Stonespine Architects | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Tue, 17 Dec 2024 15:53:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png Stonespine Architects | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Top 20 through 11 Board Games of 2024 https://nerdologists.com/2024/12/top-20-through-11-board-games-of-2024/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/12/top-20-through-11-board-games-of-2024/#respond Tue, 17 Dec 2024 15:50:16 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9328 What games just missed my Top 10 Games of 2024? Let's find out what those are before the Top 10 tomorrow.

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Tomorrow, I plan on doing a video of my Top 10 games of 2024. Some of them are already going to be spoiled because they made my Top 100 Games (of all time) 2024 Edition. But others weren’t played in time to make that list. And that list is just a snapshot of time. Even this list, I think there are new games that I’ve played since then so it’s still just that snapshot in time. But let’s see which games make 20 through 11.

Games 20 through 11 of 2024

Now, first off, I do want to say, there are some games on the list that I don’t really enjoy. The bottom three I find to be poor or just okay, but let’s get to them.

20. Takenokolor

Takenokolor is a roll and write game where what you are rolling is the pens. However, the game itself is really simple and the choices are generally very obvious. They do have a few different “boards” that you can play on, but even the more complex ones tend not to offer that much more choice than the others. It feels like a very basic roll and write game with the gimmick that you are rolling pens. And even the added complexity doesn’t make the game more fun, it’s still very basic, just extra rules for the sake of extra rules.

19. Landmarks

Landmarks is a party style of game where one person is “it” and they are giving clues to lead the other players around a map. And the clues they give are one word based off of other words on the board. Basically, there are hexes, three of them have words on them, to start the game, and the clue giver gives a clue and the other players need to figure out where it makes sense to place that new tile. Does it make sense to connect to two words, or is the clue giver trying to keep you away from some.

Now, I said at the beginning that I wasn’t a huge fan of the bottom three. I think I want to try this one again. My hopes are fairly limited that it’d be a consistent hit for me, but I do believe, in the right group, this could be a fun game.

18. Odin

Odin is a card shedding game. Probably the best known card shedding game right now is Scout, which just broke into the Board Game Geek Top 100. Odin isn’t that, it’s a solid but simple card shedding game that works on a more basic principle than scout. You play out cards either as a bigger number of one color or a bigger number of a set of one number than the previous person did. Then you take one card to add to your hand from what the previous person played.

I think that this one is probably a 7 for me at 2 or 3 players if I were to rank it out of 10. But it plays higher than that. And at higher numbers than that it’s just very random. And you find lots of turns where you aren’t able to play and that might happen several rounds in a row. In Scout at least you are picking up new cards when you can’t play, here you are just left stuck with what you have.

17. Icecool Wizards

Icecool Wizards is not as good as Icecool. But if you want a smaller box and a bit more game play, there is an option for you. The core mechanisms remain the same. You flick around a penguin, but now you are trying to get elements to cast spells, basically set collection. And you do that by flicking your penguin over the elements and then flicking them over spells to collect those spells.

The one thing that keeps it from being up higher is that there is almost more luck than the basic game. What do you flip out for a spell, who knows. Now that balances out somewhat over the course of the game, but it’s just an extra element to the game that isn’t completely needed.

16. Festival

Next up we have Festival. I like games with fireworks, fireworks are fun. But Festival is just fine for me because it’s basically a pattern building game. And while I think it works well, it’s very abstract, and I’m just okay with abstract games. You take one of two tiles that’s visible and you’re trying to complete goals. But, instead of taking tiles you can reserve a goal as well because you can only score goals that you reserve.

Honestly, I think it’s the reserving the goals that bugs me about the game. It’s an extra turn that you take, and generally you reserve and score it the same turn. Unless you spy someone else going for it, you’re not going to waste a turn grabbing it early to then never be able to score it. It might be more exciting of a game if you just scored if you were the first to get it, though maybe a bit more deterministic, I see you one turn ahead of me for a goal, I pivot goals, whereas now you can steal it out from under another player.

Metrorunner
Image Source: Thunderworks Games

15. Metrorunner

Next up is Metrorunner. This is one that I got to play at Gen Con and it’s a fun game. You are going around a rondel collecting cubes and trading them in to complete missions. It’s not that super unique a game, but I like that rondel mechanism in it. It feels different while still being an accessible and easy to understand and play game.

But the game has an interesting extra element to it. In Metrorunner you also have a sliding puzzle game in the middle. It reminds me of I believe it was called Pipes Dream where you connect one side of the board to another specific side with pipes. You do that here, but you do it with limited moves and only a few special abilities to help you. I won the game because I am very good at figuring out those puzzles, and you can do it a lot in the game.

14. Captain Flip

This one is a game that I’d love to add to my collection. I own 15 & 17 already, but Captain Flip is maybe the last one that I don’t own on the list. This is a fun game of drawing a tile, you see one side and that tells you some of the scoring that might be on that tile. And it is scoring that you can use and add to your pirate ship. But on the flip side is some other scoring and that scoring might be better. But, once you flip you are locked in on that side of the tile. So do you push your luck or not. It’s a very light game but a good time.

13. Adulthood

Adulthood is a game with a fun theme of being an adult, though, I’m already an adult and I think the game is more fun than real life. You have less taxes that you need to do in the game. But the game is all about how you spend your time and money. And the artwork is great and goes well with the theme because it just creates this fun experience.

I love how you might lose your job but you find a new one easily. Or you fall in love and get married and how you have a new action spot to spend time and money on. Plus you also are trying to play out other cards that are life experiences. If you do well with those, they are great way to score points, but a lot of them require that you have other life experiences first. No going to the PTA meeting without having a kid first. And who knows if you find that kid because it’s a big deck of cards you dig through.

12. Cafe Baras

Cafe Baras is a game with a really fun theme. You are Capybara baristas and you want to make your best coffee shop. So you buy items to put on your menu. Then you bring in customers who will give you money. And if you match everything a customer wants, you can get a repeat customer, which is going to give you points. Plus there are special customers. They score at the end of the game and only if you cafe meets certain things.

The game is from Kids Table Board Games and it is light. But because o that it plays fast as well. And it’s a pretty easy game to teach. I don’t think with a silly cute theme I’d want it to be longer. So Cafe Baras is a very fun time.

Stonespine Architects
Image Source: Thunderworks Games

11. Stonespine Architects

And just missing my Top 10 for 2024 is Stonespine Architects. Though it is one of my most played games in 2024, at least in person. I really like this game because it’s all about building out a dungeon. And you want your dungeon to meet certain things. If it does you are going to get points. But there is an element of drafting cards to add to your dungeon. And then buying items to enhance your dungeon.

I also really like that you draft some scoring objectives as well. Players add three to the game as they play, each of them unique to that player. So while there are shared scoring elements, your dungeon is going to become more unique. And when cards don’t quite fit perfectly, well that might work for a scoring objective that you have.

Final Thoughts

I’m sure that I’m missing games that I played in 2024. Some because maybe they didn’t get rated from a quick play at Gen Con. Or maybe I just missed that date, but 2024 was a year where I got in a lot of fun games. And I also know that there are games from 2024 that I haven’t gotten to that I really want to play. In fact, I see one from where I’m sitting with Stamp Swap, and I know there are more as well.

What are some of your favorite games from 2024? But not you #1 game, bring that to Malts and Meeples tomorrow night as I stream at 9 PM Central my 10 through 1.

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Top 100 Games (of all time) 2024 Edition – 60 through 51 https://nerdologists.com/2024/10/top-100-games-of-all-time-2024-edition-60-through-51/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/10/top-100-games-of-all-time-2024-edition-60-through-51/#comments Thu, 24 Oct 2024 14:45:41 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9229 We're rounding out the first half of my Top 100 Games (of all time) 2024 Edition. What game makes 60 through 51?

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It’s time again to round out the bottom 50 games of my Top 100 Games (of all time) 2024 Edition. We have games 60 through 51 this time. Checkout the video of these ten games over on Malts and Meeples YouTube. And join me there every Wednesday at 9 PM Central to see what games are making the list. And see what might be new on my Top 100 Games list from what it was in 2023. There is at least one in my Top 100 Games in this section of 60 through 51 that is new, but which is it.

Catch up on previous videos here

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

Top 100 Games (of all time) 2024 Edition – 60 through 51

60. Medium

Medium
Image Source: Greater Than Games
  • Published by Greater Than Games in 2019
  • How well can you and a partner connect two seemingly separate words?

This is a really fun party game. You are just trying to match up with your partner (for the round) on two words. But can you both land of the same word? If not, now you need to use those two new words. But, of course, those two new words might have gotten you further apart. This game is one of those party games that has a lot of great highs to it as people land on the same word. And also a lot of moments of just fun as you think it’s impossible to connect the words.

Buy Medium

59. Under Falling Skies

Under Falling Skies
Image Source: Czech Game Editions
  • Published by Czech Games Edition in 2020
  • Battle aliens and defeat the mothership before it lands.

I love this as a solo game. I really enjoy the complexity and thought process of needing to manage how to alien ships are descending. Yet you also need to push to research. So it’s a balancing act of trying to get what you need done, but also not stretching yourself too thin that the smaller vessels are making it into the city scape and pushing the end of the game along faster. So the whole thing is a giant puzzle and a very fun one at that.

Buy Under Falling Skies

58. Final Girl

Final Girl
Image Source: Van Ryder Games
  • Published by Van Ryder Games in 2021
  • Be the final one standing in a horror film as you take on the roll of the Final Girl.

This is one that is perfect for the Halloween season so great for me to talk about it this week. It’s a solo only game where you are taking on a killer, a ghost, or whatever the story is as the final girl. The one who is standing at the end of the movie. And who knows if you will survive or not, but that is the fun challenge of the game. Plus the action system in the game is really good as you spend resources to succeed on checks, but also need those to replenish the cards and actions you can take.

Buy Final Girl

57. Stonespine Architects

Stonespine Architects
Image Source: Thunderworks Games
  • Published by Thunderworks Games in 2024
  • Build out your best labyrinthian dungeon and show the you’re the best architect.

This is a really fun drafting and set collection game. And I think one of the elements that really stands out to me is how become unique in your scoring. You are able to stop buying stuff to grab a scoring card. And that scoring card is going to shape how you play the game, but you also don’t want to stop too early because you need to collect those tokens to bolster up how dangerous your dungeon really is. It’s a great balancing act and adds just a bit more choice to the game. Also this is a new one to my Top 100 Games list.

Buy Stonespine Architects

56. World Wonders

World Wonders
Image Source: Arcane Wonders
  • Published by MeepleBR and Arcane Wonders in 2023
  • Build out y our civilization and compete to complete wonders to make your lands the best.

I appreciate the ease of play. I say that knowing that World Wonders is not the simplest game to learn, but it is a game that as you get into it, to goes really fast. And I like the push your timing element of the game as well. I won’t call it push your luck, but you might be ready to build a wonder but have a lot of money to buy tiles left. Well, if you don’t build it now, someone else might snag it, but if you do, it might put you behind for the next round and the new wonders that come out. And I believe this is new, though maybe 2023, to my Top 100 Games.

Buy World Wonders

55. Homebrewers

Homebrewers
Image Source: Board Game Geek
  • Published by Greater than Games in 2019
  • Become the best home brewer and win awards at Summerfest and Oktoberfest.

This is a great little engine building game that I really like. I like it for the theme, but also for the game play as I always have fun with it. In the game you brew beer to get better at brewing beer. And some of how you do that is you get new ingredients to work with and add to your recipes for IPAs, Porters and more. Those ingredients are going to help build out your engine and might get you more money, move your up on tracks, etc. At the end, though, most of it just comes down to who is the best at brewing beer.

Buy Homebrewers

54. Potion Explosion

Potion Explosion
Image Source: Horrible Guild
  • Published by Horrible Guild in 2015
  • Combo marbles together to create the most and the greatest potions.

This is almost an app game as a board game. And I mean that in the best way possible. There are a number of app games where you remove a “thing” and try to get matching “things” to touch because of it. Here you remove a marble and you want to get like colored marbles to touch. Because that cascades together and then you get to take those marbles. If you play it right you can create a bit change to get the marbles you need to complete a lot of potions in one turn. And that puzzle is the fun of the game to leverage your potions to complete more.

Buy Potion Explosion

53. Mansions of Madness

Mansions of Madness
Image Source: Fantasy Flight Games
  • Published by Fantasy Flight Games in 2016
  • Investigate mysteries of the elder gods in this app guided game in FFG’s Arkham line.

This game is one of the first really big games on the list. And there is a lot that I like about it. But it did use to be higher on my list. I think it’s dropped because I haven’t played it as recently, and because I’ve played more story driven games. This one, though dynamically adjusts the story and the world as you play through multiple times and that is a fun element. But the different scenarios and missions are all fun, and I enjoy that variety in the game.

Buy Mansions of Madness

52. Ohanami

Ohanami
Image Source: Pandsaurus Games
  • Published by Pandasaurus Games in 2019
  • Create your best Zen garden to score you the most points.

The last two games on the list are small. This one is great though for me because it’s a chill game, for the most part, and easy to learn and play. You collect cards, drafting them two at a time. And then you add those cards to three columns. But you either need to add to the top, higher, or bottom, lower on the column. And things can never drop out of numerical order. Plus how the different color score, as you draft over three hands, makes the game even more of a puzzle. And there is a fourth color as well that can be huge, but you are giving up points elsewhere. Overall a really fun little filler game.

Buy Ohanami

51. Vegetable Stock

Vegetable Stock
Image Source: Taiwan Boardgame Design
  • Published by Good Game Studio and Arcane Wonders in 2019 (and 2024 for Arcane Wonders)
  • Collect vegetables and be able to sell them for the most at the end of the game.

This is a stock market vegetable drafting game, and I love the absurdity and double meaning of Vegetable Stock. This is another small game that is more of a filler than anything. But it’s a really fun filler as you draft over six rounds. Each round you draft from N+1 cards where N is the number of players. That last card is then used to adjust the stock market. So you need to be smart in what you draft. Draft too much of one veggie it’ll never move up, but if it moves up too much the market might just crash and make them worthless.

Preorder Vegetable Stock

Upcoming Streams

Just a reminder on my streaming schedule. It’s not just all my Top 100 Games (of all time).

  • Monday night, time varies, I play different small solo games, though I might be looking to start up a campaign again. Expect Final Girl next week for Halloween. And generally the streams do start between 8 and 8:30 PM central time.
  • Wednesday at 9 PM central is going to continue my Top 100 Games (of all time) 2024 Edition for another six weeks. After that expect this to be when I play my small games. Only 5 more weeks left of my Top 100 Games, then likely this will switch to smaller solo games and video games.
  • Friday at 9 PM central my wife and I are streaming a playthrough of Baldur’s Gate 3. Join us for the adventure of Nina and Kaerok and see what choices we make.

The best way to know when we go live, though is to subscribe and click that notification bell. I can’t promise, and in fact it’s pretty unlikely, that I’ll have events to click on ahead of time. Though I do want to get better at it. I hope that you can join a stream and hop into the chat. And let me know what games in this list are your favorite or that you want to try.

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Should Multiplayer Board Games Play Solo https://nerdologists.com/2024/08/should-multiplayer-board-games-play-solo/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/08/should-multiplayer-board-games-play-solo/#respond Fri, 23 Aug 2024 11:50:02 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9110 Should all board games have a solo mode? Some games are made for solo, but what about the rest?

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I play solo board games. I think that we all know that. And the games that I play solo, some of them are meant purely for solo. Other games are going to cooperative, and those naturally work solo because you all work together. So when I sit down and I play one of them solo, I get the full experience. But, for example, when I play River Valley Glassworks, which you can see here, do I lose out on the competitive game? And should that solo mode even be in there in the first place?

The Crux of the Problem

So, I say problem, we can determine if it’s actually a problem or not. But let’s talk about the big reason why I’m talking about this in the first place. For a lot of people, myself included, board games are a social activity. When you add in a solo mode it takes a game that is that social activity and makes into an activity of solitude.

Some board games, as I hinted at in the introduction, rely on that interaction and shared nature of board games. When I attack another army, it isn’t the games army, it is your army. We make alliances and then break them depending on the state of the game. Yes, all of these examples are from Risk, but it’s true for a number of games.

Yet, even games where there can be large amounts of interaction are getting solo additions to them. Sometimes it comes later, but sometimes it’s out of the box when you buy it. Let’s look at Root for example, that game is a war game. Yet there is a way to play it solo. Is that a good thing to have in the box?

Stonespine Architects
Image Source: Thunderworks Games

Board Games Doing Solo Well

On the flip side of the problem I laid out is that a lot of board games do allow for playing solo well. When I sit down and play a game like The 7th Citadel or Stonespine Architects, they make solo game play simple. I intentionally did pick one that is a cooperative game but also one that’s competitive. They make solo work smoothly and easily.

Some board games, though, do end up with clunky systems or systems that don’t make that much sense. I think of Roll to the Top which isn’t that complex a system but is basically playing the game a second time to get it to work. That isn’t that fun, the gratification of playing the game is reduced because the solo mode doesn’t work well. The same can be said for Trek 12. And now Trek 12 is a game that I like a lot, but the solo mode out of the box with an opponent to beat is clunky and slows down the fun.

So Why Offer Solo Modes?

The first reason is that for some people board games are more of a solo activity. It is hard for them to get out and play with other people. And while it’s fun to have a big campaign game, or a small solo game to fit in your pocket, sometimes they want to experience other styles of games. So offering a solo mode opens up games to a lot more people.

It also offers gamers a chance to game more. For me this is a big one. I try and sit down at least once a week on Wednesday and stream a solo game. I will get back to doing Mondays more often once school has started for my kid as well. But I get to experience games, a lot of the time campaign games, and decide if they are for me. Though, I’ll caveat this for myself, I stream games because it gives me some of that social aspect of gaming to share the game with others.

Another, possibly overlooked, reason is that it allows for a gamer to learn and play a game prior to needing to teach it. I think this one is very important, though does have a caveat as well. If I sit down and learn the game it is way easier to teach. I deal with questions prior to ever teaching someone. I learn some of the pitfalls of the game. The caveat is that the solo mode needs to be similar enough to the actual game play.

So Keep Solo Modes for Board Games

I think, and I think you all knew, that board games should keep solo modes. I also think that more board games should have solo modes. But as always, the caveat, they need to be done well. And from what I see, not all designers know how to create a good solo mode. This isn’t a bad thing, it’s more a statement around game design how designing for solo is different than for multiplayer.

That said, that’s not an excuse. This reminds me of film when a writer comes in and does that final polish on a film. They aren’t rewriting the whole thing, instead they have a particular skill where they can polish up a script to make it work the best it can for film or television. It’s something that the original creator might not have or might have a hard time doing. A solo mode creator is very similar to that. The great ones channel an ability to create that, not to rework the whole game, but to take what is there and make the best possible solo mode.

So enjoy solo modes. If you don’t want to play solo, don’t play solo. But there is a great reason for them to be in the box if you don’t love solo modes. And for board game companies, keep on putting them there. Even if they rarely get played, but make them good. Don’t add them just to sell to a few more people, add them because they make it easier to learn and teach the game later. And because they stay true to your game.

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Games to Checkout at Gen Con that I’ve Played https://nerdologists.com/2024/07/games-to-checkout-at-gen-con-that-ive-played/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/07/games-to-checkout-at-gen-con-that-ive-played/#respond Wed, 24 Jul 2024 11:48:55 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9054 If you want some recommendations for games to checkout at Gen Con, here are five that I really like. Are they ones that sound good to you?

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I’m going to be doing an anticipated games to buy at Gen Con list coming up here. But I want to highlight some games that won’t be on that list. Mainly games that I already know that I like because I own them. So if you’re going to Gen Con and you haven’t played them, and you find your tastes align with mine, at least sometimes, these might be games for you to checkout.

Games to Checkout at Gen Con that I’ve Played

Slay the Spire

Let’s start with Slay the Spire from Contention Games. We all know that I like this as a video game. I’ve streamed it on Malts and Meeples YouTube channel several times. But I’ve also streamed the video game a few times. This game is a great implementation of the video game both as a solo experience, more close to the video game, and multiplayer. The game play is fast, impactful and really provides a lot of fun as you go through and battle.

I think there is a difference between solo and multiplayer. But I think I might might like the multiplayer better. That tactical element of working together to take out bad guys, figuring out whose to target and how to mitigate the worst damage as a group is great. That is not something that can be done in a solo game.

Slay the Spire Board Game
Image Source: Contention Games

Dungeon Kart

Next up is Dungeon Kart. I’m so glad that I got to demo this one at Gen Con last year and then get my Kickstarter for it. This is going to be a Mario Kart style racing game. But Brotherwise Games brings in their own characters from Boss Monster, and those are the racers.

The racing in the game is fast and the whole game moves quickly. You just plan how you can move and hope not to crash as you careen around the board. At the same time you also try and pick up spells that you cast and mess with the other drivers. And player positioning determines what smell you might get, further behind the better. I love the experience of this one, it is a bit chaotic but it’s really good.

Vegetable Stock

Vegetable Stock is a little game compared to the first two. But it’s still a really fun and fast filler style of game. It’s a stock market game, you aren’t making soup you’re buying and selling veggies. And it does that through a drafting system that is really clever.

You flip out cards to draft equal to the number of players plus one. In turn order, each player drafts a veggie. And it might seem like the player at the end is in a worse spot, but they aren’t. Because they get to determine what the leftover veggies are going to be. Each card has three veggies on it, I believe, or possibly two, and those veggies increase in value. So that, again, might sound bad, but when a veggie hits the top of their value, they bust. So the player picking last can control which veggies increase and which bust.

The game is just six rounds long. So it goes fast and is one that is easy to say you shuffle up and play again. And now it’s coming from Arcane Wonders, so it’s going to be easier to find than before.

A Gentle Rain

Speaking of small games and games that were hard to find, A Gentle Rain is back. This is a peaceful solo gaming experience. In this game you flip over a tile, you match it to the sides of other tiles by color. Your goal is to get four corners matching, or what would be four corners. The tiles have the corners cut out so that when all match it creates a circle. When you create a circle you place in a flower. The goal is get rid of all the flowers before all the tiles are gone. It is really simple, but it’s meant to be a peaceful game, and it does that.

Stonespine Architects
Image Source: Thunderworks Games

Stonespine Architects

Last but not least on the list we have Stonespine Architects. This is a dungeon building game that honestly feels like it could be at home in the Brotherwise Games Boss Monster world. Instead it is from Thunderworks Games and their Roll Player world, which also works.

In this game you build out a dungeon or labyrinth really. You want it full of monsters, traps and other things. But this is done from open drafting of dungeon tiles. And those tiles then give you money to get more monsters to add to them. All of the time trying to complete various objectives and drafting more throughout the game.

I like the speed this game plays a lot. And I think that the drafting is simple enough that it works well. And the scoring, while there are a number of ways to score, all of it is pretty obvious as you get going. The buying things is maybe the hardest to track, but overall a fast fun dungeon building game.

Final Thoughts

I do want to add in two honorable mentions at Gen Con really quickly. I chose not to put any expansions on the list, but there are two worth checking out.

Forest Shuffle Alpine is a great little expansion for Forest Shuffle. It is going to add in a few more cards and no more complexity. So now the deck of cards has a bit more variety to it and it improves some potential scoring. I mixed it into my game and there is no reason to remove it, so it works really well.

World Wonders: Mundo Expansion is just more wonders for World Wonders. It adds a tiny bit more than that, I believe, but not much else that I can remember. Just a slight tweak to wonders scoring. So it’s another expansion that is really easy to mix in.

There are a lot of games to checkout at Gen Con every year. These are all some games and expansions that I can say that I really like. So if you are interested in them, or heard me talk about them before, now is a chance to pick them up. Are there any first time at Gen Con games that you know already and recommend?

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Stonespine Architects – Game Play https://nerdologists.com/2024/04/stonespine-architects-game-play/ https://nerdologists.com/2024/04/stonespine-architects-game-play/#respond Tue, 09 Apr 2024 11:43:14 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=8862 From the company that brought you Roll Player Adventures and Cartographers is Stonespine Architects their next hit?

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A new game to the table, Stonespine Architects. This one is a dungeon building experience where you are trying to make the most impressive dungeon out there. It’s a theme that I feel like I’ve seen before, but what does it look like in this version? Join me as I play through two games solo over on Malts and Meeples YouTube.

Stonespine Architects

I won’t do a full review of this game. And sorry about the thumbnail for the game. I blame YouTube on this one as the thumbnail in YouTube’s own studio program isn’t that. Or start screen I should say. But let’s talk a bit about the game and how it works, just highlighting some of what I like about solo play.

Firstly, I like that the game isn’t massively different. Jael, when shopping, does get to do everything at once. That’s the main difference that I see from playing with actual people. Though, I’ll be testing that out more today. But what I’m doing and how I’m going about it, that doesn’t change a ton. In fact, I think it probably simulates game play at a higher player count better than two players, even though there are only two players, kind of.

I also am a big fan of drafting. I brought it up last night on the stream, but the game is going to be fast two more players. The stream was two games in under and hour. Stonespine Architects is going to play at any player count. I do something at the same time that you do something, which I love in a game. Drafting is one of the best mechanisms for that because it offers everyone hands of cards to play with immediately.

Finally, I like the variable scoring in the game. My three bonuses are different than yours. That means that you and I compete, but not as directly over some things. And you saw that I almost always spent all my money. If I know that we both want the most traps on a path, I might not against another player. But with the solo player, it is something I can better plan around.

Upcoming Streams

On Monday I play small solo game plays. The schedule is, right now, going to look like gaming every other Monday. A chance to see people in person came up for Monday and as much as I like streaming, it’s good to socialize as well. And I might do more deck construction with Star Wars Unlimited on Mondays as well or pack openings.

On Wednesdays, I play solo campaign games. I plan on playing a campaign game coming up. Right now I’m torn between two games. Well, more than that if you watched through the end of the video. The next game is the one that I just unboxed, 7th Citadel. So I plan to start playing it next week or at least do character building and then dive into the game.

And if you want to know when I go live, the best way is to subscribe. When you subscribe, click that notification bell and you’ll get an alert whenever I’m going to go live. Follow the link – here – to subscribe.

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