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Post by ganews on Dec 4, 2014 11:04:33 GMT -5
Because there are other games besides video games! I don't know if this will generate enough interest to be pinned (cough cough Douay-Rheims-Challoner), but we'll see. The new-to-me game (actually released 2009) I tried at my last game night was Cyclades. Pretty cool, but especially as a longtime lover of mythology it left me wanting more. The game has many elements - it actually took almost as long to explain as the Game of Thrones tabletop - but was done in less than 90 minutes. It plays like a combination of other games: army movement like GoT and others, ships like Seafarers of Catan, building like Puerto Rico, and lots of monsters for purchase and use. I guess it's a little too easy to win, leaving little incentive to attack others or buy monsters, so I want to go back and make some house rules. I see that there's a second GoT edition, which I really need to try after having played and loved the first edition. Still need to get around to Diplomacy and Axis and Allies. What have you been playing?
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Post by Douay-Rheims-Challoner on Dec 4, 2014 11:13:03 GMT -5
Basically I have an Ogre Kingdoms army for Warhammer Fantasy Battles (a Tolkeinesque fantasy battle game that is a staple of wargaming here), a Necron fleet for Battlefleet Gothic (set in the Warhammer 40k universe, Battlefleet Gothic is that, but spaceships), and I've dabbled a bit in Flames of War (a New Zealand made WW2 wargame.) I really like tabletop gaming, but I haven't played anything new in a while because it costs a small fortune.
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Post by ganews on Dec 4, 2014 11:42:22 GMT -5
I haven't played anything new in a while because it costs a small fortune. They really are super expensive, but it's not much worse than a newly released video game. I actually only own a few contemporary games myself. Never had to buy a version of Catan because everyone else already owns one. I've got a buddy with a zillion games, so it's easy to mooch off him. Best of all, down the hill from where I live there's a new board game cafe with thousands of dollars worth of contemporary games available to play for unlimited time under a $5 door cover.
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Post by Douay-Rheims-Challoner on Dec 4, 2014 11:43:22 GMT -5
ganews Try building an army for a Games Workshop game. You can buy like five new AAA videogames for that price.
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Baron von Costume
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Like an iron maiden made of pillows... the punishment is decadence!
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Post by Baron von Costume on Dec 4, 2014 12:25:48 GMT -5
I see that there's a second GoT edition, which I really need to try after having played and loved the first edition. Still need to get around to Diplomacy and Axis and Allies. I have never tried the GoT game(s) but I thought they looked great. We used to play a ton of Axis and Allies (Or rather the World at War addon that made it more fun) in high school but getting people together for a game that can run that long simply isn't feasible more than once a year or two these days (especially when the guy that owned the game moved to the states for a while.) That same crew has played Shogun a few times and that's a lot of fun with its weird ass battle tower thing but is still a lot more random that I'd like, at least in the games I've played so far. I've been playing a ton of more casual games lately and it's actually been great. I got my parents and a few friends playing Ticket to Ride on a regular basis, I'm sick to death of Catan but we still play it regularly when I'm having a family night. Lately friends and I have been blasting through a few rounds of King of Tokyo with the power up expansion and that's always a great time, particularly when we've had a few drinks are too far gone to play any more Coconuts or do anything super complex game wise.
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Post by ganews on Dec 4, 2014 12:33:24 GMT -5
I've been playing a ton of more casual games lately and it's actually been great. I got my parents and a few friends playing Ticket to Ride on a regular basis, I'm sick to death of Catan but we still play it regularly when I'm having a family night. Lately friends and I have been blasting through a few rounds of King of Tokyo with the power up expansion and that's always a great time, particularly when we've had a few drinks are too far gone to play any more Coconuts or do anything super complex game wise. I never have played Ticket to Ride, I suspect because while I was in grad school knowing no gamers everyone else played it to death and now wants something new. I'm still largely inexperienced in this world that I didn't know existed until a few years ago, although I've just about gathered enough so that new game rules can be explained to me as analogous to other games. When I was in college my roommate had Catan, and while we didn't play necessarily every day I'm sure we played at least 7 games/week for a couple years.
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Baron von Costume
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Like an iron maiden made of pillows... the punishment is decadence!
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Post by Baron von Costume on Dec 4, 2014 12:45:08 GMT -5
I never have played Ticket to Ride, I suspect because while I was in grad school knowing no gamers everyone else played it to death and now wants something new. I'm still largely inexperienced in this world that I didn't know existed until a few years ago, although I've just about gathered enough so that new game rules can be explained to me as analogous to other games. When I was in college my roommate had Catan, and while we didn't play necessarily every day I'm sure we played at least 7 games/week for a couple years. If you're interested in trying out TTR the iOS and Steam versions are both quite good and cheap. Personally I think Europe is a better map than the USA one but both benefit from the expansion pack of extra cities (I'm not sure if that's available for the europe electronic versions. I often play a round or two on my old iPod touch on the bus ride home if my phone is low on power. I'm curious if anyone here is a King of Tokyo fan and if so have they tried the new King of New York version? I haven't heard anything about it yet.
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Post by Douay-Rheims-Challoner on Dec 4, 2014 21:33:38 GMT -5
I played a game of Star Trek Catan once. Was pretty fun. It is also literally just Catan with spacedocks and starship Enterprises. I loved Risk as a kid, so I like the idea of boardgames like Axis & Allies or Europa Universalis (and have played the PC versions of multiple games like that... including the PC game version of Axis & Allies, actually) and I'd be particularly interested in playing Imperial at some point, a board game where you play as international financiers in pre-WW1 Europe.
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Post by disqusf3dme on Dec 4, 2014 22:21:16 GMT -5
I used to play a lot of table top games with my ex because our mutual friends loved them, but she got all of those post-break up. My one roommate likes to play but he buys all these complicated ones, like Axis and Allies or Arkham Horror and then we never get around to playing them because he's not good at organizing sessions for things like this, not to mention that he doesn't know the rules. The most complex thing we can ever arrange a game of is Catan, and even then it's rare due to lack of players. Neither of us have the amount of close friends required for that sort of thing it seems. Lately we got into Netrunner a bit. I got really nervous about it though because I suck so much compared to my roommate. We got caught up playing regular old video games though and haven't touched that in a month or two, unfortunately.
I kinda wish I had an iPad for all the sweet digital versions of games. Android doesn't have much.
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Post by Hugs and Hisses on Dec 5, 2014 10:20:15 GMT -5
I picked up a copy of "Once Upon A Time" to give to my regular Game Night hosts. The game night group consists of an ex-children's librarian who loves giving book talks, an adult librarian who reads more than anyone else I know, and a friend who had a high school teacher tell her "you're going to have a hard time in college because you write better than your professors and they'll know it". I think it's going to blow their minds! One member of the group is too Type A for the big, European-style games, so we stick to low-key affairs like Bananagrams and, our collective favorite, Wise & Otherwise. I used to play Carcassone quite a bit and wish I had a group of folks who liked it. Playing against the AI on my ipad just isn't the same.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 5, 2014 13:46:37 GMT -5
I went to a weekly board game night several times last year, but the host has an odd habit of playing the same game every week until he's tried out every single scenario for the game and any expansions he owns, so if you don't like a game you're screwed for however long that takes. (As in, this year he played the same game from February to October. So none for me!)
I DID like the Mage Knight board game...but the complexities of the spell card portion are too frustrating to follow along with everything else.
I like strategic games with lots of detail (like Axis and Allies), but I'm spoiled by 30 years of PC gaming in that I'd rather play the electronic versions of most of them so I don't have to worry about forgetting some of the rules.
I used to own a Warhammer 40K Chaos Space Marines army. It's one of the big reasons I currently have a huge credit card balance because I bought more than I could afford. I LOVE the style of the Space Marine army, especially with the Chaos thrown in. I also realized after buying a ton of figures that I enjoyed painting more than playing the actual game, and enjoyed assembling custom figures and vehicles more than painting, so I ended up with a bunch of stuff assembled and half-painted. (I think the only things I actually painted 100% to completion were Kharn the Destroyer and a squad of plastic marines.) Last thing I was working on before giving up was a Land Raider with magnetically-attached interchangeable weapons so I didn't have to have a different model for every loadout I wanted to try.
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Post by sarapen on Dec 7, 2014 11:45:04 GMT -5
Are we counting tabletop RPGs? I played my first one over the summer with a group of virtual newbies. Either our members had only played computer or video game RPGs, like me, or had played tabletop RPGs decades ago in high school. Or they'd never done either and were only there because their husbands were. Our first foray into Dungeon World was a rousing success so we've been having monthly sessions now.
My character is an evil elf wizard named St. Nicholas. I mean, Santa is an elf who uses magic to cause fear in children, so obviously he's evil, and that's how I'm roleplaying him. I'm the only evil player in the party but our paladin kind of wishes he'd also gone that route whenever we start getting 24 with the suggestions of torturing goblin prisoners taken in combat or attacking people in their sleep.
I looked into it and hadn't realized how much the dungeon master did behind the scenes. I've got to give my props to him since he's said that he would prefer to be playing, but someone needs to be DM so he'll do it. Maybe we can get more people? How do you recruit players, anyway? I feel like my public image would cross the nerd Rubicon if I started talking up this game with other people.
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Post by ganews on Dec 9, 2014 10:52:10 GMT -5
I much prefer physical tabletop games to a device port. However, you don't often find someone to play thousands of games of backgammon with. And there are so many moments at work where I have to wait on something for four minutes. 61% of points scored. I play a lot of backgammon, you guys.
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Baron von Costume
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Like an iron maiden made of pillows... the punishment is decadence!
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Post by Baron von Costume on Dec 9, 2014 12:22:49 GMT -5
I went to a weekly board game night several times last year, but the host has an odd habit of playing the same game every week until he's tried out every single scenario for the game and any expansions he owns, so if you don't like a game you're screwed for however long that takes. (As in, this year he played the same game from February to October. So none for me!) Wow, that's incredibly lame. I'm hoping to start a bi-weekly one once I have the house space to do it. I'm thinking it's going to alternate between a night of something complex like Shogun and a night of shorter games like Catan, King of Tokyo, Ticket to Ride, Gloom etc. so that I can get friends interested then maybe gradually bring them over to the more complex side of things.
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Post by ganews on Dec 12, 2014 19:07:39 GMT -5
My mom's family has played games at Christmas for as long as I can remember, and I remember how excited I was when I got old enough to play. It's still one of my favorite parts of the holiday. We have some great family stories, the king of which involves a game of Pictionary from before my time:
My mother and unassuming great-grandmother were on the same team, the latter was doing the drawing, and the clue was "prick". While others were drawing fingers and needles, great-grandma drew the figure of a man with an arrow pointing at the dick. Mom kept guessing every word for penis she wasn't too embarrassed to say in front of her favorite relative, but because she didn't say "prick" Grandma just kept drawing the phallus larger and larger...
Anyway, last year Lifemate gave me the Intrigue edition of Dominion, one of the stand-alone sets that has much more attack and interaction cards than the original. I brought it down to the family and had a pretty good time of it with the younger crowd. The larger family mostly prefers Catchphrase these days, maybe because everyone gets to shout the answers instead of yelling about the rules.
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Post by nowimnothing on Dec 13, 2014 19:58:17 GMT -5
Are we counting tabletop RPGs? I played my first one over the summer with a group of virtual newbies. Either our members had only played computer or video game RPGs, like me, or had played tabletop RPGs decades ago in high school. Or they'd never done either and were only there because their husbands were. Our first foray into Dungeon World was a rousing success so we've been having monthly sessions now. My character is an evil elf wizard named St. Nicholas. I mean, Santa is an elf who uses magic to cause fear in children, so obviously he's evil, and that's how I'm roleplaying him. I'm the only evil player in the party but our paladin kind of wishes he'd also gone that route whenever we start getting 24 with the suggestions of torturing goblin prisoners taken in combat or attacking people in their sleep. I looked into it and hadn't realized how much the dungeon master did behind the scenes. I've got to give my props to him since he's said that he would prefer to be playing, but someone needs to be DM so he'll do it. Maybe we can get more people? How do you recruit players, anyway? I feel like my public image would cross the nerd Rubicon if I started talking up this game with other people. I have a weekly D&D 5th edition game (transitioned straight from 1e/2e in August) going on right now. We play in a local bookstore so we have the opposite problem, people are always stopping by and asking if they can jump in. Yeah... it really is not something you can start without some prep work. We are big into the roleplaying aspect so we would have to work any new characters into our storyline. Our DM is good, but he is not very creative. I kind of wish he would use some of the pre-made modules instead of his world, but he has about 30 years invested in it so I can see why he wants to keep with it.
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Post by Gregson on Dec 17, 2014 11:44:34 GMT -5
My mother and unassuming great-grandmother were on the same team, the latter was doing the drawing, and the clue was "prick". While others were drawing fingers and needles, great-grandma drew the figure of a man with an arrow pointing at the dick. Mom kept guessing every word for penis she wasn't too embarrassed to say in front of her favorite relative, but because she didn't say "prick" Grandma just kept drawing the phallus larger and larger... I loved this story
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Post by Gregson on Dec 17, 2014 11:47:50 GMT -5
I bought Tz'olkin not too long ago. My friends were nice enough to indulge me in learning how to play it. It's bigger learning curve than the games we're used to. I enjoyed it, hopefully I can convince them to play it again sometime, I'd like to play it more having a feel for the game. Meanwhile we enjoy Ticket to Ride Europe, and Carcassone. One game I'm interested in trying out is 'Betrayal at House on the Hill'. Have you guys played that?
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Baron von Costume
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Like an iron maiden made of pillows... the punishment is decadence!
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Post by Baron von Costume on Dec 17, 2014 14:33:53 GMT -5
I bought Tz'olkin not too long ago. My friends were nice enough to indulge me in learning how to play it. It's bigger learning curve than the games we're used to. I enjoyed it, hopefully I can convince them to play it again sometime, I'd like to play it more having a feel for the game. Meanwhile we enjoy Ticket to Ride Europe, and Carcassone. One game I'm interested in trying out is 'Betrayal at House on the Hill'. Have you guys played that? No though I've heard good things from a friend in another city who I only play table games with once every 4 years or so.
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Post by Great Unwashed on Dec 19, 2014 1:51:51 GMT -5
This Christmas, I have decided to replenish the family chest with Risk and Settlers of Catan. I was just playing a Risk clone on my phone that has settled into a very slow surge, pick off small territories, reinforce, wait for cards to come in, surge, 3-way game that is giving me some images of the horrors that may await if I don't get onto finding the old secret missions somewhere online, as they no longer include them in Risk, at least not the general one.
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Post by ganews on Dec 26, 2014 23:54:18 GMT -5
Catchphrase has been the game of choice the past few Christmases. For those not familiar, you pass an electronic hot potato between two teams, trying to get your teammates to to say the magic phrase. This year we played a version themed around the decades from the 70s to now. Pretty funny with a family of pop culture-illiterates. The real hilarity comes when people shout out guesses that hint at what they really think, or laugh at the perversion of a phrase. When the clue was "national debt", I was proud that my 18-year-old cousin out of Republican parents said, "Obama tried to reduce this..."
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Post by Gregson on Dec 30, 2014 12:30:46 GMT -5
I bought my friends 'munchkins' for christmas, because I wanted to play it.
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Post by π cahusserole π on Jan 1, 2015 20:19:19 GMT -5
Last night at the dumpling party we played a couple games of 7 Wonders. I was in last place by a very sizable margin in the first game, but I was able to get to second place in the second game. I had fun, but I was getting really frikkin' tired by the end since it was NYE and I don't generally stay up until midnight.
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Post by ganews on Jan 1, 2015 20:23:18 GMT -5
Last night at the dumpling party we played a couple games of 7 Wonders. I was in last place by a very sizable margin in the first game, but I was able to get to second place in the second game. I had fun, but I was getting really frikkin' tired by the end since it was NYE and I don't generally stay up until midnight. I must investigate that one. I like mythological and/or Greco-Roman settings.
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Post by disqusf3dme on Jan 12, 2015 15:50:38 GMT -5
So I'm getting a new roommate that's actually got his life in relative order and would absolutely be down for some tabletop RPGing, something me and my other roommate have been wanting to try out for some time now. We've already established that I'm going to be the GM, but now we're wondering what game to play. I've been reading the rules to Dungeon World and it seems relatively simple, so I'm thinking we'll give that a try. Anyone have any experience with it, or perhaps know of any other fairly accessible RPGs?
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LazBro
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Post by LazBro on Jan 12, 2015 16:21:27 GMT -5
Last night at the dumpling party we played a couple games of 7 Wonders. I was in last place by a very sizable margin in the first game, but I was able to get to second place in the second game. I had fun, but I was getting really frikkin' tired by the end since it was NYE and I don't generally stay up until midnight. I must investigate that one. I like mythological and/or Greco-Roman settings. 7 Wonders is really great. I love the fact that no matter how many players, the game takes the same amount of time to complete. It's subtly complex, with tons of options, but also very accessible. It deserves its success. Unfortunately this is one of those games, like Carcasonne, Puerto Rico, Settlers..., etc., that we played so much that now I'm sick of it and kind of never want to play it again. Maybe one day.
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Post by ganews on Jan 12, 2015 22:04:30 GMT -5
I must investigate that one. I like mythological and/or Greco-Roman settings. 7 Wonders is really great. I love the fact that no matter how many players, the game takes the same amount of time to complete. It's subtly complex, with tons of options, but also very accessible. It deserves its success. Unfortunately this is one of those games, like Carcasonne, Puerto Rico, Settlers..., etc., that we played so much that now I'm sick of it and kind of never want to play it again. Maybe one day. Never have played Carcasonne, but I know that box art. Speaking of tile games, I'm still waiting for an opportunity to play a modded version of Cyclades. Agricola is also on my list; I have played the mini two-person version All Creatures Big and Small several times. Oh man, anybody remember "By Jove!"? I have very fond memories of that from 5th grade, back when I just started to get into mythology. It was a pretty conventional game, but I played it a bunch of times is school because it was educational or something.
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Post by Nudeviking on Jan 12, 2015 22:46:58 GMT -5
I kind of want to seek out a copy of the most awesome of 1989, HeroQuest. Like most boychildren in my neighborhood, I got a copy of it one Christmas and played the hell out of it is with my dad and brother and friends. I have long since given up on ever getting into a D&D group again, but HeroQuest seems like it would fill that void rather nicely without requiring people to set any sort of regular schedule. I am quite certain that while some of the random pieces undoubtedly still exist in the giant Rubbermaid bins of toys that are in my parents' basement the actual board and cards have undoubtedly been lost to the ravages of time, which means I will undoubtedly have to buy it off ebay and pay too much money, since no one has garage sales anymore.
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Post by sarapen on Jan 13, 2015 13:50:49 GMT -5
So I'm getting a new roommate that's actually got his life in relative order and would absolutely be down for some tabletop RPGing, something me and my other roommate have been wanting to try out for some time now. We've already established that I'm going to be the GM, but now we're wondering what game to play. I've been reading the rules to Dungeon World and it seems relatively simple, so I'm thinking we'll give that a try. Anyone have any experience with it, or perhaps know of any other fairly accessible RPGs? I do but only as a player. This is also the only tabletop RPG I've ever played so I unfortunately can't give any comparisons to other systems. The people in the group either played tabletop RPGs decades ago or only had experience with computer or video game RPGs, so we were all fairly new to the experience, and as such I can say that Dungeon World is accessible to the neophyte. The vanilla game doesn't let players customize their characters too much, which I think is helpful if you're brand new so that you don't get paralyzed by all the decisions you have to make before the game even starts. I find the gaming sessions quite fun, but I wonder how much of my enjoyment is from the specific group and the DM. I skimmed through a couple of pages of the manual before getting bored so I do have to give props to our DM for keeping all that invisible for us players. Sorry, guess I don't really have the experience to give an informative review but take this anecdote as being one supportive of the game.
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LazBro
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Post by LazBro on Jan 13, 2015 16:49:19 GMT -5
Never have played Carcasonne, but I know that box art. Speaking of tile games, I'm still waiting for an opportunity to play a modded version of Cyclades. Agricola is also on my list; I have played the mini two-person version All Creatures Big and Small several times. Oh man, anybody remember "By Jove!"? I have very fond memories of that from 5th grade, back when I just started to get into mythology. It was a pretty conventional game, but I played it a bunch of times is school because it was educational or something. I guess you should play Agricola, since it has entered the pantheon of great games and all. But don't buy it, and after you get it out of your system, what you should really play is Caverna, Uwe Rosenberg's spiritual successor to Agricola. It's cleaner, faster, more accessible, but no less complex. It's the most obvious example of a game designer simply taking another crack at it as I've ever played. And he nailed it.
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