tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26185232902646547992024-03-12T19:37:21.877-07:00Board Game Night(s) in SaskatoonOne man's journey to find the perfect game, somewhereJolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.comBlogger124125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-89598877127706188152014-07-08T13:19:00.001-07:002014-07-08T13:19:42.395-07:00He's back, guess who's back? High Frontier, with some of the advanced rulesAnother day, another game of [b]High Frontier[/b] last Wednesday, this time with some of the advanced rules and five players, this time we used Colonization with the Support Module, the Colonist Module and the Combat Module. The players were, in turn order; Brent (Peoples Republic of China/PRC, 4 previous games played), Jason (United Nations/UN, first game), Conal ( European Space Agency/ESA, first game), Darrin (The Shimzu Corporation, second game) and myself (NASA, fifth game). Since there were 5 players the game would go to 7 factories, not that we made it that far.<br />
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I spent about 30 minutes explaining the general rules and the new rules for the expansions, as the Support Module adds three new support cards; Generators, Radiators and Reactors, as some of the original resources; Robonauts, Thrusters and Refineries, would now require them. Then I explained the colonist module, which was not as heavily used as the Support Module but was useful in that it allowed a second action, for a fee. The advanced game also uses politics, and gives victory points to whoever is in power at the time.<br />
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The game started with everyone slowly building up their fleets and we moved into Anarchy quickly, which meant that people were unable to use their special abilities except the PRC (claim jump, water steal and impolitely decommission crews in space), but as a bonus, we could all use that ability.<br />
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The UN launched first and made it out to a nearby science planet and back before anyone else had launched (6 points), using solar sails. I was the second to launch and landed on the moon, one turn ahead of the Shimzu and their juiced up cosmonauts, who then decided to head back to LEO (low earth orbit) and rebuild/replan for their next venture into space. The ESA launched and took a slow boat Mars, and by they arrived the Shimzu were there as well. I played chicken with the PRC and did not launch from the Moon until the PRC had gone by on their ship (to prevent claim jumping).<br />
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Meanwhile, the UN had rebuilt their ship and started Solar War, as apparently they did not care for the Libertarian Work ethic, this allowed us to fight. It also meant things were touch between Shimzu, ESA and PRC as they were all near Mars. As soon as Shimzu headed back to Earth to claim their glory, the PRC claim jumped and took the Shimzu claim on Mars, immediately building a factory there, the first in the game (10 points). While Shimzu and ESA struggled to get back to Earth, I built a factory on the Moon (10 points).<br />
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We ended the game at about 11 PM with the scores as follows:<br />
PRC – 13 (10 for factory, 1 for stolen claim, 1 for freighter, 1 for factory cube)<br />
UN – 6 (3 each for first to science and back and first back from any planet)<br />
ESA – 2 (two claims)<br />
Shimzu – 3 (first to Mars and back)<br />
NASA – 13 (10 for factory, 1 for claim, 1 for freighter, 1 for factory cube)<br />
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NASA won due to having 4 WT (water tanks) compared to PRC’s 2.<br />
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The game took us about 3 hours and we completed 16 or so turns, but the speed was accelerating as the UN was two turns from building a factory on Mercury, PRC was 4 turns from getting their freighter back from Mars and I was 2 turns from getting back to Earth with my freighter. I cannot comment on what PRC had built on Mars, but my Generator added 4 to my thrust, making my ship a 7:1 (7 moves at a cost of 1 each), allowing me to explore deeper in space and get to the juicier planets.<br />
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I think we will do this again in 3 weeks…Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-83498562567363398492010-09-03T18:18:00.001-07:002010-09-03T18:21:59.795-07:00Wait, can it be, another post by John finally?I had someone I met on <a href="http://forums.saskgames.com/index.php">Saskgames.com</a> over wednesday night to play some games. Brian is his name and Battle Cry was his game...<br /><br />We started out with a three player game call <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/38364/days-of-steam">Days of Steam</a> by Valley Games. It is a light cross between a train game and <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/822/carcassonne">Carcassonne</a>. The basic premise of the game is to build a track and deliver goods on it. You build the track by laying down tiles from your hand of three. The tiles also have a steam number printed on them as well. This is how mych steam you build up (more on this later). After at least two tiles are laid down you can lie down a city tile as well (citys must be at least two tiles apart). When you complete a connection between two cities you get a circuit marker which is worth one VP (first person to 13 wins). The other thing city tiles do is get two random cubes which you can deliver to a matching city for more vp. The question I know you ahve all been asking is "John, John, how do I move?". Use your legs...<br /><br />Trains in the game move by expending one steam per tile moved, plus an extra one for hils and another extra one for passing another train. These steam is generated by laying tiles (remember?) and you can only have a maximum of six at any one time.<br /><br />When you deliver cubes to a city you get 2 vp for each cube you deliver plus you get bonus points for having multiple colours. The game ends immediately when someone gets 13 points or you run out of tiles and steam.<br /><br />I won both games we played, the second only because Brenda rolled a one on a turn.<br /><br />Brenda went off to do something else so Brian and I played some <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/551/battle-cry">Battle Cry</a>. Brian had never played it before so I chose to be nice to him. He crushed me as the Union 6-5 and as the Confederacy 6-4. So I guess I must have been too nice...Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-72987140090394677802010-06-03T09:19:00.000-07:002010-06-03T10:00:47.874-07:00Saskatoon and GamingIf you look to the right you will find that my games played has not really changed in while. I will add one or two games on, but for the most part it stays fairly static.<br /><br />There are several reasons for this: first is due to my playing a ton of Savage Worlds lately, one or two games a week, the second is that the only other games I play are at the Dragon's Den on Friday nights, which I only do every other week, third and last, Brenda and I have not purchased a new place yet so I cannot currently host game nights as my games are all in boxes upstairs (with two exceptions, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/29687/leaping-lemmings">Leaping Lemmings</a> and <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/64826/moongha-invaders-mad-scientists-and-atomic-monster">Moongha Invaders</a>. <br /><br />I think Leaping Lemmings will be a nice quick game that I can add to my stable of racing games. It states that is takes 10-15 minutes per player to play, so with a full complement it may be up to 90 minutes long! This surprises me, but may actually be ok.<br /><br />The other, looks like a wild and wacky Wallace game of monsters trashing towns. The rules are a little more confusing then that should be, but I cannot wait to get it on the table (if I could find the table!).Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-34816799312825450512010-05-30T18:51:00.000-07:002010-05-30T19:17:37.201-07:00Gaming at the Dragon's DenLast Friday night I headed over to the Den to play some games. When I got there a couple of people were playing Dungeon Lords (a game I am not interested in). I watched them for a while and Keith showed up with his sun.<br /><br />The three of us, and one other played a game of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/31730/chicago-express">Chicago Express</a>, a game I have played before but when it was called <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/42485/wabash-cannonball">Wabash Cannonball</a>.<br /><br />The game lasted 6 turns before we ran out of shares. Keith finished with 2 red shares, one yellow and one green. I finished with one of each share. The other guy finished with 2 yellow and one green. Keith's son had one each of blue and black, plus 2 greens. The stock value ended with red at 33, yellow at 32, green at 25, blue at 25 and black at 20. The final scoring ended with me at 115, Keith at 98, the other guy at 56 and Keith's son at 39.<br /><br />The other guy had to leave so the opther three of us joined up with a fourth to play a couple of games of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/3955/bang">Bang!</a> Keith and I were the outlaws in the first game with his son as the Sheriff. Keith and I won handily...<br /><br />The second game had Keith as the Sheriff with his son and I as the outlaws. His son bought the line that I was the renegade from the actual renegade player and was really surprised that I was not... Keith killed me and then his son, leaving a showdown between him and the renegade. He gunned the relic down winning his second game of the night.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-87127799563135151262010-05-11T10:13:00.000-07:002010-05-11T11:47:27.386-07:00Upheaval! Changes! Chaos! and Savage Worlds...So things have changed a little here. Brenda and I have moved to Saskatoon last month and I have started a new job. Since we are currently renting a place here I have not unpacked my games and will not until we are moved to our final destination in town (aka buy a house). If there is anyone in Calgary looking for a place, mine is up for sale...<br /><br />All that being said, I have been playing games, just different ones than usual. <a href="http://savagetimmy.blogspot.com/">Savage Timmy</a> is a prolific painter and has started two different Savage Worlds campaigns that are part roleplaying part miniature skirmish rules. Plus I made it to a Dragon's Den Friday night and got some Brass and Race for the Galaxy in.<br /><br />I like Savage Worlds, I find it a fun little game. Please remember I ran a Savage Worlds: Rippers game for awhile.<br /><br />On to the games!<br /><br /><a href="http://savagetimmy.blogspot.com/2010/05/bog.html">Tim's Cthulhu</a> game is set in the 20's and I am playing an illiterate depressed Great War vet/farmboy from Saskatchewan living in the UK after the death of his wife... Our first adventure was set in Scotland and I was one of the diggers hired to help excavate a bog that was used in the past to sacrifice Celts to their god. (Jennifer Wraight) Amanda was the one running the show and she also hired a Ghurka named Shivanshu (Darrin) as a digger as well. Laurel Trebeau (Brenda) was hired as an aide while Höllenstadt-Fürchtberg tagged along as bait (always send the crippled one off alone!).<br /><br />We were running around lost as three of the earlier crew were kidnapped and one "dead but not really dead" guy showed up with no tongue. We stumbled around blindly looking for clues when we were given a hint that I thought was a setup (which was, but not the way I thought) and we caught a break. We trailed the suspect out to the bog and caught the cultists trying to sacrifice some kidnapped surveyors and the church heretics. <br /><br />We fought some zombies and the cultists and survived the ravenous bugblatter beast to return triumphantly back to town (except the German, who buggered off, I think he set us up). <br /><br /><a href="http://savagetimmy.blogspot.com/2010/05/barbarossa-day-two.html">Operation Barbarossa</a> (Timmy's WWII one) is heavier on combat and lighter on Roleplaying. I play Yuri Gelakhov, a Cossack that was "recruited" into the army to shoot Germans. Gary, Rick, Dave and Patrick are all playing Russians as well trying to stem the German tide. In day one we faced German patrols and watched as the Polish "recruits" shot the heck out of the Germans. <br /><br />On day two I was transferred to another unit where we had a defensive position that we had to defend to allow our troops to defend. As this was the next day, I was still carrying my wound. I was now reporting to Sergeant Trotsky (how did he survive the purge?) and had to provide stability to a group of Lithuanian "recruits". Trotsky and the Lithuanians held the centre and the right while LMG Satan and I held the left. We shot the heck out of the Germans causing them to break while only losing Satan (he was injured and unconcious) and one wounded Lithuanian.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-37930184461364812142010-02-01T14:10:00.000-08:002010-02-02T21:12:39.659-08:00Robo Dominion Rally (or something like that)Thursday is our usual Descent night but JC was unavailable so instead we played some other games. Those games being <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/18/roborally">RoboRally</a> and <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218/dominion">Dominion</a>.<br /><br />RoboRally is a game that I have had two different opinions on. When I first played it (4-5 years ago), I played it in a tournament with 10 other people in the game, and the next time was with 11 other people. Groups this size did not make it an enjoyable experience for me, but I ended up with it in a trade last year, and convinced Brenda to play. She likes the game and so we have played it a couple of times in the last 6 months. So, when Jay and Cory came over, I suggested this to start. Well, the game started, but my robot did not. In the time it took to pay, my robot fell into pits twice and shutdown once... I made it to the third (of four) flags in the time it took Jay to moonwalk backwards onto the final flag...<br /><br />Since game one was so fast, we played a second one, and as we were setting up the phone rang so Brenda dropped out and we played three player. This time, the cards fell my way and Cory kept confusing his left from his right. I waltzed to victory, completing all four flags before Jay managed to get his first (Cory made it to the first and was just heading to the second). game two was even faster than game one!<br /><br />We switched to Dominion as Brenda had just hung up the phone and we played with the rule that the ten cards were deal out and each player could reject one. I am thinking I may modify the rule and deal out fourteen and then each player rejects one...<br /><br />On to the game!<br /><br />I don't remember which cards we played with, except there was one duration card and the Witch was the only 5 card. I spent most of the game collecting witches and silver. I lost... by a long shot. Brenda won by 10 points or so.<br /><br />So we played again, we had pirates and embargoes and barons oh my! I got crushed again as Jay narrowly squeaked out a victory over everyone else (I think I was ten points out again).Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-17767342516957096792010-02-01T12:31:00.000-08:002010-02-01T13:55:28.725-08:00Commands & ColorsDarren hosted the usual Tuesday night gaming and this week we got back to the basics, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/14105/commands-colors-ancients">Commands & Colors: Ancients</a>. The game I believe is <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgamedesigner/25/richard-borg">Richard Borg's </a>best iteration of the <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/wiki/page/Command_and_Colors_System">C&C series</a>.<br /><br />I am not going to rehash how to play C&C, but instead will give more of a session report for the nights gaming.<br /><br />The first battle I played against John (no not me, the other one), was the battle of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Ilipa">Ilipa</a> from 206 BC, historically it was a victory for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scipio_Africanus">Scipio Africanus</a> over <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannibal">Hannibal</a>. I played Scipio in the first battle and it held true to form, with the Romans winning the battle 7-2. We switched sides and John played Scipio, and I was sure that there was going to be a beatdown, and there was... Hannibal (meaning me) crushed Scipio 7-4 setting the stage for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Zama">Zama</a>, which was the final battle of the 2nd Punic War. This time I started as Hannibal and my amazing streak continued as Hannibal laid the boots to the Romans, defeating Scipio 8-4 and changing the entire history.<br /><br />I would like to claim that my superior generalship won the day, instead it was a combination of getting the cards, getting the dice rolls and knowing what to do with the cards. My elephants in these battles were tremendous, killing multiple units before dying and minimizing the damage to my forces.<br /><br />Next week, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30658/rise-of-empires">Rise of Empires</a>!Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-87853700208124401172010-01-23T10:43:00.000-08:002010-01-23T16:40:02.882-08:00Rail BaronLast night, Robert and Lenora invited us over to Robert's place for supper and to watch Alice. Well the PVR was screwed up so instead we played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/420/rail-baron">Rail Baron</a>, a game by <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgamepublisher/5/avalon-hill">Avalon Hill </a>from 1977.<br /><br />Rail Baron is a roll and move game to some extent, as you move your train from one randomly generated location to another. After completing your trip, you get paid and you get the opportunity to purchase either an upgraded train or a track.<br /><br />Every turn you move along a track that is not owned by anyone except you, you must pay a usage rate of 1000/turn. If the track is owned by another player you must pay them 5,000/turn you are on their track.<br /><br />End game is when there are no tracks to be purchased and the cost of travelling on someone else's track doubles to 10,000.<br /><br />Well the way the game broke out Brenda and Robert both got big payouts (and half decent dice rolls) and I got poor rolls (Lenora ditched us for a better offer)... They were buying all the big tracks and I was left buying the 4-15K tracks. When the end game arrived I was in the worst position financially, but had the most tracks, and owned most of the cheap tracks in the SE.<br /><br />When you reach 200,000 you have the option of "declaring", which allows you to race for home. When you get there, if you still have over 200K, you win the game. Robert declared first and raced for home, unfortunately, Brenda had the fastest train in the game and caught him (which cost him 50,000). I steadily built up my funds and was at 228,000 when I declared. I made it home on my next turn, winning the game.<br /><br />Brenda was 20,000 short but was heading home to complete a trip, if she would have made it home (on her next turn) the turn after that would have given her the win. Robert was still making a delivery and then was planning on declaring.<br /><br />I found the game interesting, but I am not sure how often I would play it.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-37439151870157706252010-01-21T16:00:00.000-08:002010-01-21T16:23:23.473-08:00Canal ManiaTuesday night Bruce was unable to make it, so instead of playing three player Commands & Colors, we played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/19995/canal-mania">Canal Mania</a>, a game where you build canals based on contracts you select. It is between Ticket to Ride and Steam with regards to complexity and decision making, and as such, I feel it is a fairly light game.<br /><br />Darren and John were both new to the game, and I have a vast knowledge of 3 games, but we set at it with a will. I explained the rules, dealt out the engineers and away we went. I started with the oldest engineer so I went first, and drafted the contract for the lower left corner. I am unsure why, but I seem to select that corner every time. John selected a Manchester route so was in the upper left, with Darrren selecting the route right beside me.<br /><br />One of my complaints of the game is that the areas selected are the left side of the board, so you are always on the left side of the board, if that makes sense.<br /><br />One of the things I like about it is that you are always forced to make choices (do I change engineers or get contracts? Do I draw or build?). These are things I like, the constraints and the difficulty in building and the added feature of delivering goods as well, makes this a challenge.<br /><br />It was a very close game for the most part, but in opne turn I finished two routes, scoring 22 points and putting me perilously close to 70 (game end score). Darren had to use my canal to deliver goods and I was one point away from starting the end game.<br /><br />When I started it, I had no track to build, and quickly just delivered goods. The game took about 2 hours, including rules, and was enjoyed by everyone. The final scores were John - 88, Darren - 75 and John - 74Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-47832237977440480102010-01-13T06:41:00.001-08:002010-01-13T07:12:04.203-08:00Steamin' Tuesday!or Steam on Tuesday...<br /><br />Last night was the weekly Wednesday night game at Darren's place, except we have switched to Tuesdays. This week, following our new system of 2 player games one week (last week was <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/12333/twilight-struggle">Twilight Struggle</a>) and Wallace games the next, we played the Mayfair train game <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/27833/steam">Steam</a>. <br /><br />Steam is part of the <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgamefamily/86/age-of-steam">Age of Steam</a> game family because it does share certain elements with both Age of Steam and Railroad Tycoon. I consider Railroad Tycoon as the friendlier game and Age of Steam the game that wants to knife you in the alley...<br /><br />Steam started off as close race with me pulling out to an early revenue lead and Bruce plummetting to -8 revenue deficit. This was not to last. I developed in the Southwest corner on the US map (the NE USA map), Bruce at the top with Ottawa, Darren was in the Boston - Hartford area and John was caught between Darren and I. <br /><br />Darren took control of the game about turn 5 and never looked back, as John was forced to use Darren's tracks in places to ship goods. Darren's margin of victory was the amount of delivery John did on his tracks. We finished the game in about 2.5 hours, as we had two new players and John and I each had one play.<br /><br />Final scores were: Darren 35, Bruce 32, John 30, the other John 27. <br /><br />Whenever I play Steam or Age of Steam, I always finish the game smiling. I find this game so enjoyable that I could play it more often then I do.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-29480983636952485062010-01-10T11:01:00.000-08:002010-01-10T11:57:51.571-08:00A Day at the Races!Last night I hosted my annual January <a href="http://boardgames.meetup.com/33/">meetup group</a> event <em>A Day at the Races!</em> I had a poor turnout this year with several last minute cancellations but I still had a total of 6 jockeys ready to put on their silks and race for the finish line! Except we did not play any horse racing games...<br /><br />The first game on the agenda was <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/28023/jamaica">Jamaica</a>, a light hearted filler that we decided to play 4 player until the laggards showed up. This game is based on being a pirate and racing around Jamaica, and since we were already wearing silks, it seemed a natural fit.<br /><br />Tom rocketed out to an early lead but was soon shot full of holes by the blackguards John and Bruce, losing his treasure and his food. John took over the lead shortly thereafter and never looked back, I lead from that point forward until the very end, being chased and shot at twice by the villainous Tom. The game took about 45 minutes and by then the final two players were there, so we decided to play a six player game. Everyone liked the game and they really liked the graphics as it is a very pretty game.<br /><br />That game was <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/41474/giro-ditalia-the-game">Giro d'Italia: the Game</a>, a bike racing game that is a branded reprint of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgamefamily/148/leader-1">Leader 1</a>. This is David's game and he brought it along because he always wants to play it, not that I blame him, it is a good game.<br /><br />The track had only one hill and several rises but was mostly flat so everyone, but David, who took a leader, took a rouleur, as they do better on flats than anyone else. The peloton went two rounds around the table before David decided to break away from the pack, a decision that would cost him later, as almost immediately he fell and was pulled back into the peloton. <br /><br />Bruce, Brenda, Jay and Tom broke away next but they only stayed slightly ahead of the peloton for until the race was about 2/3rds over. Brenda decided to break away from the breakaway group and poured it on, this forced Bruce and Tom (who had been providing a wind break for everyone) to break with her, along with the rest. David and I decided to go along or risk being left behind. This meant I had to change bikes as the one I was using looked something like this:<br /><a href="http://www.montanaheritagecommission.com/Images/BigWheelBike.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 270px; height: 249px;" src="http://www.montanaheritagecommission.com/Images/BigWheelBike.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a> We all gave chase and Jay and I caught Brenda on the last turn before the sprint to the finish, David ran out of energy and was pulled back into the peloton, while Tom and Bruce fell off the pace. Brenda, Jay and I all finished one turn ahead of Tom and Bruce and David finished in the Peloton. The final order of finish was: John, Jay, Brenda, Tom, Bruce and David. The commentary surrounding this game was "I really like this game" and "That was alot of fun".<br /><br />The third and final game we played was that classic, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/7805/fearsome-floors">Fearsome Floors</a>. It was decided David looked most like the monster, so he went first. It is tough to describe the game as it is a series of ups and downs. First you fall down, then you get eaten up...<br /><br />We raced around randomly, and everyone tried to hose each other (which is the way it should be played) and I was in position to win my third game in a row when Brenda and Jay teamed up to get two of my guys eaten by Furunkulus, knocking me out of the winners circle. Bruce squeezed out the win when Furunkulus's movement card was a <strong>Kill One</strong> which allowed two of Bruce's guys to waltz in. There was some discussion about whether this was a race game, but I think it is, so I include it. <br /><br />We played three games last night and of the three, three had played Jamaica, two had played Giro d'Italia, and three had played Fearsome Floors. This means several players were taught new games (always a good thing) which means that there is a better chance of getting them out more often.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-49729960126738811962009-12-18T14:15:00.000-08:002009-12-30T20:55:10.500-08:00Wednesday Night Chaos!Wednesday night was John's turn to pick a game and he picked <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/43111/chaos-in-the-old-world">Chaos in the Old World</a>, a new game from <a href="http://www.fantasyflightgames.com/">Fantasy Flight Games</a>.<br /><br />CitOW is a a theme heavy game in which you play a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_Daemons">Chaos God</a> trying to take over the Old World. The methods you use to win over the old world over the other Chaos Powers are corruption and good old warfare. This game is set in the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warhammer_Fantasy_(setting)">Warhammer Fantasy</a> universe from <a href="http://www.games-workshop.com/gws/">Games Workshop</a>, and is appropriately dark.<br /><br /><br />There are three different ways to win CitOW and one way to lose. The methods of winning are: advance your dial to the winning position, have a point total of greater than 50 points at the end of a turn, or ruin five areas on the board, then whomever has the most points will win. The way to lose is to run out of Old World cards and have no one exceed 50 points or the dial advancement condition. I will talk about each winning method in turn.<br /><br /><br />Dial advancement occurs when you advance your dial (all four powers have a dial of their own) to the point where it states they win. The method to advance each powers dial, and the amount they have to advance it to win are all different. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_Daemons#Khorne">Khorne</a>, the Blood God, gets one advancement token every time he kills one or more of his opponents in a region. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_Daemons#Nurgle">Nurgle</a>, the Lord of Pestilence gains a token every time he places two or more corruption tokens in one of the four <em>Populous</em> regions (The Empire, Bretonnia, Kislev and Estalia). <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_Daemons#Tzeentch">Tzeentch</a>, the Changer of Ways gets a counter token every time he places 2 corruption in an area that has 2 of either warpstone or magic symbols. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_Daemons#Slaanesh">Slaanesh</a>, the God of Lust, gets a counter token whenever he adds two corruption into the areas with nobles.<br /><br /><br />You are probably wondering how to place corruption tokens, well you place one for every cultist you have on the board. Cultists, warriors and avatars are placed during the summoning phase. Cultists are the weakest of all, and initially none of the Chaos Powers have cultists that can fight.<br /><br /><br />Battles occur the phase after this, and this is when Khorne would be able to do his dial advances. Combat is a simple process, roll a d6 for every point of combat value you have (Bloodletter's have 2) and you hit on a 4-6 plus you <em>explode</em> when you roll a 6. What this means is that you get a hit and get the possiblity of an additional hit. You then take off opponents figures based on the wounds each character have (Bloodletters have 1, so one hit destroys them).<br /><br /><br /><br />You score victory points in several ways; via dial advancement bonuses, ruining a region , and dominating a region. Dial advancements are obvious, so I won't go further into this. Each region has a conquest/resistance value (these are the same number) and you must exceed the resistance value to score the conquest value. I know what you are saying "John you fool! These are the exact same value!". These two values can be modified by Heroes (increase the resistance), skaven (decrease the resistance) or nobles (increase the conquest value). This means that 2 skaven and 2 nobles in Bretonnia (Value 4) would allow you to dominate the region with 3 or more points, and if you did dominate the area, you would score 6. A region is ruined when there are more corruption tokens in the region than the regions corruption value (usually 12, but can be reduced by warpstone). When a region is ruined the Chaos Powers that contributed to the corruption (aka the "ruiners") that turn, receive betwen 3 and 5 VP, then at the end of the turn, the largest number of corruption tokens gets more VP (between 6 and 10) and the second largest gets 3-5.<br /><br /><br /><br />That is the game in a nutshell. It took us a little under two hours to play the game with Tzeentch winning on VP after we ruined 5 provinces. He scored 58 points to Slaanesh's 54.<br /><br />This is probably the best game I have played so far and I include <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/40692/small-world">Smallworld</a> in this categoryJolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-16428297274011656662009-11-26T07:54:00.001-08:002009-11-26T14:27:15.823-08:00It's a Small World after all!Last night was the regular Wednesday gaming at Darren's, this time a friend of Darren's was over so we had 5 players. She was late, so until she arrived we played 4 player <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218">Dominion</a> with Seaside and Intrigue cards mixed in. One of the methods Brenda uses to beat me when the Duke is in play is to purchase Duchies and Dukes. Duchies are worth three points for 5 coins and Dukes give +1 to every Duchy you have. I finished the game with 5 Duchies and 2 Dukes (plus a Province and 2 Estates) for a total of 39 points, narrowly beating out Darren & Bruce (36 points each)., John (the other one) finished with 21.<br /><br />The cards we had in play were the Chapel, Cellar, Pawn, Militia, Thief, Merchant Ship, Tactician, Duke, Trading Post and some other card that no one purchased. The first deck to be emptied was the Duchies as Bruce had two thieves so he was yanking everyone's money. I ended the game with 3 gold, 5 silver and 5 copper. I purchased a Militia and 2 Merchant Ships as well, plus Pawns (for their versatility) and 3 Cellars (which I never got to use). Bruce went into Thieves and Tacticians and was starting to rollup the points when John ended the game.<br /><br />The second game we played was <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/40692">Small World</a>, an area control game based on the old classic <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/60">Vinci</a>. An explanation for Small World was <a href="http://boardgamenight.blogspot.com/2009/10/little-bit-of-thanksgiving-gaming.html">done here</a> so I won't explain it further except to state we played a 5 player game.<br /><br />Round One<br />Bruce took the Commando Skeletons and scored a 7 or so points. I followed my usually strategy of picking the race that cost me the least (in this case, Wealthy Halflings with an extra coin from Bruce). I scored 4 plus the 7 plus the 1 and already had 17 points compared to his 11. John took Hill Amazons and scored 10 points. Darren followed that up with Alchemical Giants and scored 5. Julie was last and she chose Berserk Wizards and scored about 10 as well.<br /><br />Round Two<br />Bruce took a couple of more areas and converted more of the conquered tokens to skeletons, increasing his army from 10 to 14 since the start of the game. I took a couple of more areas and prevented Darren's Giants from rampaging in my backfield, and scored 6. John attacked Darren and took another hill, scoring 11. Darren was in pretty rough shape and scored 5. Julie expanded her area and scored double digits again.<br /><br />Round Three<br />Bruce started rocking again and was up to 16 skeletons and scoring 12 points! I scored 7 with my halflings. John was hit by the undead and his score dropped to 2 when he went into decline. Darren followed with his Giants leaving 4 points per turn. Julie got tangled into a battle with the skeletons and scored 8 or so points.<br /><br />Round Four<br />Bruce scored another pile of points, but he lost some of his skeletons and was now scoring 10 points. He controlled almost half the board at his peak. I scored another 7 points and decided to go into decline the next turn. John came on the board with Flying Trolls and attacked Bruce from behind, killing several of his undead and scoring 5 points. Darren took the Heroic Sorcerers and attacked from his side of the board, killing several wizards and converting a Halfling. Darren scored 9 points from all his movement, and looked to be in a strong place. Julie went into decline, scoring 5 points.<br /><br />Round Five<br />Bruce had taken a beating with his skeletons and scored about 8 or so, going into the giants and wizards that surrounded him. I went into decline with my halflings, scoring 6 points. John continued flying around with his trolls, attacking anywhere someone was weak, and scoring 8 points. Darren, in a masterful plan, pulled all his guys up and went after Bruce, scoring 8 points again. Julie selected Diplomatic Ratmen, and hammered through the empty areas that Darren had just left scoring a massive 11 points.<br /><br />Round Six<br />Bruce put what was left of his might undead horde into decline, scoring 7 points. I scored in double digits for the firts time, wiping more of of the undead from the board using the mighty Spirit Orcs, and scoring 11. John bounced around some more and scored 7 points, mainly at the expense of the undead again. Darren expanded further into the skeletons and scored 10 points as well. Julie killed more halflings and also scored in the double digits.<br /><br />Round Seven<br />Bruce started up his Bivouacking Elves and marched into the area previously held by his undead and now held by trolls and sorcerers, he scored 5 points. I pulled up stakes and went after a new group on the other side of the board, killing some ratmen and wizards to score 14 points. John went into decline with the trolls. Darren enlarged his area and scored double digits again. Julie went hunting declining races and scored a further 10 points.<br /><br />Round Eight (the last one)<br />Bruce's Elves (and only elves) scored 5 points as he had no skeletons left on the board. I expanded my control of the board on the backs of wizards and ratmen, scoring a further 14 points. John played Underworld Tritons and laid a serious beating on everyone on the board and scored his best result of the game, 11 points. Darren tried to maximise his points but everyone was on to the sorcerers and he only scored 7 points. Julie finished the game by taking a couple of spaces and scoring a final 7 points.<br /><br />The final score had me beating Julie by 3, with Bruce 4 behind her and Darren 4 behind him, John was last trailing me by 17.<br /><br />Please note, all the points I added here were guesses as I am pretty sure that is what they got but I am not 100% sure.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-40247999987367449042009-11-22T15:27:00.000-08:002009-11-22T16:30:49.772-08:00Betrayal at the House on the HillRobert and Lenora came over last night to play Robert's copy of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/10547">Betrayal at the House on the Hill</a>.<br /><br />Betrayal is a co-operative, exploration game until a certain point. After this, it is one player (the betrayer) against the rest of the players. In the first part of the game, all the players are exploring a mansion and collecting better stats and gear, while learning more about the mansion. The gear and the stats are improved by three different kinds of cards, Event cards (which could increase or decrease abilities), Item cards (revolvers, candles, dogs etc) or Omen cards (items like a madman, or a lost girl, or bad things). When an Omen card is drawn, you must roll 6 special dice and roll higher than the number of Omen cards in play, if you do not, the Haunt happens (which I will explain later).<br /><br />The 6 dice you roll are special 6 sided dice. They have 3 different values on them, two each of blank, one or two pips. This means that you can generate any value from 0-12 on the Omen roll.<br /><br />Once the Omen roll is made (number of Omen cards exceeds the dice roll), the player that started the Haunt looks in the scenario book to determine which haunt will happen. This determines who is the Betrayer and what the scenario is. Both sides take their books and determine what they have to do to win.<br /><br />The game then changes, and the player to the left of the Betrayer goes first and play proceeds similar to before the Haunt, except both have different victory conditions. I don't want to give the scenario away, suffice to say, Brenda was the Betrayer and her victory conditions were to kill us all. Unfortunately, the person she was closest to was the strongest player so she tried to build up her Might so she could fight. The rest of us were not restricted by this (we had different victory conditions) , and we managed to fulfill ours before she could.<br /><br />I like the game, it has 50 scenarios so there is some replayability in the game (how many board games have you played 50 times?) and the board setup changes every game, which makes it a fun experience.<br /><br />After that we played a couple of other games before Lenora and Robert had to leave. The other games we played were: <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/29387">Zombie Fluxx</a>, a fun little card game I introduced to them a couple of weeks ago. Lenora won, on her turn,, which is a rarity, as most of us win on someone elses' turn. The other was <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/40834">Dominion: Intrigue</a>, which was won by Brenda in a close tight scoring game 39-35-35-34. I like Dominion, but I dislike the cards with Curses on them. This game had none, and Brenda won due to her Duchy/Duke strategy (6 duchies, 3 dukes) gave her the win.<br /><br />Friday night we went out to a <a href="http://boardgames.meetup.com/33/">Meetup</a> near us and taught a couple of games. First we taught some first time attendees <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218">Dominion</a> (which Brenda won), then while I was helping a couple learn <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/16216">Carcassonne: The Discovery</a> (she won and wanted to buy a copy of the game), while Brenda taught <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/40692">Small World</a> to the couple we played Dominion with. Vivian won, in a roll and they both enjoyed it and discussed buying Dominion. Brenda and I finished the night teaching <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/19995">Canal Mania </a>to a couple of other players. I won...<br /><br />Two good nights of gaming, I got to play Canal Mania, a game that I quite like and Betrayal, not to mention Dominion...Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-1408840281679274402009-10-17T14:27:00.000-07:002009-10-17T14:29:26.522-07:00Wilf Backhaus<a href="http://www.mhfh.com/backhaus-%e2%80%93-wilfried-karl/">Wilf died Wednesday</a> of cancer, he was a member of the SCA and one of the designers of <a href="http://rpg.geekdo.com/rpgitem/43966">Chivalry & Sorcery</a>, a roleplaying game I used to play back in Saskatoon.<br /><br />I saw him last at CalCon in spring and he looked frail then.<br /><br />This is a loss to gaming and to the world, he was a gentleman as well as a gamer.<br /><br />JohnJolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-13036385198537197222009-10-12T11:10:00.000-07:002009-10-12T12:02:57.110-07:00A little bit of Thanksgiving gamingI will start with the game I played at work this week. Tonny, Colin and I played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/9209">Ticket to Ride</a> on Friday at lunch. This time everyone was playing and not having to learn the rules and we wrapped the game up in less then 45 minutes. Tonny ended up crushing us definitively 129 - 98 - 91. I was the only one that did not complete all their tickets as I was two turns from getting my last ticket done, this cost me 26 points (the trip was worth 13) plus the longest track so I would have won. I guess that is what happens when you play games, you fall just short sometimes and other times you win convincingly.<br /><br />Sunday rolled around and this weekend is Thanksgiving weekend in Canada so we invited some friends over, Jay and Cory for games and supper. Cory had just picked up a copy of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/40692">Small World</a> which he was eager to try, and since Brenda liked the game and Jay and I both wanted to play it, we broke out his copy and tried it.<br /><br />A quick description of Small World, you set up the game with a series of races with special abilities, for example Commando Amazons or Pillaging Dwarfs and you can either take the top one in the row, or pay one buck/race and take one of the following ones. Each race has a special bonus (Amazons get four extra tokens to attack with, Dwarves get an extra coin every turn they control a mine) and each ability gives them a different bonus (Commando, which does not mean they play without underwear, but instead require one less token to attack with or Pillaging, which means they get a bonus coin every time they take over an area that was previously controlled). <br /><br />After selecting your race you conquer territories on the board, expanding 2 tokens to conquer an area plus one for every other impediment (each token someone else put on there, mountain ranges etc). When you are done you collect points for the areas you control. A dwarf that conquered a mone controlled by either another player or a neutral race would get 1 coin for the area (standard) , 1 coin for the mine (Dwarf special ability) and 1 coin for conquering an area that was previously controlled (Pillaging) for a total of three coins for that area. Victory Points are money, so whomever has the most money at the end of the game wins.<br /><br />When it is no longer feasible for your race to expand any further you can put that race into decline and start a new one. You will still score points for the declining race, but you will not be able to expand them (with certain exceptions) . This goes on for 9 turns (in a four player game) and the game ends and you count your money.<br /><br />Cory started and paid 1 coin and picked the Pillaging Orcs (Orcs have the same advantage as Pillage so he scored three coins for every area he conquered with someone in it) and scored 12 points. I chose the top one, Wealthy Giants (Wealthy means 7 extra coins at the end of the turn and Giants take areas adjacent to mountains they control for 1 less counter), taking the free coin that Cory had put on it and scoring a total of 13 points. Jay took Underworld Ratmen (all caverns are one token cheaper to conquer as well as considered adjacent to each other, Ratmen start with more tokens, 8 then anyone else) and scored 8 coins. Brenda finished the turn by taking Mounted Sorcerers ( Mounted means you can take hills and plains for one cheaper, Sorcerers can conquer areas that are adjacent and have only one token in them by swapping out the other token for theirs.) and scored 7 points.<br /><br />Round two was very similar except all of us scored around the same with my total going down to 8 and everyone else going up. Cory put his Orcs into decline around turn 4 and picked up Commando Amazons (see there they are again) and started scoring well again. On the same turn Jay declined his Ratmen and picked up Bivouacking Ghouls (Bivouacking means you get 5 encampments which give you an extra point of defence and Ghouls only sorta go into decline, instead they can continue to attack and take new territory), and scored well with them. Brenda had scored 17 in one round and 13 the next so she was perceived by Cory and Jay as the greatest threat (no I didn't help convince them....) So on turn 8 Brenda finally put her Sorcerers into decline.<br /><br />I had placed my Giants into decline the turn after Jay so I picked up Swamp Tritons (bonus coin for swamps 1 less token needed to conquer areas that were adjacent to seas or lakes) and started scoring back in the teens again. On turn 9 Brenda took Alchmist Wizards (2 coins/turn they are on the board, and 1 coin bonus for magic areas) and she scored 7 points at the end of the game.<br /><br />The final scores were John 107 (I got a ton of points every turn), Brenda 90, Jay 85 and C0ry 78. We all liked the game and will play it again. Small World is a retheming and slight redesign of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/60">Vinci</a> and shares a lot of feel with the old Avalon Hill game, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/224">History of the World</a>. Brenda, Cory and I all like HotW alot so I was not surprised thatwe all liked this.<br /><br />I started supper about 5 so we broke up the gaming for awhile as I cooked and the others talked, we ate about 6:30 finishing about 8. Brenda napped from all the carbs (we ate vegan as Jay & Cory are) and about 8:30 we played a quick three player game of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/5782">Coloretto</a>, a quick filler. Jay won 183-142-137 over us and they left about 9 as Cory worked today.<br /><br />Game night is Saturday!Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-4598103833551153372009-10-01T18:39:00.000-07:002009-10-01T19:18:09.695-07:00El Grande at Darren'sI have been gaming more and I thought I should give you a quick update to what I have been playing. Last night, at my regular gaming session at Darren's, we played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/93">El Grande</a>, it was my second try (the last time was a year ago...) and Darren estimated he had played it 20 times, the other John twice and Bruce has probably played it more the Darren.<br />El Grande is a game of area control, nothing more nothing less. The beauty of the game is how you control the areas. Every turn, starting with the lowest player, you play a power card and this determines your turn order, with the highest number going first and the lowest number going last, with the added fact that the higher the number the less caballeros (not Guy, he never shows up) can move from the provinces (standby) to the court (readied). The first player then moves his caballeros to the court, and then choses his action card. Action cards do two things, they allow you to move caballeros from the court to the board and they have special actions, such as "Move the King" or "Score areas". The action cards allow you to move anywhere from one to five caballeros from the court to the board (the king allows 5). You score points on the board every three rounds (except for special scoring cards).<br /><br />Point scoring works as this: Each area has a scoring tile, scoring between 4-7 points for first and 0-3 points for third (second ranges from 0-5, fourth and fifth range from 0-0). If there is a tie, the players get equal to the standing lower (2 players tied for first each score second, 2 players tie for third score fourth, AKA 0).<br /><br />That is a good enough description of the game, I followed a strategy of this: caballeros in the court and in the provinces score 0, caballeros on the board have a chance of scoring. All four of us had all our caballeros on the board, so it seemed to be the prevalent base of everyone's strategy.<br /><br /> The game is not complex, it is just a hard game to win for new players. My first game I was crushed, finishing 30 points behind the winner, my second game was better, I finished 12 points out of first.<br /><br />Today at work Tonny, Colin and I played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/9209">Ticket to Ride</a>, a game I am far more familiar with then El Grande. Tonny and Colin are both new to it. Tonny got an unfortunate set of cards and finished the game with 27 points as he completed no tickets. Colin completed his tickets and finished with 98 points, I completed 6 tickets and ended with 127. I am going to see if I can arrange for more people at work to play, maybe we can play some 4-5 polayer games.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-56158872658888692009-09-22T20:04:00.000-07:002009-09-26T07:50:56.254-07:00FallCon 22Well<a href="http://www.fallcon.com/">FallCon 22</a> has come and gone, and to quote Tony the Tiger, it was grrrrreat!<br />Attendance was really good, I think there were more people there on Friday night then I have ever seen before. The place was cram packed! It was a little different then previous years, the auction filled up two hours after the auction opened...<img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5385773581988226706" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 213px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4ciasXZpI/AAAAAAAAADI/Ayebhs6Mtc4/s320/fallcon-22-035.jpg" border="0" />I started my FallCon adventure with a game called <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/19857">Glory to Rome</a>, it won the People's Choice award and I was asked to moderate it. I really like the game, I just hate explaining it. There are so many things you have to explain for the game, and each one rests upon another one. I did manage to get through the explanation and then the game started. We played two games of it, and a winner emerged, a player that had never played it before. This was surprising because usually the winner has experience in the game. <a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4h8l0QuZI/AAAAAAAAADg/1D68yosbj-k/s1600-h/fallcon-22-047.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5385779529208871314" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 213px" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4h8l0QuZI/AAAAAAAAADg/1D68yosbj-k/s320/fallcon-22-047.jpg" border="0" /></a>Glory to Rome went until 11 or so and I helped out around the booth and the game library until midnight, then I went home.<br /><br />I arrived at 7:30 Saturday morning to help set up and ensure all the games were ready for the morning events. I had no games scheduled that day but just tried to helped things go smoothly. <br />I took over running the games library for awhile as well and played a game of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/37380">Roll Through the Ages</a> 2 player and lost badly. I like the game, so much so that I will probably purchase it. It is a unique filler and ends before the mechanism is wearing. The game is based on rolling dice to build your civilization. <img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5385776823072195922" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 213px" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4ffErABVI/AAAAAAAAADY/u4Wl8O1qINQ/s320/fallcon-22-055.jpg" border="0" />The downside for me is that it might as well be solitaire as there is no player intereaction except for the race to build wonders, you get more points for building a wonder first then your opponent.<br /><br />I stayed at the games library for awhile and played some games with my friend Leah from Medicine Hat. She schooled me in <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/50">Lost Cities</a> and then she read the rules to <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/40628">Finca</a> while I helped people check games out of the library. We played a game two player as we both learned the rules, she proved to be an excellent teacher by allowing me to beat her in the game. It is another interesting game that I will probably pick it. There is some depth to the game, and it plays in about 45 minutes.<br /><br />My afternoon was spent helping pirates play <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/17133">Railroad Tycoon</a> (Saturday was <a href="http://www.talklikeapirate.com/">International Talk like a Pirate day</a>) and then prepping for the auction.<br /><br />The auction deserves special mention because of the games that were available this year. We <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4jYJJNnjI/AAAAAAAAADo/zzzBwN-23Hs/s1600-h/fallcon-22-025.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5385781102060084786" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 213px" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4jYJJNnjI/AAAAAAAAADo/zzzBwN-23Hs/s320/fallcon-22-025.jpg" border="0" /></a>had several people drop off large amounts (127 in one case) and the games were for the most part high quality. I would guess over a hundred were still in shrink and bidding for the games was fierce. One difference between this year and last was that there were far less miniatures (maybe 12-15 items) and magazines (2) then in previous years. This was due to the speed that the convention filled up. I saw several gamers haul their games back out to the vehicles because of the speed the auction filled. I purchased three games this year; <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/941">Turbo Taxi</a>, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/1017">Fresh Fish</a> and <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/39339">Android</a>, and I missed out on <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/1">Die Macher</a> by a dollar!<br /><br />I left at about 11:00 Saturday night, being too tired to stay longer and I wanted to finish my <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4nwaJmqjI/AAAAAAAAADw/ILioKCTpwO8/s1600-h/fallcon-22-133.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5385785916988500530" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 213px" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_--SlONhlDiY/Sr4nwaJmqjI/AAAAAAAAADw/ILioKCTpwO8/s320/fallcon-22-133.jpg" border="0" /></a>prep for my tournament the next day, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/25417">BattleLore</a>. I also used the <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30232">Hundred Years War expansion </a>for Battlelore as well. This expansion is great for tournaments because it removes the council and presets the Lore deck, which is great when you are teaching the game at the same time. There were an uneven number of players so I played as well. I won my first game 9-5 and had a shot at winning the tournament (which I don't like doing) but fate stepped in and gave me no centre cards in the second round, causing me to lose the game 10-4 (yes I was squished like a grape). The tournament was fun though and I really enjoyed playing it. <br /><br />Afterwards we cleaned up and went for beer...<br />I had a really good time and everyone that was staying at my place for FallCon (there were 6 people) all agreed that it was great. <br />We have started planning for FallCon 23 already. So come on over for a weekend of gaming!<br />All the pictures were taken by <a href="http://www.the-bit.org/">The Bit</a>, a real photographer.... for FallCon.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-76429467349763675422009-08-13T07:54:00.001-07:002009-08-13T10:10:00.877-07:00Hey look, John finally updatedYeah, yeah I know, it's been ages since I did an update.<br /><br />I have been playing games, most noticeably <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/4098">Age of Steam</a> twice, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/17226">Descent</a> a couple of times and a some games of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218">Dominion</a> (with Rob and then again with the nephews) and not to mention a bunch of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/14105">C&C:A</a>.<br /><br />Today I am here to talk about the <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/25417">BattleLore </a>I played at Darren's with John and Bruce. John was new to the game so he and I played the Wizard's Lore scenario from the first game while Bruce and Darren played the Battle of Crecy in the <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30232">100 Years War</a> supplement.<br /><br />John and I had a pretty close game, both of us seemed to be slightly crippled by cards in certain scenarios. I won the first scenario 6-4, while John won the rematch 6-4. We were tied at 4 in the second game when he used Creeping Doom to kill two of my units to win the game.<br /><br />Tonight we played Descent!Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-23167501959548374352009-06-11T15:14:00.000-07:002009-08-13T10:12:35.043-07:00C&C at Darren'sWell we had a new guy to Darren's weekly C&C night, that being John (no not me, the other one!). He was completely new to the whole system so I started out by teaching him the Battle Cry! and I must be a heckuva teacher. He whipped me soundly, winning the first four games by pretty large margins. Now I could use the excuse that I was taking it easy on him, but I wasn't. Although only having left flank cards for half the game really hurt me...<br /><br /><br /><br />Darren and Bruce replayed Trebbia and River in Commands & Colors: AncientsJolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-9899327152830638442009-06-11T15:08:00.000-07:002009-08-13T10:11:38.308-07:00RoborallyI received a copy of RoboRally in a math trade on BGG last week so I taught Brenda how to play and we played a couple of scenarios 2 player.<br /><br /><br /><br />She won... everytime...<br /><br />I am going to pull RoboRally out with more players and see how it goes.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-40064612349239638582009-06-11T15:03:00.001-07:002009-08-13T10:13:20.107-07:00Ancients! at DarrensBruce and I played three games of Commands & Colors: Ancients on the 2nd of June, with Bruce winning everything. We played Trebbia and River<br /><br /><br /><br />Steve and Darren played the first two scenarios as Steve was new to C&C:A but not the system.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-19111113842375165662009-05-27T12:34:00.000-07:002009-05-27T12:36:17.654-07:00Memoir ’44 at Darren’sLast night was the first night of what I hope will be a long running series of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/wiki/page/Command_and_Colors_system">Commands and Colors</a> games at Darren’s.<br /><br />We played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/10630">Memoir ’44</a>, and since I was the only one of the four that had played it we played the first couple of scenarios. I am not sure who won the games on the other table as I was not paying attention to them other then to help with rules questions.<br /><br />Darren and I were first to set up and played through the first three. Darren won Pegasus Bridge by a score of 6-5 in a close game. He won as the Germans 4-1 and then lost as the Allies 4-2. While we were finishing up the second half of the battle, Bruce and Steve arrived and set up Pegasus Bridge as well. They had finished their first battle by the time Darren and I set up and started the second battle, Sainte-Mere Eglise (I pointed out John Wayne on the board). I do think Bruce won both sides as I know he won as the Allies in Pegasus Bridge.<br /><br />Sainte-Mere Eglise was a much closer battle. Darren won as the Germans 4-2 and I won as the Germans 4-2 resulting in a tie between the two of us 6-6. Darren still had the lead as he won the first scenario. Steve did comment that he had the best cards he had all night in the second scenario and if I recall correctly he won that session.<br /><br />We set up the Sword Beach, the invasion by sea. I was extremely fortunate and managed to play three Assault Center cards which allowed me to advance a large portion of my force up and off the beach. All of Darren’s forces (three) on his left flank were destroyed which allowed a breakthrough for me. This netted me three medals and destroying a unit on his right flank got me my 4th. All that was left was for me to send tanks to the town for my fifth and final medal and I won 5-2. We switched sides and Darren did not have the same luck as me, getting his centre bogged down and only getting Probe cards for the centre. I ended up destroying his tanks (3 medals) as well as two infantry to win the side 5-2 again. This meant I won the scenario 10-4.<br /><br />Next week, <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/14105">Commands and Colors: Ancients</a>!Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-30405519599704084022009-05-26T14:55:00.000-07:002009-05-26T15:29:33.507-07:00FallCon web siteThe newly revamped <a href="http://www.fallcon.com/">FallCon</a> website is up and the games for this year's edition of FallCon are available to review.<br /><br /><br /><br />You can also preregister now.<br /><br /><br /><br />Why are you still here? Go register... NOW!Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2618523290264654799.post-68943292540276006982009-05-25T14:58:00.001-07:002009-05-26T14:55:49.791-07:00Last games night until fallI had 7 people show up and we played 6 games. The first people showed up at 7:30 and we set up for a game of Dominion, but by the time the explanation was done, the rest had shown up so I moved over to teach <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/8217">San Juan</a> and Tim played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218">Dominion</a> with Lenora, Robert and Brenda. Brenda won a long game that took about an hour, with no one getting the revenue to buy the provinces.<br /><br />Meanwhile, I taught San Juan to Brennan and Scott. San Juan being one of my favourite games. I took my time and explained it well and they caught on, with Scott finishing the game with 12 buildings about 25 minutes later. The final scores were John 30, Scott 24 and Brennan 21.<br /><br />While we waited for the slow pokes, Brennan and I taught <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/9674">Ingenious</a> to Scott. Ingenious is one of the best gateway games, it is simple to teach, easy to score and quick playing. I won in a very close game with Scott and Brennan blocking the yellow from scoring with that as their lowest colour. Final scores were John 11, Brennan 6 and Scott 5.<br /><br />We switched tables around and Brenda, Lenora Robert and I played Poison with the others playing <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/9209">Ticket to Ride</a>. I was leading <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/17025">Poison</a> with 6 points until the (disastrous) last turn when I scored 16 to finish last, Lenora won with 11, Robert was second with 12 and Brenda finished third with 16.<br /><br />I not not know the scores in Ticket to Ride but I do know that Brennan won.<br /><br />Brennan had to leave by then (something about work) and we switched to a game of <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/3955">Bang!</a> Scott was the sheriff, with Tim as the renegade, Lenora as the deputy and Robert and I as the outlaws. Robert and I managed to remove the deputy and the renegade which left us mano a mano with the sheriff, who mowed us down in quick order…<br /><br />For our final game of the night we played <a href="http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/19237">Ca$h n Gun$</a> and the less said about that the better… Scott won again, and I died in the third round from lead poisoning.Jolohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489222384096732121noreply@blogger.com3