to be a simpler, or less in depth dungeon crawler game and there are some good playthroughs of it. I’d recommend checking otu the playthrough that was done done on Meet me at the Table. They’re one of my favorite channels, and it shows how fast it is to get the game to the table and get playing.

12. Kinfire Chronicles

Speaking of another campaign game that I’ve heard a lot of good things about, we have Kinfire Chronicles. This is again supposed to be a friendlier and easier to get into campaign game than some. I like the look of the aesthetic of the game. And it’s not a mini heavy experience which might make it easier to get to the table. But it’s probably easier to see what it’s like at the table. I really do like how the cast of characters looks like a ton of fun and familiar fantasy but not the completely normal fantasy.

11. Tidal Blades 2

For this one I’ll add a video from Man vs Meeples. But I know more about this one. Some of the previous ones I just went on theme. This one is a dungeon crawler or adventure style game with scenarios where you are in this beautiful world dealing with monsters who attacked a festival and more in the story.

But the mechanisms got me to pick up this game. I like how you add in cards to a grid and then you activate a row or a column. But once every spot in a row or column is filled and you activate it, it wipes. And you have basic actions on spots without cards, but it’s a rising and falling action as you try and play through the scenario and defeat the monsters.

10. Etherfields

Now we’re onto Etherfields. The only campaign game from Awaken Realms that I haven’t gotten to the table. And this one actually left my collection for a very short time. But as I said, I love campaign games so I got it back. I put this one where because I love the theme of it. I have heard that it is rough around the edges but the theme gets me.

You are exploring dreams and each dream is going to be a little bit different. Some of them might be more dream like, but the fun of dreams, at least in a board game is that they can be nightmares as well. And that means that the game is going to have twisted and crazy and surreal scenarios and that sounds amazing to me. I know one element was a bit of a grind, but I believe that there are rules out there now that help fix that.

9. Kingdom: Death Monster

Then we get to one that maybe should be higher on the list. Kingdom: Death Monster is not the grand daddy of all campaign games, that’s Gloomhaven in a lot of ways. But this one is one of the games that really showed what you could do and create a massive game with a ton of expansions and a ton of minis in it. I only have the core box and there is a ton in there.

In this game it’s a boss battler campaign. You start at no one, really you don’t even have language yet. But as you play, you grow you tribe, figure out new things, like ways to make weapons and armor, develop language and more. All that while sending out your hunters to try and defeat boss monsters who are sometimes going to take out your hunters. And that’s why you need to keep growing your village. But Meet Me At The Table has great videos on this as well.

8. Divinity Original Sin

This is a game that I need to play through both as a video game but also as the board game. I had fun watching Felicia Day an Ryan Day play through it on their streams back in the day. So it is a game that I have played some, in the video game. But the board game sounds great for it as well. The theme definitely helps with that as does the fact that this isn’t a grid movement map but more of an area movement game. And I really like how there’s that campaign element and adventure element to it without purely being a dungeon crawler game.

7. Dragon Eclipse

Alright, I kind of lied about having played all of the Awaken Realms campaign games. This is one that might actually get to the table sooner because I think it might be easier to get to the table. I didn’t think of it though, because it just got in. In this game you are collecting dragons and battling dragons. Does that sound a bit like Pokemon, that makes sense. But it’s a game with a fun theme and compared to some campaign games, it’s a campaign game that you can play true solo which is great for me.

6. Nova Aetas Renaissance

You’ll notice and probably already have noticed a trend of the videos that I share here. A ton of them are from Meet Me At the Table. A lot of these games I had already backed before they played them. But this is one that I tracked down because of the channel. I love the 3D nature of the experience for this game. And how, in one of the scenarios a house that is 3D can be taken apart and flattened. But there is more than that as well.

The story of the game is fun. It feels like it mixes up a few things from historical to make fantastical. And then it uses a fun mechanism for whose turn it is. You spend you action points and move around a time track. Whomever is at the end of the track is going to be who activates next. There are some other rules for it as well. So you can’t just stack up turn after turn after turn before the bad guys go, but it’s a fun element to the game.

5. Agemonia

Then we have Agemonia. This is a rare campaign game that I didn’t back right off the bat on crowdfunding. Or I should say a rare one that I looked into a lot and didn’t end up backing. This game seems to have a fun world and setting to play in and that’s some of what drew me in right away for it. But there were other elements that kept me coming back for it as well.

I liked how the maps were in books and that felt different. But also beyond that, as more places are doing that now, the world would change. You draw out a card after interacting with a point and cover it up. That might create a different point of interaction or it might be nothing to do there anymore. And the game play just seems simple enough to be easy to learn and play, but offer some solid choices in combat as well.

4. The Elder Scrolls

Next is another new one to come in. But it’s a fun theme that a lot of people are going to be drawn to. For me it’s less the theme and more that it’s a shorter campaign based off of the Too Many Bones system that I really am excited for.

If you’re not familiar with the system, you level up after missions. Or you can anyways. And as you spend your points to try and level up you get better or unlock new abilities. You can add to base stats, which can be good, or you can add to the specialty dice that you roll. And while this streamlines it a bit from what it was with Too Many Bones, I’m excited for it and the world that the game is set in certainly helps.

3. Middara

Now the top 4 are going to be ones that I really would love to play. Yes, you read that correctly, we’re on #3 and we have four games to go including this one. How is that, I couldn’t pick between my top two. But Middara is very safely into that group. And soon I’m going to be having more Middara come in. I say soon, I expect maybe this time next year.

But Middara is going to be a classic dungeon crawler with a ton of story and a ton of dice chucking. But I really like the theme and look of the game. You go to another world, chosen to go there kind of it’s weird to explain. But you are chucking dice to defeat monsters, level up and become awesome. But the whole aesthetic of the game gives me a really strong anime feel. I’ve heard that sometimes trips up the writing, but overall people really enjoy it. And to me that sounds exciting.

1c. Oathsworn

Next we have Oathsworn. And this, this is the three way tie for first place. Why did I not just remove the last game from the list, because I wanted to mention it too. Oathsworn is another boss battler game. But it is a game that is split into two parts. And that excites me about the game. You get a mystery or exploration phase where you experience a lot of story. And then you go beat up that boss. But if you do well on the story the boss maybe is easier.

And I really like the mechanisms in the game. I kept games that I’d really played off of the list. I did a short demo of this one two years ago at Gen Con and I adored it. There is this great card system where cards have to cool down before you can use them again. And then you decide how many dice you are going to roll, some are required, but the more you roll the more chances you to bust and miss, but the greater a hit could be. Or you could play it safer and draw cards, but eventually that deck of cards will run cold and do you switch to dice then?

1b. Primal: The Awakening

Next tied at the top is Primal: The Awakening. This one is another boss battler game. And this one I should probably get to the table sooner than some. A nice thing about Primal is that it doesn’t need to be a campaign, you can also play it as a one off. And that would definitely make it easier for me to get it to the table.

But this is a game that is all about the boss battle. There is a little story between scenarios and a chance to upgrade, but it’s not going to be nearly as much other stuff as just a pure battle. And the battle is different as well. You play on a tiny board with just four sides of the monster that you can be on. And depending the stance the monster is in, you need to be in specific spots to do damage. Add in card play for this which you can pull of powerful combos, that’s great. Of course, depending on what cards you play, you might trigger a lot of monster reactions.

1a. Arydia

And finally the most recent game to the campaign game collection. This one barely beat out Elder Scrolls for that title, we have Arydia. Arydia is another game that I passed on originally when it was on crowdfunding but then I went back and late pledged it. I just kept on being drawn into one part of the game.

The game is at three different levels. Now I don’t mean that you build stuff up on the table. I mean that you explore the world at three different levels. You explore at a high level where you get general encounters and interactions. Then you can dive down deeper and start to interact with specific characters or explore a location in more detail. Finally, you might then drop into combat which is tactical movement on a map. And that massiveness of the world really drew me to the game.

Final Thoughts

You might think that is enough. But there is going to be another list, probably tomorrow for games that I want to come back to or that are new editions or versions of games that I’ve already played as campaign games. I expect that is only going to make it to ten, but that’s a lot. And this list even didn’t include everything. The campaign in Solomon Kane could have made the list. And I know that I just didn’t see some games on the shelf that would have made sense for the list as well. And there are games that I likely missed too because I don’t think of them as campaign games.

What campaign games do you want to get played? And how do you find time to play them all? Or are you like me where you have more campaign games than you can play?

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Top 20 Wish List Board Games https://nerdologists.com/2023/01/top-20-wish-list-board-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2023/01/top-20-wish-list-board-games/#respond Fri, 06 Jan 2023 12:27:15 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=7659 What board games are on your wishlist? I go through my Top 20 I have saved to Board Game Geek to see which ones I really want.

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So I’ve looked ahead at games, and I’ve looked back at games that I liked in 2022. But this one is going to be a little bit different. This is going to be a list of games that I’d love to get my hands on somehow. And it is really a mix of everything. I have games that have just come out and I have board games that were on Kickstarter and are hard to find, and I have games that are going to be going to Kickstarter. So why 20, because I have 55 on my wish list in Board Game Geek. Which, I will say, is a feature that is really nice. It’s a single spot for my wish list versus having it over several sites. But let’s get onto the list.

Top 20 Board Games on my Wish List

20. Sagrada Artisans

Yup, things can be on this and other lists. So I’ll go over them quickly. This is a legacy roll and write game based off of Sagrada. I played Sagrada again recently and I really do enjoy it, to me it’s a pretty relaxing game to play. And I want to know what the legacy version does. And how many years it should take to play is also a big question. The Sagrada Familia is still being built which is why I make that joke. But I like the stained glass theme so I’m excited for it and I like the dice drafting.

Sagrada Artisans
Image Source: Floodgate Games

19. Planet Unknown

One that I wish I’d backed on Kickstarter, Planet Unknown is a game of picking tiles and placing them onto your planet to terraform it the best. Terraforming a planet is a common theme, but one that I like. The thing that caught my eye is the mechanism of the rotating center board. So when I pick a tile, that means that you are picking the tile that is facing you, or where your marker is. So we are all getting a tile every turn. I think that’s a really clever mechanism because not only do I need to think about what I need, but I need to think about what I am giving you.

18. Aeon’s End Trespass: Odyssey

Do I need another big game? The answer is no, I do not. But this one which is just delivering from Kickstarter looks great. This is one of those pipe dream games where if I can stumble across it local and used and not too expensive I’d buy it. But Aeon’s End Trespass is a massive dungeon crawl adventure game with a lot of minis, you know the drill. The cooperative, soloable and campaign style game that I enjoy.

17. Dice Manor

Also on a list recently, and that is when I added it to my wish list. The game play just looks simple and clever. You either allocate dice to unlocking some more dice, I think, so you have a bigger pool, or to getting tiles, or to putting into your house to score you points. I guess I should explain more. In Dice Manor you are building up a house, and you need to allocate dice of certain numbers to get rooms. If you get that room you add it to your house. So it’s dice allocation mixed with figuring out how you want to put together your house. And then, like I said, using dice in the house to score points. Three pretty simple things that seem to offer really good decisions.

16. Agemonia

You’ll see a lot of these campaign soloable games on the list. Agemonia is another one of them. Though, I don’t think it’s as massive as some of them. Agemonia is one that I almost backed, and I was in for a dollar on it, but I didn’t upgrade it in the pledge manager. It looks like a fun one because the world looks more vibrant and dynamic than a lot of them, in terms of the boards you are playing on.

You might start out in a tavern and then go out into the town to interact with things. And as you do that, you might change what’s at a location so you find a card and put that down. And then you end up with new actions that you can do, all while trying to complete some goals that you need to in a set amount of time. Plus, it’s fantasy but not your standard fantasy, so I really want to get my hands onto this one.

15. The Everrain

This one I maybe shouldn’t have on my list. It’s kind of getting fulfilled now, but the company is in financial trouble, it seems, which doesn’t bode well for my Village Attacks pledge. But Everrain is a sea exploration adventure game. And that just sounds fun to me. As they put up, you have your crew and are building up your crew and ship before you’ll have to face off against a Lovecraftian great old one, which I’m sure is not too difficult at all. And you are exploring in a cooperative gaming experience.

14. Monumental

Monumental
Image Source: Funforge

Like Aeon’s End Trespass this one is a pipes dream to find. Monumental is a deck building, area control, moving people on a map, and did I say deck building game? And it’s been out for a little bit and isn’t in retail. The company is having some issues fulfilling their next one, so I’m not hopeful that there’ll end up with too many in the market. And Monumental is well liked.

The interesting thing with the deck building is that you don’t have a hand of cards. You have a grid of cards and you activate a row or column. Then those cards get wiped and new ones get added in. I want to try the game just for those interesting mechanics. Deck building is a mechanic that I really enjoy, and to see something so different, it makes me want to track it down. But it’s expensive when you can find it.

13. Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim – The Adventure Game

One that I passed at on Gamefound. The game looked decent, it’s supposed to be like Skyrim as a board game. So that means you have a main quest that you are trying to complete but also that you can just go and do a bunch of side quests. It’s not really a dudes on the map game but more of that adventure experience which I enjoy. It’s one that eventually it’ll be back in retail and I’ll get a copy just to experience it. And I’m pretty sure it can be played solo so there is that element that I like as well.

12. Birds of a Feather: Western North America

That’s a long title for a little play out a card and check off stuff on a sheet. You are basically trying to get as many birds that you’ve seen as possible, so bird watching. And there are some interesting rules around it as you see things at the terrain you are at. So if I play down a desert and you play down a desert bird we see both of them. But if everyone else plays down a forest bird, I don’t see them. It’s a clever system. But not all is lost because you can go next round to the forest, if you have a forest bird, and see the ones played previously. Unless someone plays down a predator bird which scares them away. So, like I said, a clever system.

11. Arkeis

Arkeis
Image Source: Ankama

Another one previously on a list, but a legacy adventure game. I like that a lot and it’s set in Egypt and almost seems like it’ll have an Indiana Jones vibe to it. If it has that, and they can promise what looked like a not too complex but still very interesting game, I’ll pick this one up on the theme alone.

10. S.H.E.O.L.

I blame Meet Me At The Table for making me want this one. S.H.E.O.L. is a game about a weird future where there are robot monsters and you’re exploring, fighting them, interacting with people and places and it’s again that big campaign, adventure, combat, and solo game that I enjoy. Plus the setting is just different. The aesthetic of the game is basically black and white and it isn’t a bunch of dungeons but ways that you create the paths. The whole thing is just intriguing and hard to find.

9. Heat: Pedal to the Metal

A racing game from Days of Wonder, this one is already out and it’s really interesting to me. It looks like a lighter game than some racing, like Formula D, but also not a betting racing game that a lot of lighter ones are, like Downforce. So I’m really intrigued by this one and people are really liking the game. So I want to give it a try as you balance pushing to go faster without building up too much heat that can clog up your hand and slow you down. A balancing act which I always enjoy that question of when do you push or when do you hold back.

8. Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders

Tidal Blades Rise of the Unfolders
Image Source: Skybound Games

Also on another list. Tidal Blades 2 is a dungeon crawler set in the interesting world of Tidal Blades: Heroes of the Reef which gives you the story that you are missing in the first game. And from what I can tell, the mechanics are interesting as well. You play out actions and slowly as you get more and more actions out you become more powerful. But then they’ll all get pulled back sometime so you’ll do it again. I like that ebb and flow and that it’s a dungeon crawler without just being a dice chucker.

7. Rove

One coming to Kickstarter this year, Rove is from a designer who did a fan expansion for Gloomhaven. Rove promises a dungeon crawl set in it’s own unique world. I don’t know too much about it beyond that, but I’m very intrigued by it because it’s someone who made a Gloomhaven expansion. Gloomhaven is my favorite game, so I’m hoping that it takes some of things that were learned from making and expansion and adds it to Rove.

6. The Great Split

The Great Split is already out as well, but hard to come by. It’s a game where you are giving your opponent the option between two things and they are doing the same for you. So how do you make it, as you push up tracks based off of what you get, that you get what you want and they don’t get exactly what they want. The game system seems like it is pretty simple but also offers really good decision making. And it’s from Horrible Guild a company who I’ll generally always checkout what they are making.

5. The Elder Scrolls: Betrayal of the Second Era

Yes, it’s a second Elder Scrolls game, this one from Chip Theory Games. And yes, this one is coming to Gamefound this year. So I’ll probably end up backing it. It’s an adventure mini-campaign game that is based off of the Too Many Bones system, a system that I enjoy. And Chip Theory Games tends to make games that interest me. And I mentioned campaign, but did I mention you can play it solo? So even more reason why I’m interested in the game.

4. Hoplomachus: Victorum

Hoplomachus Victorum
Image Source: Chip Theory Games

Speaking of Chip Theory Games and solo games and campaign games, we have Hoplomachus: Victorum. This builds upon their Hoplomachus system, makes it purely solo and adds in a campaign and leveling as you go. You are a gladiator or fighter going through lands, fighting in arenas, recruiting troops all as you work your way up to face off against your final adversary. Will you be strong enough to defeat them? It’s one that I’m so close to pre-ordering from Chip Theories website, I might have just talked myself into it.

3. Clank!: Catacombs

This is the newest version of Clank! A game that I like all the versions of. Clank!: Catacombs is going to offer one really unique and new feature to go along with the deck building, and that is that the map is modular. So as you delve into the catacombs you are building it out. That sounds like a lot of fun, and I doubt it’ll even mean that I get rid of any of the others. Clank is one of those games that I just want to have a lot of it because whether it is Clank!: Catacombs, Clank!, or Clank! In! Space! I think that it’s going to be a fun time.

2. Stonesaga

Also on a previous list, Stonesaga is a legacy game set in the stone age where you are all working together to build out your civilization. Of course there are some monsters, there are other trials and tribulations that you can go through, and well, I’ve had a chance to playtest it and I had a lot of fun with it. The game really gives you some story of building up your civilization as you play. Without it being too heavy handed in the story elements of the game. I think it has more story than something like Charterstone or My City, but less than a Pandemic Legacy, for example.

1. Rogue Angels

Rogue Angels
Image Source: Sun Tzu Games

Another one that I’ve already played, though like Stonesaga, which I hadn’t mentioned, just on TTS (Tabletop Simulator). And it’s great on there, but I really want to get my hands onto a prototype and show that off at some point in time. And I’m hoping it can get to Kickstarter or Gamefound this year.

The trick right now for the creator is getting enough eyes on it and getting enough people showing it off. But it’s kind of Mass Effect the board game or that is the designers intent. And I think that comes across. There are missions where you are doing combat, there are missions that just have a specific challenge(s) that you need to complete and everyone feels different.

Then there are mechanics which are so simple, do two actions which are generally playing cards. But when you play down a card it goes in a slot and then cools down over time. So a really good card might take longer to get back into your hand. And there are ways to speed that up, but that probably means that you’re not doing something else useful. Just a fun system with interesting characters and interesting story.

Final Thoughts: What is on Your Wish List?

Let me know what is on your wish list. You can do that down below or over on Twitter. And my wish list isn’t just 20 items. In fact, there is one, Paper Dungeons Expansion that isn’t on the list because expansions were filtered out. And even then my list is 55 items long. Some are in the maybe I’d want to get it category. Others, especially in this Top 20, I’d love to get my hands on them. Of course, time to play them, and money to get them is always a question. But I hope I can end up getting or playing a lot of these.

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Back or Brick – Crowdfunding Madness https://nerdologists.com/2022/03/back-or-brick-crowdfunding-madness/ https://nerdologists.com/2022/03/back-or-brick-crowdfunding-madness/#respond Wed, 23 Mar 2022 14:50:22 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=6827 Crowdfunding was busy this week, so instead of one game, I look at six different ones in Back or Brick, which do you want to back?

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This week is going to be a little bit different than some weeks because there are a lot of crowdfunding games that launched this week. I could write a Back or Brick on each one of them. Or, as I am doing instead, one article is all that I need. I’m going to dive into six different games. The depth is going to be a little bit less than sometimes, but I still want to give you an idea if a game has red flags, what got me looking at it, and if it’s a Back or Brick for me.

Casting Shadows from Unstable Games

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ramybadie/casting-shadows?ref=discovery_category_newest

Casting Shadows is going to be a battling game for two to four players. Players are going to gather cards, summon companions and sling spells in a strategic game. This is from the company that brought Here to Slay and Unstable Unicorns. I haven’t played either of those games and they aren’t high on my radar. But I always checkout the games because the artwork on Here to Slay is great, and same with Casting Shadows.

What interests me less about the game is the style of game that it is. I am always only so interested in skirmish style games. Especially where the game seems to be focused most on slinging spells and knocking out your opponent. I own Super Fantasy Brawl in the genre, and it gives me ease of game and objectives. It reminds me in some ways of a combination of Magic: The Gathering and Super Fantasy Brawl. I own both, so the artwork isn’t enough to bring me in. This is a Brick for me.

Fire For Light from Greenbrier Games

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/gbg/fire-for-light?ref=discovery_category_newest

Greenbrier Games is another well known company. They’ve done some fun games like Folklore: The Affliction, Grimslingers, and Champions of Hara. This one feels different than some of their other games. Fire For Light is a narrative driven cooperative game. They have done stuff like that before, but the polish of this game seems less than their other games.

That said, I do like that this is supposed to be a light, fast to the table narrative driven campaign game. A lot of campaign games end up with a million little pieces and take forever to set-up. Fire For Light looks like it should be faster. And it offers character leveling. I also like that Fire For Light is a 15 game campaign. You saw Sleeping Gods played over 10 sessions, I like some shorter campaigns right now. That said, it is still a campaign game, and how many do I need? This is going to be another Brick for me.

Jurrasic World: The Legacy of Isla Nublar by Prospero Hall

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/prosperohall/jurrassic-world-the-legacy-of-isla-nublar?ref=discovery_category_newest

Dive into the world of the Jurassic Park and Jurassic World movies. Build up your dinosaur islands, create new dinosaurs and hope that things don’t go wrong. That’s the hole of Jurassic World: The Legacy of Isla Nublar anyways. This is a big cooperative legacy game from Prospero Hall who has done a lot of work with Target for games before, but this game is too big and expensive for a mass market store. So it is coming to Kickstarter, and I expect to see it show up at local game stores as well.

Obviously, the main thing that draws me in is it being a legacy game. Whenever someone says Legacy I am going to be interested. But, I am also interested in it because of the dinosaur theme. There have been a lot of games that promise dinosaurs from Dinosaur Island, Dinogenics, Tiny Epic Dinosaurs, Welcome To Dinoworld, and more recently. But this is the first truly Jurassic Park one.

I like that about it, but there isn’t much that is Kickstarter exclusive. Yes, this game might be harder to find when it comes to retail, but what’s the added benefit of backing it? Apparently they are looking to address that, but until they do this is a game I will get, but at retail.

Mercurial by Hyperlixer

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/davidgoh/mercurial?ref=discovery_category_newest

This one I don’t know nearly as much about as some of them. It hit my radar because of the artwork and someone telling me about it. Which, I mean, other people being interested in a game makes it more interesting to me. I like it when I don’t have to fully vet everything myself. And then great artwork that is going to draw me in even more. I don’t know much about Hyperlixir as a company, so while I don’t think it is a big risk that this is never going to fulfill, expect it to be later than the estimated date.

Mercurial seems like it might be some of an engine building game, at least to some level. I almost get a bit of a Century game vibe to it, Spice Road or Golem Edition. The game appears to have you adding in cards to your hand and rotating those cards to get different resources, then using those resources to complete bigger cards. It’s a system that looks interesting, but I’m not quite sold on it yet, so right now it’s a Brick for me, but one I want to look into more.

Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders by Druid City Games

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/druidcitygames/tidal-blades-rise-of-the-unfolders-cypher-system-rpg-book?ref=discovery_category_newest

So, while this is in the same world as Tidal Blades, it is a very different game. This is a dungeon crawler versus that was a dice upgrading and engine building game. Druid City Games, is also an established company and definitely makes very pretty looking games. Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders is definitely the interesting part of this campaign to me. Cypher System RPG is great for some people, but I am sticking with D&D for my RPG’s.

What interests me a lot in the dungeon crawler is how you activate. This building action as you play down cards to a grid and when you get full rows or columns they activate for a big action, wipe, and you build up again. I see this an interesting puzzle, but I wonder about the downtime between the big actions. That said, this looks like a deluxe game, even if you don’t pledge at the minis level. And the character progression and the different paths you need to keep track of is cool to me. It has a lot going on that I like in a campaign game.

But, that said, it is also a campaign game. That means that it will take a while to play. And Druid City Games, and what they have done before, they generally do see some level of retail. I’m tempted to wait on this one, but it’s teetering whether or not this is a Back or Brick for me, right now it’s a Brick because of upcoming games, but I really want to get it at some point in time.

Ares Expedition: Discovery – Foundations – Crisis from Stronghold Games

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/strongholdgames/ares-expedition-discovery-foundations-crisis?ref=discovery_category_newest

So, when the original game that this is expanding upon came out it was called Terraforming Mars: Ares Expedition. The game, from what I know, plays different than Terraforming Mars, but is similar in some ways. It appears for this Kickstarter they are focusing on the fact it is a different game. That might have made it more interesting or better set expectations for some gamers the first time.

There are three expansions for this game that they are doing. You’ll be able to get all of them later, but the big draw of buying it now is getting dual layer boards, as an add-on, if you want, and the fact it comes in a big box. The big box means that you can store everything, including the base game, more easily. And that’s the most tempting reason to back it.

Discovery adds in awards and and milestones. Those are interesting, but less interesting than the upgraded phase cards. In the base game you all have the same phase cards that add extra powers if you play down that phase. The upgraded phase cards means that my cards can become more unique as th game goes on.

Crisis adds in a cooperative mode. Basically, Mars has been terraformed and now things are happening to undo all our hard work. Can we keep up as bad things keep happening. It’s an interesting add to the game.

Foundations is a 5-6 player expansion, so you can play with more. Plus it adds in an infrastructure track and 20 project cads that you can work on for that track.

Right now, I think I will end up backing this one. But I am waiting on it. Out of all of them it’s the most likely to be a Back for me. Mainly having a big box that will store the base game and expansions sounds great.

Crowdfunding Madness Final Thoughts

There are so many games that came out this week. I know that there are some others that I haven’t looked into as much because they didn’t jump out at me. But there are a strong six games here, so let’s go through quickly and rank my least to most likely to back.

6: Casting Shadows – Great artwork, not my style of game.

5: Fire for Light – Looks like a light campaign game and some interesting things, but it’s campaign and the aesthetic doesn’t draw me in.

4: Mercurial – I need to look into it more, I hope it’s hand/engine building, but I don’t know. Also, I have games like that.

3: Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders – Game looks gorgeous and I really am intrigued by the building up rows and columns for actions.

2: Ares Expedition – Discovery -Crisis – Foundations – I really like the base game, so expansions are almost a no brainer. The only thing is, do I need the big box, that’s the main reason to back it on Kickstarter.

1: Jurassic World: The Legacy of Isla Nublar – It’s a legacy game, it’s a cooperative game, and it’s a dinosaur game. But right now while I know I will buy it sometime, I don’t need to back on Kickstarter to get a fancy sleeve.

Which one are you most interested in?

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Most Anticipated March Crowdfunding Games https://nerdologists.com/2022/02/most-anticipated-march-crowdfunding-games/ https://nerdologists.com/2022/02/most-anticipated-march-crowdfunding-games/#respond Mon, 28 Feb 2022 15:42:01 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=6739 Crowdfunding continues to heat up with some big titles in March. Which one have really caught my eye for the month?

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So, I did this for the quarter already. But figuring out what games are coming to Crowdfunding in a quarter is tricky. Mainly because timelines change on a game. When it’s coming up the next month, well, that’s much more likely to let us know everything that is coming out. And even then there’ll be a lot of surprises.

If you want to checkout some more detailed lists, Liege of Games has a list, I know Tantrum House normally does one, though they do half a month at a time, and BoardGameCo all on YouTube have lists. I’m mainly using that BoardGameCo list because, well, there are 41 different games on the list. And that is enough to keep me busy talking about it for a while.

Anticipated March Crowdfunding

Far Cry Beyond
Image Source: Funforge

Far Cry: Beyond

This one is interesting to me because I don’t know a ton about it. And honestly there isn’t that much available for information on Board Game Geek and it’s just a Kickstarter notify page. But I expect that this one is going to be big. A popular IP and a long running IP. And I know that some of the channels, Quackalope and Dice Breakers are already doing some coverage on it. So it’s coming up fast and there will be more information as time goes on.

Obviously what draws me to this, from what I can see, is that there is going to be a campaign to the game. This is one that I’m most definitely going to checkout but have more tempered interest in because I don’t know the IP all that well.

The Fog
Image Source: XOLLOX Games

The FOG: Escape from Paradise

The FOG got onto my radar because of their advertisements on Facebook. The game seems like one that I’d be interested in. There is fog rolling in and you are trying to get all of your people off of an island. I like a game with a good horror theme to it. And I find it interesting how you control as a guardian to help your survivors navigate off of the island.

On the downside for me, I think the art looks just okay. It looks a little bit inconsistent or more so, the graphic design and text of The FOG looks inconsistent with the rest of the game. Plus, the game itself looks very abstract, not that it’s a bad thing, but it’s one that I want to know more about.

Maul Peak
Image Source: Pencil First Games, LLC

Maul Peak

Maul Peak is the follow-up to Skulk Hollow. And I really like Skulk Hollow. I enjoy Skulk Hollow a lot where it’s two different asymmetric competing factions. One person plays as the guardian who has their objective to win. And the other as the Foxen who are trying to take down the guardian. It’s a simple game but very tactical which I really enjoy.

I don’t think that Skulk Hollow has hit retail. I know that Pencil First, not everything will get that wide a release being they are a smaller company. So Maul Peak which should be more goodness like Skulk Hollow is very interesting. And for a spot to pick-up the game, it’ll be great for a lot of people. For me, I want to see what it adds, if anything, because I have Skulk Hollow which I still need to explore more.

The Bad Karmas

The Bad Karmas is an interesting one because I am curious about the game. But I am more interested about the Teburu system. I saw this demoed, through a window, at GenCon in 2019. It’s basically a gaming platform that can tell what you rolled, have chip enabled cards and characters and that takes care of a lot of housekeeping that bigger board games can have. Plus then sounds an handling story elements.

I am worried about the tech on this one. They clearly have spent a lot of time refining things and making sure they had a game to go at the launch of the system. I want to know how fast other games will start to adopt and use this system. And if you need the system to be able to play it. I expect the price tag to be high on this, but hopefully it’ll lead to some interesting board game improvements and expand the development space. But also, I don’t need every game to add it in.

Tidal Blades Rise of the Unfolders
Image Source: Skybound Games

Tidal Blades: Rise of the Unfolders

Finally, the game I am most interested in, Tidal Blades: Rise of the Unfolders. I almost backed the first Tidal Blades, and I’m glad that I didn’t. I watched the Dice Tower play with the prototype and that looked amazing, but the game play didn’t quite seem like it matched my style. Now they are doing a dungeon crawler for the second one, and I love dungeon crawlers.

That really interests me in this game is how it plays around with cards. It sounds like you are building up columns (or rows) of cards and then you activate them. But so you end up with a rising and falling action with your cards and building up those sets of actions. Plus then it is a dungeon crawl and the world of Tidal Blades, even the first game, extremely interesting.

What Are You Looking Forward To?

Let me know if there are any that I missed that you’re really excited for. I’m sure as I dig into more of the games as they hit crowdfunding I’ll find more that I’m interested in. Right now, though, I do think there’s a decent chance I don’t back anything big in March. Granted, Unsettled will wrap up in March, and that might be one of the biggest campaigns, after Marvel Zombies that I back this year.

Let me know what interests you in the comments below.

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