The Guild of Merchant Explorers | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Thu, 30 Oct 2025 15:18:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png The Guild of Merchant Explorers | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition – 40 through 31 https://nerdologists.com/2025/10/top-100-games-of-all-time-2025-edition-40-through-31/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/10/top-100-games-of-all-time-2025-edition-40-through-31/#comments Thu, 30 Oct 2025 15:15:07 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9873 What games make it into the Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition? We're onto games 40 through 31 with three new games to the list.

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It’s time for the next 10. The articles will likely catch-up next week to where the videos are. But you can always checkout the videos for the Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition over on the Malts and Meeples YouTube channel. But the lists keep on going, and on this part of the Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition there are three new to me games. Let’s see which ones those are.

Catch Up on the Top 100 Games

100 through 91
90 through 81
80 through 71
70 through 61
60 through 51
50 through 41

Top 100 Games (of all time) 2025 Edition – 40 through 31

40. Sushi Go Party!

Sushi Go Party
Image Source: Gamewright

Published By: Gamewright
Designer: Phil Walker-Harding

Buy Sushi Go Party!

Sushi Go and Sushi Go Party! are classic drafting games at this point. And I think with the fun theme and artwork more welcoming than other bigger group drafting games like 7 Wonders. In this game you draft a meal over three hands of cards. You score points for the sets of cards you get, depending on how those cards score. So an example is for each pair of tempura shrimp you score five points. Some might not score you points, though, if you get too many or too few of them. So it’s a fun changing strategy with lots of cards drafting game.

39. Ninjan

Ninjan
Image Source: Helvetiq

Published By: Helvetiq
Designer: 6jizo

Buy Ninjan

This little game I thought wasn’t going to be that interesting, but I really enjoy it. It’s rock paper scissors. But you don’t play against the other players, you play against a central set of cards. And if you beat a card you take that one and those are the points you get. The trick is that some points are negative. So if all the cards are negative in that middle display, you don’t want to beat them and take a card. It makes some some interesting choices and a lot of fun moments of trying not to get points.

38. First Rat

First Rat
Image Source: Pegasus Spiele

Published By: Pegasus Spiele
Designers: Gabriele Ausiello and Virginio Gigli

Buy First Rat

The moon is made a cheese, you’re rats so of course you know that to be true. And you want to get there. You do that by collecting resources to build up rocket parts and get your ratstronauts ready to go to space. This game is all about figuring out how you want to score and then optimizing that as you move your rats up tracks gaining resources and other things. I like how there is a variety of ways you can go about it in the game, and the theme is just great.

37. Let’s Go! To Japan

Let's Go! To Japan
Image Source: AEG

Published By: Alderac Entertainment Group
Designer: Josh Wood

Buy Let’s Go! To Japan

Second new game on the list Let’s Go! To Japan is one that I backed on Kickstarter but played first on BGA. This is another drafting game, I really enjoying drafting. In this game you want to create your best trip to Japan. And each day you have a certain goal you go for. So it might be food one day or cultural events. As you draft cards and plan your days you try and line that up. As well as you try and get the best scoring for each day that you can. There are a lot of fun things with how this drafting work. And it’s just fun to see your trip when you are done.

36. Guild of Merchant Explorers

The Guild of Merchant Explorers
Image Source: AEG

Published By: Alderac Entertainment Group
Designers: Matthew Dunstan and Brett J Gilbert

Buy Guild of Merchant Explorers

The last new game on the list is Guild of Merchant Explorers. This is a game with a roll and write feel but uses cubes for that. You are creating routes across your map and filling in areas to get points and create trading posts. I love how simple this game is, everyone has the same map and you flip a card and you place a cube or cubes on that type of terrain. But then you get special cards that make you different in each era and games start to go in very different ways. Plus the treasures which always feel like they should be better than they are, but I always want them.

35. The Isle of Cats: Explore and Draw

Isle of Cats Explore and Draw
Image Source: City of Games

Published By: The City of Games
Designer: Frank West

Buy Isle of Cats: Explore and Draw

This is one of the highest roll and write games on the list. The Isle of Cats: Explore and Draw is a really fun game where you are rescuing cats from an island before the bad guy gets there. And to do that you pick a column of cards to activate. Some of those columns are just cats and you add them to your ship trying to create groups of cats. Others might have scoring objectives, so it’s this fun balance of determining how you want to score or maybe you need more cats to make your scoring work. All this while having a polyomino puzzle on your board.

34. The Isofarian Guard

Isofarian Guard
Image Source: Sky Kingdom Games

Published By: Sky Kingdom Games
Designers: Eric Bittermann, Sean Craten, David Yanchick

Buy The Isofarian Guard

The Isofarian Guard is one of two bigger story games on the list. And I think you’ll find that a lot of the bigger story games are towards the top half of my list. I love this type of game. And The Isofarian Guard has a lot of fun bag building as you level up characters. Then you explore and enjoy a big story while hopping into combats and using that bag building to battle the bad guys. It’s interesting how there are multiple campaigns with different guard members that all happen during the same time period. That is unique to the game.

33. Forest Shuffle

Forest Shuffle
Image Source: Lookout Games

Published By: Lookout Games
Designer: Kosch

Buy Forest Shuffle

Some games give you a ton of points and Forest Shuffle is for sure one of those. In this game you build out a tableau that is your forest and surround the trees with flora and fauna. Every tree, every animal and every plant give you some benefit in some way. And your goal is to optimize is the best you can. Maybe you go all in on butterflies, or you get a bird card that scores more for other birds. You need to figure out your best scoring.

I need another paragraph to talk about the game because the card play and end game are so good. In the card play you spend cards from your hand to play cards, and that is always a tough decision as to which cards you might not get to play. And the end game is great with three winter cards in the bottom third of the deck. When you hit one or the second one, you know the end game is coming soon and you need to get cards played.

32. The 7th Citadel

7th Citadel
Image Source: Serious Pulp

Published By: Serious Poulp
Designer: Ludovic Roudy and Bruno Sautter

Buy The 7th Citadel

Another story and campaign game, The 7th Citadel creates a really unique world of necrodruids and monsters that you avoid, fight, and challenges to complete. With a map that you build out each time you play, you explore new areas and directions to get through the scenarios of the story.

And how you do your combat or challenges is really enjoyable. Each character has a deck of cards. And you draw from that deck trying to get the right stars to line-up. You can draw a lot of cards, but if you do, you’ll run out of cards sooner. So maybe you draw fewer, or maybe you really need to pass, so you draw a lot but then spend health to get more back. But of course, when you spend health that is putting you closer to death that way.

31. Star Wars: Unlimited

Star Wars Unlimited Twilight of the Replubic
Image Source: Fantasy Flight

Published By: Fantasy Flight Games
Designers: Jim Cartwright, Tyler Parrott, Daniel Schaefer, Jeremy Zwirn

Buy Star Wars: Unlimited

The only TCG on the list is Star Wars: Unlimited. Though I’ve been loving Magic the Gathering again as well. But Star Wars: Unlimited is just an easier game to play. The actions being so simple and a back and forth one action and then one from your opponent is great. I also like the two theaters that you fight over, ground and space. Granted you can also just direct that damage at the base as well to try and take that down because that is how you win. And there are a lot of good synergies for building if you want to be a force user, a Mandalorian, or a Rebel, etc.

Join Next Week

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

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

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Top 10 New To Me Board Games of 2025 https://nerdologists.com/2025/07/top-10-new-to-me-board-games-of-2025/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/07/top-10-new-to-me-board-games-of-2025/#respond Fri, 11 Jul 2025 15:40:35 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9682 How do I rank all the new to me board games that I've played in 2025? Join me as I rank all of them from the first half of the year.

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We are now half way through the year. I think I did a list of this after Q1 but I can’t find it. So now we’re taking all the new to me games that I’ve played thus far in 2025, and there a number. And I am putting those board games through Pub Meeples ranking engine. And I am going to rank all 65 of those board games and yes, I’ll post the full list. But I’m going to do a write-up on the Top 10. So join me now to see what the Top 10 New To Me Board Games are thus far in 2025.

Top 10 New To Me Board Games of 2025

10. Schadenfreude

One of the few games that I didn’t play first or only play on Board Game Arena (BGA). Schadenfreude is a trick taking game but one with some weird rules. You want to be second in the game. If you win the trick you aren’t getting the points. Instead whomever comes in second gets the trick and scores their card and any that don’t follow suit. Some cards are going to give you positive points and some are going to be worth negative points.

But what I really love beyond that with the game is that as you get points you are trying to get as close to 40 total points as you can. This is something that might take a few hands. But the game is over in the hand where someone goes over forty points. If you go over forty points, you lose the game, you can’t win anymore, instead it’s the person who is the closest without going over who is the winner of the game. It’s a neat little twist on trick taking.

9. Pirates of Maracaibo

The biggest of the board games on the list just in terms of what is going on, Pirates of Maracaibo is the first of three games that I just always have a game of going on BGA. That’s because I constantly play it with one other person and it’s just always going. I love it when I come across someone who wants to keep playing a game so I can really learn it.

Pirates of Maracaibo is all about being a pirate, getting treasure, hiring crew, upgrading your ship, and exploring lands. There is a lot going, but almost all of it is pretty simple to learn and play. There are a few things that I want to get better at with the game, and that one person, I still haven’t beaten them. But I have gotten close so I think I will one day. But the game, when you know it, is thinky but fast to play and I really enjoy the theme and different strategies in the game.

8. Space Base

Space Base
Image Source: AEG

I owned Space Base and then I sold Space Base, why because I wasn’t playing it. I like to try a game before I sell them, but I just wasn’t playing it. And I had played games like Machi Koro and Valeria and those were fine. Then I played it on BGA and now I love it. I love it so much that I got it back into my collection and I have played it already.

The game is roll dice, activate spots, get income, buy cards and upgrade those spots. But I really like how as you play, you improve what you do on your opponents turn. When you upgrade a spot, the old cards flip vertically and now they activate a different ability on your opponents turn. And it is a race to see who can get points the fastest.

There are some trickier cards to teach in the game. But I think you can teach them as they come up. And once you know the handful of basic cards, the game is easy to play. And I like it a bunch more than Machi Koro which is fun, but feels slightly limited. This one feels like it was created with more purpose.

7. Symbiose

Symbiose from Subverti
Image Source: Subverti

The second of three games that I have a standing game on BGA. Symbiose reminds me of games like Silver or games that I grew up playing with a deck of cards. In those you start with face down cards and you want to get rid of them and get rid of points. In this case, you start with face down cards and you want to build out an optimized scoring set-up.

I love how scoring works in this game. It’s a two by four grid, so two high and four wide. And the middle four cards, the middle two in each row, they are the ones that score for you. So the scoring on the bottom half of the card is what matters. And they score your whole grid. But to the left and right, those score your opponents to your left and right. So you need to decide when you flip those cards over and swap them. It’s simple but such a fun game.

6. The Guild of Merchant Explorers

I thought at one point that The Guild of Merchant Explorers could end up as #1 on this list. It is the game that I have played the most thus far this year. And that is because I love it on BGA. I often set-up a number of two player games because they go really fast and you don’t feel like you lose anything. Plus I play with a group of two others where we just have a standing game. So when one game ends a new one begins.

Watch me play it below and see if it’s for you. But I love how simple it is once you know how the game works. I think it’s even a very simple teach.

5. Kingdom Legacy: Feudal Kingdom

You saw me play through this on Malts and Meeples. And you can catch-up on that and watch it down below. This is a solo legacy game where you want to build out the best kingdom possible. You flip out cards and then you spend those cards to upgrade other cards. It’s all about managing your deck and setting it up so that you gain stronger actions. Of course there is a lot that you want to manage and you decide what scoring and what paths you go down in the game. I already bought another copy to play it again.

4. The Fellowship of the Ring: Trick-Taking Game

Do you love Lord of the Rings, this game is steeped in theme. Do you love trick-taking? Well this one is cooperative and pretty different in how it plays. Because you play through The Fellowship of the Ring with different characters depending on where you are in the book. And each character is going to want to win tricks in a different way, maybe a certain number of tricks, maybe a certain suit. So it is very tricky and changing and works really well. I want to dive into this more with a group of people.

The one thing I will say is that I think that The Fellowship of the Ring: Trick-Taking Game is not an introduction to trick taking. It is a very good game, but because there isn’t communication you need to have some idea of how trick taking works. It is too easy, otherwise to just repeat the same chapter over and over again. Because like a game like Euchre, you want to tell your teammate, in this case everyone that you have or don’t have.

3. Zenith

Zenith
Image Source: PlayPunk

Zenith is a great two player game where you are battling for favor on planets. But there is more going on with it than just that. I really like how you battle for one of three different planet victory conditions. You can gain favor three times from one planet, once from four different planets, or five total favor tokens. But you do that by card play to gain favor, going up a technology track, and then spending cards to manage other things like gaining more income or more cards on your side of the board.

I really feel like every time that I play Zenith the game is different. And that is what I love about it so much. I don’t feel like I found a strategy that is going to work every time. I sometimes go for all favor from a single planet by playing cards. Or I might try and get a lot of technology/research done and manipulate the board that way. But the game is really good at making you adapt as you go and it is tense as you battle for favor with your opponent.

2. Clank! Catacombs

The last two are kind of “cheats” so to speak. Clank! Catacombs is just a new version of Clank a game that I already know I love. This push your luck deck building game is really now just modular. The game does change in a few other ways but it is mainly that it now adds in a modular board. And I like that element that the game is going to be different each time you play it. In base Clank you might find your optimized path and strategy. Here the game is going to be different each time. And you decide how it is going to be different based off of how you explore it.

1. Marvel Dice Throne: X-Men

Marvel Dice Throne X-Men
Image Source: Roxley Games

It’s almost unfair to have this on the list. I know that I love Marvel. And I know that I love dice Throne. So of course I love the combination. But it’s still new to me this year and I still really enjoy it. Plus I get to play as Gambit which is always a win for me. I won’t spend much more time on it than that because you know what Dice Throne, battle Yahtzee with special powers and cards. But yes, the new X-Men stuff is good. And I’m excited for even more of it to be coming in.

The Whole List

1Marvel Dice Throne: X-Men
2Clank!: Catacombs
3Zenith
4The Fellowship of the Ring: Trick-Taking Game
5Kingdom Legacy: Feudal Kingdom
6The Guild of Merchant Explorers
7Symbiose
8Space Base
9Pirates of Maracaibo
10Schadenfreude
11Astro Knights
12Tower Up
13Knister
14Fromage
15Toy Battle
16Ninjan
17Scratch & Catch
18Panda Spin
19PUSH
20One-Hit Heroes
21Creature Comforts
22Flip 7
23Jaipur
24Jump Drive
25MicroMacro: Crime City
26Take 5
27Pyramido: Forgotten Treasures
28Crafting the Cosmos
29EXIT: The Game – The Lord of the Rings: Shadows over Middle-earth
30Rumble Nation
31Imhotep
32Circus Flohcati
33A Nice Cuppa
34The Architects of Amytis
35Lure
36Apiary
37SpaceShipped
38Coffee Rush
39Luxor
40Welcome to the Moon
41Hey, That’s My Fish!
42Super
43Mesos
44ROVE: Results-Oriented Versatile Explorer
45Wizards Cup
46Ancient Realm
47The Royal Limited
48Tiwanaku
49Unsurmountable
50The Hanging Gardens
51Kamon
52At the Helm
53INK
54Karvi
55Stalk Exchange
56Gatsby
57Harmonies
58Paper World
59Bunny Boom
60Sir Ocelot’s Cave
61KADO
62Garden Rush
63Gold’n Crash
64Dédale
65Castellion

Thoughts on the Board Games Outside of the Top 10

I like most of the board games that I’ve played new this year. I think that beyond maybe the bottom 11 of them I want to play most of them again. Karvi is an interesting one and it’s on that edge. I played it once and I need to play it more. But I’m not 100% sure that I understood everything and I messed up my first play. There is an interesting track where you go around and take your actions. But you can go as far forward as you want. I didn’t understand where the starting point . So I’m not sure if it is a game that I’ll love or not.

But just outside the Top 10 I want to highlight a few board games. I just wrote my review for Scratch & Catch, which is #17 and I think the game is a really fun filler game. I like the different strategies and plans that players can have in the game. Also Knister and #13 is such a simple roll and write game, but while it is very lucky, as a lot of roll and write games are, I think it’s a very good one to play.

And one final one because I’m not sure where it will and is Apiary. Right now it is sitting very much in the middle at #36. But I think it could rise. I also think it could drop. I just don’t know because I need to play it in person. And when I play it in person that means that I need to learn the rules better so I can teach it. And it feels like a game where nothing is too complex but there is a lot going on. So that is a bit intimidating for the teach.

Final Thoughts

My goal at the start of the year was to learn 50 new board games. I’m well past that at this point. And I plan now to shoot for 100 new board games. If I keep up a pace of 1 per week I won’t quite make it there. But already this week I learned three new board games, all of them on the list. So it isn’t like I’m running behind on that and running behind on learning new board games.

That is a new game that you really have loved this year? It doesn’t have to be from 2025, it just needs to be a new game for you. Let me know that down in the comment section below.

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Ranking All The New Games Played in Q1 https://nerdologists.com/2025/04/ranking-all-the-new-games-played-in-q1/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/04/ranking-all-the-new-games-played-in-q1/#respond Thu, 17 Apr 2025 15:44:59 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9545 How do I rank the new games that I've played in Q1 of 2025? I have played 35 new to me games, and that's a lot, but which are the best?

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I thought let’s do some fun rankings. I’ve played 35 new to me games this year between in person and on Board Game Arena. You haven’t seen all of them yet in reviews from BGA, but I’ll be getting to them. So let’s rank them all and then I don’t want to talk about them all, but I’ll talk about the Top 5 and why there are up there in more detail.

As normal, I am using Pub Meeple to do my rankings. You can find their ranking engine here.

Kado
Image Source: Lumberjacks Studio

Ranking New Games 35 through 5

35 – KADO
34 – Gold’n Crash
33 – Castellion
32 – Harmonies
31 – Pokemon Old Maid
30 – Karvi
29 – Panda Spin
28 – Unsurmountable
27 – Stalk Exchange
26 – The Royal Limited
25 – At the Helm
24 – Ancient Realm
23 – SpaceShipped
22 – ROVE: Results-Oriented Versatile Explorer
21 – Ext: The Game – Lord of the Rings: Shadows over Middle-earth
20 – Circus Flohcati
19 – A Nice Cuppa
18 – Toy Battle
17 – PUSH
16 – Knister
15 – Luxor
14 – Crafting the Cosmos
13 – The Architects of Amytis
12 – 6 nimmt!
11 – Imhotep
10 – Pyradmido: Forgotten Treasures
9 – One-Hit Heroes
8 – Fromage
7 – Schadenfreude
6 – Symbiose

Quick Thoughts

There are a lot of great games in this section. Everything from Old Maid up I’ll gladly play. And I mainly will gladly play old maid because my kid likes it. Also, I realized I have played old maid before growing up, but I never ranked it. So maybe shouldn’t be on the list.

There are some games where I wonder if they would move higher in other circumstances. Panda Spin, for example, at 29 feels low. But it’s also just okay on Board Game Arena. Would it be a better game in person. The downside of that one is downtime as you might not be able to partake in tricks. But that downtime would be way less.

Also there is a huge clump of Button Shy solo games there in the middle. I like those games. There weren’t any where I thought they were actively annoying or not that great to play. At the same time, there are some that are better than the others, and because it’s just 18 cards, they all fall into that similar feeling category, especially the ones that I’ve played on Malts and Meeples thus far.

Pirates of Maracaibo
Image Source: dlp games


Top 5 New Games of Q1

5. Pirates of Maracaibo

This game is great. I love everything that is going on in it and I also love how fast the game is. I wrote up a review of this one already and you can read that here. Just a quick recap, there is a lot going on, but the turns are simple. And there are a ton of ways to explore scoring. I like being able to spend time figuring out new ways to score. And each way to score really does feel good, but you can’t only focus in on one, most likely, you are going to need to get a few working together to do well in the game.

4. The Guild of Merchant Explorers

The next one is another one that I’ve done a review on already. You can read my review for The Guild of Merchant Explorers here. This one I love because I can play it so quickly at two players on BGA, as long as the other player is active. And it is a different puzzle each time you play as you get unique cards for each era. And the scoring objectives, which can easily swing the game, help give the game that more variety as well.

3. Zenith

Yes, another BGA game with a review, but the final of the BGA games, is Zenith and you can read the review here. Zenith is a very fun two player game. And while there are other two player games on the list, the lowest at 34, Zenith stands above with the variety of ways to win the game. It really feels like such a great back and forth two player battle. And that tug of war element where you are trying to get the planets to your side and figuring out how to do that best is great.

Zenith
Image Source: PlayPunk

2. Clank! Catacombs

Next we have Clank!: Catacombs. We already know that I love Clank in all it’s forms. I’ve streamed the digital app this year as well, but Clank!: Catacombs is probably the best version of Clank!. And that’s really driven by the fact that the game is going to change every time. You don’t know how the tiles are going to come out, and you could decide to build things so it goes off into the distance. That is going to make it more replayable without any expansions, and I think it also makes it easier to have expansions.

1. Marvel Dice Throne: X-Men

The final one is another game that I’ve kind of already played, much like Clank!, but it’s Marvel Dice Throne: X-Men. And this one is great for me because it has two of my favorite players. Beyond that, it is still just more Dice Throne, and I love Dice Throne. I need to pull out my other Marvel characters and have everyone battle together and see who comes out on top. That’s another great thing about Dice Throne, it’s really built for a tournament or competitive play. I wonder if there are any shops around me who are doing the Dice Throne league, that could be something fun to join.

Final Thoughts

That’s all of the new to me games that I’ve played this year. And I know that I’m going to play even more. I am trying to learn new games each week on board game arena and I’ve done a very good job of that thus far. It might become harder later, but I think that I can do it.

Based off of these games, are there any that I should be looking out for in 2025 to tryout? Obviously these aren’t all the games that I’ve played, so I might have played your suggestion already. But let me know those down in the comments. And let me know which games you’ve tried for the first time this year?

Looking around me, I have games like Knarr, Finca, Thunder Rolls, Bomb Busters and a whole lot more that I’ve had come in this year. And there are kickstarters as well, like Dragon Eclipse, Lore, Star Realms, Andromeda’s Edge, and The Dark Quarter that I need to get played as well. So I’m at no shortage of games to get played. And I hope to get a lot of those games played this year, plus the oh so many more that have been on my shelf of opportunity for even longer.

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Guild of Merchant Explorers – BGA Game Of The Week https://nerdologists.com/2025/03/guild-of-merchant-explorers-bga-game-of-the-week/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/03/guild-of-merchant-explorers-bga-game-of-the-week/#comments Tue, 04 Mar 2025 15:54:19 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9465 Travel the lands, create trade routes and find riches in Guild of Merchant Explorers. A dull sounding name, but is it a fun game?

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If you want to find a game with a boring title, I think that Guild of Merchant Explorers does a solid job. If you want to find a game with a dull board, again see this game. But are the name and the looks deceiving with this game? Is the Guild of Merchant Explorers actually a good game, or is the name telling the truth? Well, it’s one of the new ones that I’ve been playing on Board Game Arena (BGA) so let’s see how the game is.

How To Play Guild of Merchant Explorers

Guild of Merchant of Explorers plays kind of like a roll and write game, or flip and write game. So start by using that as a basis for how it is played. On a turn a card is flipped over and that tells you what type of terrain you can explore. And you want to explore terrain that has coins or is going to give you coins, because coins are your points at the end of the game.

Each card you flip has a certain way that or type of terrain that you need to place on. It might be wild but you need to place them so those two spots you are filling in are connected. Or it might be two grass lands which you can place anywhere, as long as they are connected to something previous, we’ll talk about that in a second. And then there are ones for each age that give you a special placement power that other players don’t have.

How To Place

So when you are placing you need to place off of a few different things, or a few different rules. When you start the game you need to start from your central city. And as you play, you can connect to paths leading back to that central city, or to villages that you’ve placed. I’ll talk about villages in a second. As you move from age one to two, and all the way up through four, you wipe what you have on the board each time, minus a few things.

So it might seems that you are always limited as you play out. But like I said you can play from villages as well. Villages do you give points, so one of the things you want to build to do well in the game. But they also give you new spots to build from. If I place a village on another island, I can now build off of that village. The rest of the rules apply still to what you are doing for placement, but you start in different spots.

And each era gives you a special card to use as well. Those special cards stick around, one for each era. And the one you pick and use in era one is going to be used in ages two through four as well. That is going to make how you expand compared to other players unique. And it is going to help determine your scoring strategy as you play the game.

How to Score

Then it’s all about how you score in this game. And the scoring is simple but there are a good number of ways to score. The first is simple, every time you cover up a coin, you gain that many coins. So if you cover up two coins on a turn, you get two coins which are two points at the end of the game.

You also gain coins for building villages. Earlier you build the village in a game the fewer points you will get. Why, because some spots are easier to build than others, so you likely will be building those to start the game.

You also explore spots with treasures. These give you a treasure card that you draw. Some of them give you points for the number of villages you have, or trade routes you create. Or it might be an urn that gives you more treasure for the number of urn cards you pull from the deck.

You establish trade routes as well. A trade route is going to connect two towns printed on the board. Not villages. You score points based on the numbers of your two connecting towns. And then you cover up one of the tows, so you can’t just connect the same high scoring towns again.

Finally each game you deal out shared objectives. The first player to complete it is going to get more points than the subsequent completion of those goals. And the most points at the end of the game wins.

What Doesn’t Work

There is an element of fiddliness that I expect to find when I play in person. On BGA it is great because it cleans up everything between rounds for you. When you play in person you need to remove all the cubes, but keep the villages in the right place. And that is going to be a bit more prone to a table bump or something like that. The game would be hard to make with a recessed board, and there are multiple boards, so I get it. But it is going to be a small concern.

What Works

Firstly, the card flip system and what you do with placing cubes is great. I really like how smoothly that works in the game. It is easy to track and use in the game. And it is nice because that means that everyone is playing the game at the same time. There is no roll or anything for a specific persons turn. I know a lot of roll and write style games do that now, as do more others, but it’s always nice.

I also like the cards you gather for each era. At the end of the game, I have three unique things that I can do. So, to make that clearer, in the final era, you activate all three, plus you choose one to activate again. So you decide, somewhat, how you build out your strategy. You get two cards each era that are special and choose to keep one, so while it might lead you in a direction, it is your choice.

And I like the scoring a lot in this game. I know it reads like a lot when it comes to what I wrote down for it. And that isn’t all the possible scoring in the game but nearly. So it is a bunch, but mainly, everything gives you coins. And on your first age, you probably get a village out and cover some coins. That is going to be about it. So it leads you into the scoring as you go and you can focus in on an area of scoring that you really want to make work for you.

Who Is Guild of Merchant Explorers For?

I think this is a great game for people who like roll and write games but want to bridge that gap between others. You play something that feels a bunch like a roll and write game, but it is still played on a board. The one thing I’ll say is that people looking for a very interactive game aren’t going to find it here. Which is okay but know that going into it. I was told by someone I play with on BGA that the game reminded him of Cartographers. And I think there is definitely an element that feels a bit like that. It is different, but if you like Cartographers you probably will enjoy this one.

Final Thoughts on Guild of Merchant Explorers

Now, I do like Cartographers a lot. So do I like Guild of Merchant explorers then? The answer is yes. This is a fun game that is easy to sit down and play on BGA and I think it’ll be easy to play in person. In fact, I plan on playing it in person sometime soon solo and competitively against other players.

I think what makes it so great for me is how the game expands out as you go. Yes, you wipe your progress between each era. And I though, or was worried, that it might make the game feel smaller and tighter. Mainly, can I make it to the edge of the board to get to that town there, or to cover up that area and put in a village. It turns out that the answer to those questions is yes, because if you start to place villages early, you really expand. And you add more cards each era as well.

There are some games that I play on BGA that I almost always have a game going. Forest Shuffle, Zenith, Rallyman Dirt and Pirates of Maracaibo, which I’ll talk about next week, are a few. I expect that Guild of Merchant Explorers is going to end up the same way. It’s an easy game to pick-up playing asynchronously and I enjoy that about it a lot. So a good easy game to play and enjoy, in my opinion. And a game that is going to give good variety and replayability and the possibility for expansions.

My Grade: A-
Strategy: B
Luck: C

Have you played Guild of Merchant Explorers? What do you think of it?

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