Top 10 Cooperative Board and Card Game Expansions of 2024

IMG_0647

Welcome to the end of 2024!  There were some great games that came out, but also some great expansions that really contributed to the world of cooperative games!  As usual, we qualify our expansions are one of three types:

  1. Stand-Alone Expansion: Some games you thought might be on the Top 10 Cooperative Board and Card Games of 2024 might have just ended up on this list because they are stand-alone games that can be played without a base game, but at the end of the day they also expand a base game!
  2. Makes The Game Cooperative: Some expansions take a competitive base game and make the game fully cooperative with the expansion! We saw a number of these type of expansions on the Top 10 Games That Can Be Played Fully Cooperatively!
  3. More Content: Some expansions just add more content (more cards, etc.) to the base cooperative game!

As of last year, we also add the new characterization: Does It Require Another Expansion?  We continue adding this characterization, but note that this requirement was not quite as pervasive as it was last year!

If there were some games you thought missing from this list, be sure to check out Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2024 and our Top 10 Solo Games of 2024 to see if it made one of those lists instead!

Honorable Mention:  Comic Hunters Cooperative Expansion
IMG_8355

Expansion TypeMakes The Game Cooperative
Solo Mode: Comic Hunters already had a solo mode, but this can be played as a multi-handed solo mode as well
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_3054

Comic Hunters is a game I adore from this last year! See our review here! There is a good solo mode included with this drafting game, but there is no cooperative mode!  I like the idea of cooperative drafting games, but the only other cooperative drafting games I know of are Flourish and Sidekick Saga!  Why couldn’t there be a cooperative mode for Comic Hunters?

IMG_3058

With a little bit of perspicacity and imagination, I went ahead and developed my own cooperative rules for Comic Hunters and put them up on the web for free so others can try it!  See a link here for Cooperative Rules for Comic Hunters!  This is basically and free print-and-play cooperative expansion for Comic Hunters!

IMG_3067

It’s a little bit of a cheat to put this as one of my favorite Cooperative Expansions of 2024 (since I developed it), but I spent so much time playing this solo and cooperatively with my friends (as I honed the rules), this needed to at least get an Honorable MentionSee the rules here to see if you might enjoy this.

10. Marvel United: War of Kings

IMG_6728

Expansion TypeMore Content
Solo Mode: Yes, any of the Marvel United solo modes
Requires Another Expansion?  Not really, just any base Marvel United game

IMG_6763

Marvel United: Season 3 Multiverse has pretty much torn through all of our Top 10 lists for 2024.  The War of Kings was special to me because I ended up devouring the entire expansion!  I played all the characters multiple times, all the heroes multiple times, and really enjoyed a lot of the ideas here!  And I think Lockjaw (see above) may be the best introductory character for when you play with a new player!  Who doesn’t love a dog?

IMG_6828 I freely admit that this expansion appealed to me because of my love of Comic Books, The Inhumans, George Perez, and John Byrne!  However, even when I predisposed to like something, it still has to be good (I am looking at you Freedom Five) …

IMG_6760

After playing through this all, I fell in love with the Inhumans all over again (and even watched the Marvel show … sigh).  Overall, this was a great experience!  There’s so much new and great content for Marvel United here!   See our review of War of Kings: Marvel United to see if this is something you might like!

9. Thunderstone Quest: Raging Seas and Ancient Adversaries

IMG_8921

Expansion TypeMore Content
Solo Mode: Yes (with Barricades Expansion)
Requires Another Expansion?  Yes, The Barricades Mode Expansion is required to play the game solo or cooperatively

IMG_1042

Nathan and Caroline have become my Thunderstone Quest buddies! See me and Nathan above! We ended up playing through both of these expansions this year!

IMG_5074

The Raging Seas expansion (see above) has some great ideas with Pirates and adds the new Corsair!   The idea of the Voyage has become ingrained in a neat new way!  

IMG_1040

The Ancient Adversaries adds the new Totems deck (see above) to replace most Treasure, and the game plays very differently with this new expansion and its totems!

IMG_1036

If it weren’t for Nathan, I am not sure these would have gotten played.  But, we had a great time! I think I may have gotten to the point where I have “enough” Thunderstone Quest expansions, but even still, I really did enjoy these two expansions!

8. Townsfolk Tussle: Foul Neighbors

IMG_8922
Expansion TypeMore Content
Solo Mode: Two-handed
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_8939

I didn’t think Townfolk Tussle needed more content, but it’s nice to have! One of the purposes of an expansion is to breathe new life into a game, and that’s what Foul Neighbors did for us! Me and friends thought this game was silly and fun!  See below as Sam I and I play this ridiculous game with this ridiculous expansion!

IMG_1065

This expansion just adds more content: 2 new Townsfolk (heroes), 8 new Ruffians, a few new rules, cards, and tiles!!  Nothing brain-bending!!  This silly, boss-battler game was surprisingly good when we first reviewed it here, and this new expansion reminded us just how silly and fun this is!

IMG_1071

My favorite moment from playing Foul Neighbors was blowing up the outhouse to take down the final Ruffian!  In a game full of silly cards and fun (but slightly creepy) art, it seemed an apt way to end a game!  (My second favorite moment was driving the jalopy over the Ruffian!)!  Foul Neighbors is a fun expansion that reminds us how much we like original game of Townsfolk Tussle!  It also has some of my favorite minis!  See below! They are cute and creepy and cool, all at the same time!

IMG_8934

7. Detective: City of Angels: Saints and Sinners

IMG_2544

Expansion TypeMore Content
Solo Mode: Yes
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_2549

This is just plain up, more content for the great detective game Detective: City of Angels! And we need more content for this system, since each case is a “one-and-done”, meaning you probably can’t replay it again! So, they fact that they are still coming out with content for this system is great! And all of the new cases felt up to the same level of writing as the original!

IMG_2667

We were even able to introduce my friend Sara to this system!  And we had a great time playing! See above!

IMG_2562

After all this time, I still feel like Detective: City of Angels is a great detective game that doesn’t get enough love!  There are so many expansions for it which keep extending the life of the game for me!  Take a look at our review here to see if this is something you might like!

6. Marvel Champions: Age of Apocalypse

IMG_8947

Expansion TypeMore Content
Solo Mode: Yes
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_8948

If Nathan is my Thunderstone Quest buddy, then Joe is my Marvel Champions buddy!  The people at Fantasy Flight keeps plugging away and generating new content for Marvel Champions!

IMG_8950

My friend Joe and I played a few games, and although he was skeptical of playing Bishop and his discard abilities, Joe ended up really like how he worked!

IMG_8949

For me, the reason this expansion makes this Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2024 is because it finally added Magik to the Marvel Champions universe!  Her character and deck are so interesting, and very thematic to her abilities. 

5. Marvel Zombies: X-Men Resistance

IMG_1879

Expansion TypeStand-Alone Expansion
Solo Mode: Yes
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_1939

The whole Marvel Zombies: Resistance games surprised me! I didn’t expect to like these zombie battling games as much as I did!  I guess I shouldn’t be THAT surprise since I love my Cooperative Superhero games (see our Top 10 Cooperative Superhero games), but I don’t necessarily love Zombie games!

IMG_1962

But having a chance to play the X-Men on missions for killing zombies was so much more fun than I expected!  My friends and I had a grand time in the X-Men universe!

IMG_0162

See our review here to see if you an your friends want to be X-Men killing Zombies!

4. Astro Knights: Eternity

IMG_1985

Expansion TypeStand-Alone Expansion
Solo Mode: Yes
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_1998

I liked Astro Knights from about a year ago (see our review here of the original Astro Knights), but I didn’t love it.  One of my complaints was that it really needed some more content to keep it fresh.

IMG_2078

Although it’s fantastic that this deck-building boss-battler now has more content, it was the story that really sold me on this expansion!  I played through the whole adventure with me and friends, and we loved all the new content and the Firefly-esque story that unravelled!

IMG_2125

For a while, I thought this would be my #1 Expansion!  It made the top of my list at RichieCon 2024 (see that list here), but this year was really strong for expansions.  See our review of Astro Knights: Eternity to see if this is something you might like!  We really enjoyed this!

3. Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles

IMG_3576

Expansion TypeStand-Alone Expansion
Solo Mode: Yes (but you must play 4 characters: it’s not as bad as it sounds, especially once you get into it)
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_3709

Like all the Set A Watch games (see our review of the original Set A Watch, and our review of Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin), this is a really fun monster battler as players play four heroes trying to get back home! Every night, they camp and one person has to watch the fire while the others go and fight the monsters in the night!

IMG_3706

There’s a whole new set of monsters, a whole new set of heroes (with whole new powers), and a whole new set of gear!  This game is easy to teach and plays pretty quickly!  And you can play it either standalone or combine with other Set A Watch sets!

IMG_3723

There’s some new mechanisms in the system (Doom), but it’s doesn’t really change the complexity of the game.  Every time I play any of the Set A Watch games, I have such a fun time!  This standalone expansion really just made me love Set A Watch that much more! See our review here to see if this is something you might like!

2. Marvel United: Fantastic Four: The Coming of Galactus

IMG_6265

Expansion TypeMore Content
Solo Mode: Yes, any of the Marvel United solo modes
Requires Another Expansion?  No (but you might want the Fantastic Four expansion)

IMG_6217

So, for a long time, I thought this would be my #1 Expansion of 2024!  The Galactus model was so cool!  The Heralds of Galactus added a new style of play!  See below!

IMG_6212

In the end, there were just a few niggling details that kept it from #1; I loved it, but my friends didn’t like it as much as me.  See our review here to see more details of this.

IMG_6357

But in the end, it was such an epic game of fighting heralds and Galactus, that this game had to make my Top 10 Cooperative Expansions this year.

IMG_6350

See above the epic story told by the battle with Galactus!!

1. Aeon’s End: The Descent

IMG_8755

Expansion TypeStand-Alone Expansion
Solo Mode: Yes, and it’s a true solo mode!
Requires Another Expansion?  No

IMG_8641

I am just as surprised as you that this expansion was so good!  I like the Aeon’s End system (see our Top 10 Cooperative Deck-Building Games), but this new expansion breathed new life into this game!  Playing mages cooperatively fighting big bad monsters (in a cooperative deck-builder) had so many new turns!

IMG_8757

What really made this hit the number one spot was the addition of the Friends and Foes module!  This module mitigates a problem I have with Aeon’s End Variable Turn Order (see our Discussion of Variable Turn Order and How To Mitigate Its Randomness), but also adds some really new and interesting ways to play the game!  What’s even better is that you can use this module in ANY of your Aeon’s End games! It’s a module!

IMG_8683

And what put Aeon’s End: The Descent over the top to #1 was the story in the campaign!  We liked how much the story elevated Astro Knights: Eternity (back at #4), and the story here coupled with the Friends and Foes module AND coupled with all the new mages and cards made this rocket to the top of my Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2024Check our our review here to see if this is something you might like! My friend Becca (who doesn’t like cooperative games that muchh) also really enjoyed it! High Praise indeed!

Top 10 Cooperative Board And Card Games of 2024!

Wow! What a great year 2024 was for cooperative games! As we put this list together, it felt like any of the games here could have been the #1 game because there were were all great!

IMG_0653

Some of the games you might expect to see here might make it on a different list!  We will have our Top 10 Solo Games of 2024, our Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2024, and our Top 10 Party Games of 2024!  Check these lists for more great games!  Let’s head into our list!  This is the best of the best for 2024!  It’s so great that cooperative games have really flourished!  Now I can play with my friends!

Honorable Mention: Ultimatch

IMG_5525

Plays Solo:  Yes (true solo)
Player Count: 1 to 5
Ages: 10+
Length: 20 minutes

IMG_5536

I am so surprised this little cooperative card game didn’t do better!  It’s colorful and easy to play! I don’t see many people talking about it, but my friends and I had a great time playing this!

IMG_0503

If you are looking for a cooperative game to take out instead of UNO, this seems like a game could fit in anywhere!  A light cooperative card game that anyone can play?  Sign me up!

IMG_0506

This has to make an Honorable Mention because it is such an approachable and fun little cooperative game!  See our review here to see if you might like Ultimatch!!

10. Slay The Spire: The Board Game

IMG_4652

Plays Solo:  Yes (has true solo play, but it’s better cooperative)
Player Count: 1 to 4
Ages: 12+
Length: 60-90 minutes per Act

IMG_4687

As someone who has never played the original video game, this was a huge surprise!  If you like the video game, I think you’ll like this!  And if you didn’t like the video game … you might still like this!! This is a surprisingly good game with surprisingly good components!  It’s a cooperative adventure deck-building game as players navigate dungeons and fight bad guys … just like the video game! 

IMG_0642

This game worked so well in so many contexts!  It was probably one of the most played games at RichieCon 2024 this year, as I saw it getting played so many times! See above. It also worked with my friends who have played the original video game Slay The Spire, and for my friends who HAVEN’T played Slay The Spire!

IMG_4844

This had to make our top 10 list of the year because it was so good! It really is a great cooperative game, as it embraces Player Selected Turn Order and Simultaneous Play at the same time!  The only reason it’s at number 10 is just that’s it sometimes harder to get to the table if you already have a game in progress (as cards are stored/flipped and saved in the box).  See our review here of Slay The Spire: The Board Game to see if this is something you might enjoy!

9. Union City Alliance: Heroes Unite!

IMG_4178

Plays Solo:  No (but you can play two characters)
Player Count: 2 to 4
Ages: 14+
Length: 75-150 minutes

IMG_4340

This was #1 on our Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2022, and it finally delivered this year!  Of course I was excited when it came in, but I was wary!  Luckily, it was very good!

IMG_4405

This is a cooperative deck-building game (a lot of these this year) where players are Super Heroes with special powers and have special cards tailored to their deck! If you like Marvel Legendary, a cooperative deck-builder with Marvel Super Heroes, this might be right up your alley! Union City Alliance is also much more thematic than Marvel Legendary as players are actually Super Heroes moving around a map and fighting bad guys!

IMG_4339

The only reason this is a little lower is because it doesn’t have official rules for playing solo (but it seems to work with the solo player operating two heroes), and because it is a little more complicated!  This game drips with so much theme that it has to pay a little cost of complexity for that theme!  Take a look at our review of Union City Alliance to see if you night enjoy this more than Marvel Legendary! I knowI did!

8. Flock Together

IMG_5776

Plays Solo:  Yes (true solo)
Player Count: 1 to 5
Ages: 10+
Length: 25 minutes per player

IMG_5783

This is a gorgeous and very cute game with art by Andrew Bosley. Flock Together is a cooperative Boss-Battler, as players have to battle 3 minor bosses on the way to the final confrontation with the big Boss!

IMG_5830

This was on my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024, and boy was it great!  This seemed to hit home for so many people!  Flock Together a light cooperative game and it is so easy to get to the table!  The art and chicken puns in this game just evoke such joy!

IMG_0684

This was another one of the most played games at RichieCon 2024 (see above) as I saw it getting played multiple times!   Because this game is so easy to get to the table and evokes such joy and humor, this had to make my Top Cooperative Games of 2024!  See our review of Flock Together to see if this might be something you enjoy!

7. Hissy Fit! 

IMG_3068

Plays Solo:  Yes (true solo)
Player Count: 1 to 4
Ages: 8+
Length: 20 minutes 

IMG_3100

Wait, a game about taking cats to the Vet made the #7 position?  That’s right!  This super cute little cooperative game was a surprising hit!  It’s a cooperative game you can take just about anywhere, it’s easy to teach and play, and everyone just responds so well to it!

IMG_3133

I haven’t had a bad play of this yet!  I have played with my gamer friends, my non-gamer friends, my niece, my best friend, and so many groups and it has been a hit every time!  This is a great little cooperative game with a follow-like mechanism that keeps everyone involved the whole time!

IMG_3119

In the end, the super cute art will bring in people (see above), but the simple cooperative gameplay (with the involving follow mechanism) and short games of 20 minutes will enchant just about everyone!  Take a look at our review of Hissy Fit here and see if you want to take the cat to the Vet!

6. Endeavor Deep Sea

IMG_7441

Plays Solo:  Yes (true solo)
Player Count: 1 to 5
Ages: 14+
Length: upto 30 minutes per player 

IMG_7576

So, I have never played the original Endeavor, but this follow-on (called Endeavor Deep Sea) worker placement game had both a solo and cooperative mode, so I took a chance on it, and it was very very good!  A cooperative worker placement game is such a neat thing when it actually works!

IMG_0917

Although I liked the game solo and cooperatively, the reason this is higher on the list is that this was a hit for everyone who played it cooperatively!   Each player feels like they have so much choice on their turn, so agency is present and relevant, but the discussions for how to achieve the cooperative goals really do elevate the game!  It’s a cooperative game where the turns are multiplayer solitaire (which gives each player agency), but still instills a sense of cooperation in the goals!

IMG_7575

This was a very thinky and engaging solo and cooperative worker placement game that looks really great on the table!  Take a look at our review of Endeavor Deep Sea to see if this is for you and your group!

5. Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders

IMG_7706

Plays Solo:  Yes (but you have to play two characters)
Player Count: 1 to 4
Ages: 14+
Length: 60-90 minutes

IMG_7981

This is a fantastic year for board and card games! In many other years, this would have easily been my #1 game of the year, but there are so many good games this year!  This is a cooperative boss-battler dungeon crawl campaign game where players play unique and interesting characters in this world of Tidal Blades!

IMG_7976

This game is just gorgeous and took up my table for weeks as I played through the campaign both solo and cooperatively!   The components are so good and, this sounds silly, but so easy to read and understand the icons and colors!  They did such a fantastic job!

IMG_7942

The best recommendation you can give a campaign game is that your friends want to keep playing it!  I have gone through most of the campaign solo, and I am enjoying playing cooperatively with my friends when I can!  See above!

IMG_7835

The way players choose a card and then activate all the abilities in the row or column of choice is such a great mechanism!   I hope we see this mechanism again in future games! Tidal Blades 2: The Rise of the Unfolders has so many great things (and fixes to Gloomhaven) that I wish I could give this the #1 position, but I liked the next few games just a little better!  See our review of Tidal Blades 2: The Rise of the Unfolders here to see if you might like this and argue that it should be #1!

4. Invincible: The Hero-Building Game

IMG_5878

Plays Solo:  Yes (but you have to play two characters)
Player Count: 1 to 4
Ages: 13+
Length: 45-90 minutes

IMG_5933

Invincible: The Hero Building Game is a cooperative bag-building game set in the Invincible universe.  You may have read the original comic book or seen the TV show, but even if you haven’t, you might still really enjoy this bag-building/push-your-luck game!  I really enjoyed that no cube is bad on its own, but if you ever draw 5 black cubes, a hero can crash (which is still recoverable).  The black cubes are actually good (they are wild) up until you get 5 of them!  

IMG_5973

There is also a campaign, where each scenario can be just played as a one-shot as well!  

IMG_6013

Cooperatively, my friends (despite never having seen/read Invincible) still had a good time playing!  Sam even mentioned Invincible in his top 10 list at RichieCon 2024 !  I freely admit that the SuperHero nature of this game contributed to me really liking it, but the game is very very good!  See our review of Invincible: The Hero-Building Game to see if you might enjoy it!

3. Leviathan Wilds

IMG_4418

Plays Solo:  Yes (there’s an official true solo mode, but just play two characters: it’s easier)
Player Count: 1 to 4
Ages: 10+
Length: 60 minutes

IMG_4551

Leviathan Wilds took my gaming groups by storm!  This is a game I championed, as it was #3 on my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024, and boy did it deliver!  It seems most reviewers picked up on how good it was!  

IMG_4552

This is basically Shadow of The Colossus, the cooperative board game! But, instead of “fighting” a creature by climbing all over him, players work together to heal a creature (by getting rid of crystal growths)!

IMG_4609

This game works so well because it’s easy to get to the table and has some really unique features!  Each player gets to choose a Climber and Class (each with its own deck) and meld them to create a unique deck and personality!  The cards are multi-use, and your deck represents your grip! It’s such an interesting and gorgeous game!  See below!

IMG_4611

My friend Becca (who doesn’t like cooperative games normally) said she really liked this!  And most of my friends also liked it!  It was hit just about everywhere I went!  Take a look at our review of Leviathan Wilds to see if this is something you may like!

2. Sammu-Ramat

IMG_2695

Plays Solo:  Yes (there’s a couple of ways, either the solo player operates 2 advisors or 3)
Player Count: 1 to 5
Ages: 14+
Length: 60-90 minutes

IMG_2855

You haven’t probably heard of this game; it had a very small Gamefound presence, but in the end, it probably should have been game of the year.  This game is fantastic: it’s a cooperative war-game with euro-type resource gathering mechanisms!  And it’s cooperative and solo!  The theme is that players are advisors to Sammu-Ramat, a leader from 811-820 BC known for her wisdom! 

IMG_2782

In the end, though, this is a puzzle game about how to keep the kingdom prosperous, while still enduring the warlike invaders! How do you handle crisis? What resources do you collect?  how do you move about the kingdom to do the most good?  It’s such a great and thinky puzzle with almost no randomness to the game (from a few events)!  

IMG_2905

My friends and I had such a good time playing through this puzzle, but I think I enjoyed the campaign mode best, where you play 5 games back to back using the previous game state as set-up for the next!  So interesting and thinky!

IMG_2799

I loved this game and strongly suggest you check it out, especially if you like thinky puzzle games!  See our review of Sammu-Ramat to see if this might be something you like!  If this were any of other year, this would have been my #1, but one other game took almost all my time this year …

1. Marvel United Multiverse/Season 3

IMG_6400

Plays Solo:  Yes (there’s many ways, but I prefer playing two heroes)
Player Count: 1 to 4 (sometimes 5, depending on the mode)
Ages: 14+
Length: 60-90 minutes

IMG_6197

This is kind of a cheat, as Marvel United: Multiverse standalone game comes with Season 3 of Marvel United Multiverse! See above!

IMG_6426

Marvel United: Multiverse is the base game that includes heroes from the Multiverse (Loki) and What If? (Captain Carter) and other lesser know heroes and villains.

IMG_6412

IMG_6418

One of the best new things in the Marvel United: Multiverse game is the Equipment cards!  Some of the heroes in the game get some really interesting and  choices if equipped!  I was pleasantly surprised how much I liked the new equipment and its effects on gameplay.  See our review here to see if Marvel United: Multiverse might be for you!

IMG_6187

Even though Marvel United: Multiverse is out favorite of the Marvel United base games, it’s all the content from Season 3 that made this rise to the top!  We spent weeks lovingly going through so much of Season 3 Multiverse!  

IMG_7404

We liked Marvel United: Multiverse so much, we used the Project P.E.G.A.S.U.S location from that box to make our own campaign!

IMG_7430

The Project P.E.G.A.S.U.S campaign, using “mostly” Season 3 and Multiverse components took over our lives for weeks as well! See our custom print-and-play campaign of the Project PEGASUS story!

Marvel United has become my favorite game of all time, and Season 3 pretty much cemented it i place! That’s why Marvel United: Multiverse (and Season 3) has to make the #1 spot on our cooperative games of 2024!

A Review of Cyberpunk Unfolds: a Cooperative Escape Room

IMG_0966

Cyberpunk Unfolds is a pop-up Escape Room that was on Kickstarter back in December 2023 and delivered sometime in the later 2024.  It promised delivery in January 2024, so it was a number of months late.  We were very excited to get this, as it was #10 on our Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024!

IMG_1441

I think we were SO EXCITED for this Cyberpunk Unfolds because it was another Pop-Up Escape Room game!   We had good luck with Doomensions: Pop-Up Mystery Manor (see above and below), so we were excited to get another Pop-Up Adventure!  A Pop-Up Adventure!  

IMG_1491

Granted, the Cyberpunk Unfolds is a smaller scope than Doomensions, but it still looked cool.

Let’s take a look!  There’s some minor spoilers on the content below (pictures of the game), but it shouldn’t affect gameplay at all if you don’t look too closely.

Jumping In

IMG_0978

So, Charlie and Allison are my Escape Room buddies: we have played a lot of Escape Rooms board games together (Unlock, Exit, etc)! See above.

IMG_0968

It might seem obvious from the cyber theme, but this escape room requires a phone or an iPad. In fact, you need to scan a QR code to even start the game (see above).

IMG_0969

After clumsily trying my phone for a few minutes, we reverted to Charlie’s iPad (see above). 

IMG_0970

If you play this, get an iPad to play so everyone can see the screen (it’s a bunch of web sites, not an app to download). See above.

Gameplay

IMG_0972

The gameplay was a little unexpected, as you interact with some people in Cyberspace almost like a text adventure game!  You type in responses, almost like you are playing an old Zork adventure game.  See above!

IMG_0973

As we played, we were directed by little videos showing us how to open up the Escape Room and get to the next scene.  There were a few struggles at the beginning, but it was nice that they actually showed a video showing EXACTLY how to unfold things.  

IMG_0974

Over the course of 1 night, about 1.5 hours, we proceeded through the Escape Room: we’d solve puzzles based on the current scene and enter the solutions into the “chat” with VIN, which would move us to the next scene.

IMG_0978

By the end of the night, we ended up just opening up the puzzle so everyone could see it.  It was “cool” that there were scenes that were 3D, but they actually got in the way of everyone seeing the scene!  To make it so everyone could stay involved, we just flattened the scene on the table later in the game. See above as we flatten one of the last puzzles.

This is an Escape Room: you solves puzzles based on the current scene and move to the next scene.  We don’t want to show too much more for fear of revealing too much.

Reactions

IMG_0977

The 3D puzzles and scenes were pretty cool, and we made some cool stuff.

IMG_0976

But, in the end, we actually didn’t like this very much. The quote of the night came from Charlie: “There were a lot of awkward points during the game”.  Some of the puzzles were awkward and unclear, some of the directions for moving forward were awkward and unclear, and some of the time was spent just awkwardly trying stuff. 

There were many times were we would say “Really? That’s the solution?”  

You might say “well, you guys are just stupid“.  Sure.   But we’ve played a lot of Escape Rooms together, so I think we have a sense of what works and what doesn’t.  Caveat Emptor.

Conclusion

IMG_0986

Let’s be clear; Cyberpunk Unfolds is very playable; there is a help system (so we didn’t get stuck completely), there are some cool puzzles and there are some cool moments.   But, none of my friends (not myself) really liked this experience.  

IMG_0985

There are directions for “resetting the game” … which we chose not to take.  We couldn’t see passing this onto another group of friends (see above).

IMG_0973

This is not a bad game, it just wasn’t for us.  Because it is playable, has a good hint system, and contains some cool moments, we’ll give it a 5.5/10.  Maybe you’ll enjoy this more than we did, but we struggled with a lot of points of awkwardness in the game.

 

Aeon’s End: The Descent. Review After Full Playthrough

IMG_8755

Aeon’s End: The Descent (an expansion in the Aeon’s End universe, but also a standalone cooperative game) was on Gamefound back in Februrary 2024 and promised delivery in January 2025. Guess what? It actually got here early right before Thanksgiving 2024 (Nov 20, 2024 or so).  That’s right, it’s almost 2 months early!  Holy cow!  That never happens in crowdfunding land!

IMG_8600

I went all-in on the new stuff and got the two expansions* (three if you count XAXOS inside), the mat, and the box!

IMG_8602

I freely admit I was on the fence on backing this.  I do love the Aeon’s End system and its ilk (Astro Knights (see review here), Astro Knights: Eternity (see review here), Aeon’s End, Aeon’s End: War Eternal (see review here), Aeon’s End: Outcasts (see review here) etc etc etc), but I have a lot of Aeon’s End content already.  I mean, this is a great cooperative deck-building game system with a mage theme, and it basically made the #1 Spot on our Top 10 Cooperative Deckbuilding Games!

IMG_8603

In the end, I chose to back Aeon’s End: The Descent because I was excited for the new Friends and Foes module which can be used in any game.  Not to bury the lede, but I think that new module makes the game that much better.  We’ll discuss that in detail below.

Let’s take a look!

Unboxing

IMG_8607

This is a pretty standard sized box: see Coke can above for reference.

IMG_8753

If you are considering getting this, I recommend the mat.  Of all the mats I have, the Aeon’s End/Astro Knights mats always seem the most useful: look above at how they well they help organize the play!  The mat from Conquest Princess last week was pretty good for solo, but not really useful for cooperative play.  This mat, for Aeon’s End: The Descent worked so very well in both solo and cooperative contexts.

IMG_8606

Just be wary that the mat a little big (see Coke can for scale above) and it’s a little harder to carry around (see below).

IMG_0964

IMG_8610

There’s a little rulebook for the Friends and Foes module; I think it’s separate so you can use it with other Aeon’s End games easier. See picture above.

IMG_8612

There’s a narrative booklet: this is to take you through the adventure with some text. See above.

IMG_8616

And the main rulebook: see above.

IMG_8640

At its core though, Aeon’s End: The Descent is a card game: see SO MANY cards above and below!

IMG_8642

Luckily, these cards are very well organized: they have stop signs cards to surround each deck.

IMG_8742

One of my favorite features of this game (and all Aeon’s End games) is that EVERY CARD IS WELL-LABELLED: see above as the Treasure card is from ATD-4-02 (bottom left of the card).  If you ever need to put everything back in original order, you can. 

IMG_8750

Spoiler Alert: I played through the entire campaign,  and I was able to reset the entire campaign (sorry, they are called Expeditions here) back to its original pristine state.  And you can! See above as I try to separate the cards back!

IMG_8758

At its core, each player takes the role of a mage, and his cards become his casting deck (which he has to try to build up using deck-building).  See some mages above … and some other ones come out later!

IMG_8761

Generally, the mages are fighting a Big Bad! See some above! To win, you usually have to reduce the Big Bad to zero hit points by casting spells to do damage!

IMG_8757

Along the way, you make some Friends and Foes, who help or hinder you just a little bit … and more come out as the Expedition unfurls …

IMG_8644

There’s a bunch of tokens which you do need to notate moneys, power, charges, and some other stuff!

IMG_8641

Generally, the components are pretty high quality, the art is good, and the production looks great. See above.

The Rulebook

IMG_8616

The rulebook is .. fine.

IMG_8617

It flops over the edges, making it harder to keep open on the chair next to me.  It really needs to be a smaller form factor: it gets about a C on the Chair Test.  I find myself grumpier and grumpier with rulebooks which are huge when opened up.  At least it does sit flat.

IMG_8618

The Components page is nice* (*modulo one issue we had with Astro Knights: Eternity:  the Component pages STILL doesn’t label the Turn Order cards as coming from one of the 1X decks … you might find yourself searching in vain, until you open up all the 1A-1D decks).

IMG_8623

Set-ups are nice, but if you get the Play mat, you really don’t need this section.

IMG_8625

Generally, this was a good rulebook with good annotations, lots of pictures, and readable text. It even used color to differentiate new rules (in yellow) from older games.

This is a pretty good rulebook, but it had better be after making 5? 10? different versions of Aeon’s End. Although there is still one quirk in the solo rules … see later below.

Gameplay

IMG_8635

I always forget HOW AMAZING the Aeon’s End games are for that first set-up!  Aeons’ End: The Descent is no different!  See above and below as the sheet that comes with the box helps you quickly unwrap and set-up your first game!  

IMG_8646

If I ever get an Aeon’s Box in the mail, I am never worried about my first set-up*, because it always goes so well!

IMG_8701

I don’t want to say too much about gameplay because we’ve discussed it before in previous reviews.  Also, there are a lot of great videos on the internet if you want to see how it plays. But I just want to say, there are a number of new mechanisms and somehow, they keep squeezing new ideas out of the Aeon’s End system!  Every game in the Expedition has a new “angle” or “mechanism” that keeps the game fresh! A new Mage?  A new weird way to defeat the Big Bad?  Somehow, Aeon’s End is still fresh after all these years!

Friends and Foes

IMG_8707

Without a doubt, my favorite new thing about Aeon’s End: The Descent is the Friends and Foes module.   Basically, two new characters become embroiled in your story: a friend and a foe!

IMG_8658

They are so embroiled, that the friend and foe each get their own turn within the turn deck!  See above!

IMG_8730

Each friend and foe slowly evolves something: the friend is building up something good for the players, and the foe is building up something bad!  See above as The Corrosion can add his Draining cards!    The nice thing about the friends and foes is that they aren’t too bad; you usually have to make a choice about the goodness/badness every turn they come up! I really enjoyed having that extra choice! 

IMG_8665

Do you add a few charges to the friend or foe?  Do you take some damage to Gravehold to avoid that charge?  The players almost always GET TO MAKE A CHOICE: what kind of good news or bad news do you want?  The players decide!!

IMG_8708

See above as the The Scavanger Foe makes players draw a card and either suffer damage to Gravehold or let the Scavenger charge up!! What do you do?  What do you do??

IMG_8711

As much as I like these choices, what I like best about the Friends and Foes is that they even-out the problems with Variable Turn Order gameplay.  What do I mean by that?

IMG_3654
Kickstarter Edition of Aeon’s End and Aeon’s End: War Eternal (with update since I was an original Kickstarter)

Those of you have been following my blog for sometime know that I am not a huge fan of Variable Turn Order: see the blog entry here for A Discussion of Variable Turn Order and How To Mitigate Its Randomness.   Basically, Variable Turn Order can be too random and cause pathologically bad draws which can make the game less fun.   To combat the problems of Variable Turn Order in Aeon’s End (and its ilk), I allow myself a simple House Rule: the Nemesis is never allowed to go more than 2 turns in a row. 

IMG_1115

It turns out that I didn’t have to use this House Rule in any of my games in Aeon’s End: The Descent!! Why?  One of the things we discovered when working with Variable Turn Order in Unmatched Adventures: Tales to Amaze was that the bigger the deck, the less likely you are to have pathologically bad draws!   See blog entry for more Discussion here.

IMG_8733

Because the Friends and Foes “fill-out” the Variable Turn Order deck from 6 cards (original length) to 8 cards (with one Friend and one Foe), there didn’t seem to be a need to invoke the House Rule!

In the end, I love this new Friends and Foes module for multiple reasons: it mitigates the Variable Turn Order issues I have in Aeon’s End: The Descent, it allows more choice into the game, and it has some really new ideas for how to push Aeon’s End into fresh territory.  Not to mention, you can use Friends and Foes with any Aeon’s End game!

IMG_8611

I guess I wouldn’t be me if I didn’t think the game still needed one slight House Rule: the rules say that the Charges “must go off” when the Charge track is filled (see above).   Sure, this makes sense for the Foe, but not the Friend!!!  I played several times where the Friend’s ability discharged … and it was completely useless for me!!!  But, the Friend is your friend!  Ask them to hold on until next round when they activate!  This seems like a minor house rule, but I think it feels more thematic and more empowering as a choice-You don’t have to discharge the Friend’s ability just because it’s full.

Otherwise, Friends and Foes is a fantastic module.  I probably won’t play without it from now on if I can help it. 

Expedition

IMG_8612

So, this game comes with a Campaign of 4 Sessions (4 battles): they call this an Expedition (much like in Astro Knights: Eternitysee here).   The basic flow of the game is described by the Narrative Book (see above and below).

IMG_8614

Each section starts with a TON of text.  I have to admit, I was a little daunted the wall of text, until I realized that using the character sheets/mats made it more interesting and visual!

IMG_8683

What I did: I found the character mats for each of the Mages described in the text (and the Friend),  and then I put them next to the Narrative book!  So, as I read, I could correlate who was speaking, who was acting, and who was who!  See above!  This brought me more into the story, and I recommend the same for you!

IMG_8724

After the text sets up the story, the yellow boxes direct you how to set-up the game: see above for instructions on how to set-up Battle 3 (note, not really any spoilers in the set-up).

IMG_8638

Most of the special context for the Expedition Battles is in one of three places: The Envelopes, the Specially Wrapped Cards, or the “unspecial wrapped cards”. 

IMG_8722

The Envelopes typically contain Friends and Foes, a new Nemesis, some dividers, and possibly some new boards.  Minor Spoiler for Envelope 3: don’t look too closely at the picture above, but that’s what’s generally in an Envelope!!!

IMG_8720

Most of the cards you need come from the special decks:  For example, you open 2B at the end of Battle 2!

IMG_8643
Or open 1A, 1B, and 1C at the start of Battle 1!

IMG_8639

There’s a ton of other decks in the game which just “augment” your game: this allows you to have other choices for your Gems/Relics and Spells.

IMG_8677

Although your first game will have a rigourous set of Gems/Relic/Spells (see above), you can choose other cards for these.

IMG_8738

Although there are some instructions for reseting the game, I strongly recommend you take pictures (like I did) of all the stuff in the Envelopes: Again, minor spoilers for Envelope 4! See above!

IMG_8756

After playing through the Expedition solo (see Solo Play section below), I went ahead and re-sorted all the decks back to their original state!  I used rubber bands (I know, some people don’t like rubber bands) to keep them together.

It took about an hour or so to re-sort everything and put the box back to the original state.  You can do, but it is a lot of work.  I did this so I can play the Campaign with my friends all over again.

Solo Play

IMG_8604

So, Aeon’s End: The Descent supports solo play (thanks for following Saunders’ Law). And it has choices!

IMG_8633

You can either play true solo mode, where the solo player plays exactly one mage OR you can play solo two-handed.  And for true solo, they mention the simple rules “You are your own ally!”  (I would have LOVED some better solo play description like this for Freedom Five from a few weeks ago:  Oh, Freedom Five, I wanted to love you so much …).  In the end, I played true solo: one mage per Battle!

IMG_8650

This true solo is interesting, because some variants of Aeon’s End only support the solo player having three turns and the Nemesis having two turns (most notably: the App for iOS! See our Discussion in Seven House Rules For Cooperative Games). This version of Aeon’s End: The Descent seems to let the true solo player have four turns (it’s unclear, because the set-up for the players has rules for 2,3, and 4 players … but not 1-Player? See page 8!). In the end, the defining text seems to be: “The turn order deck is always composed of four player turn order cards and two Nemesis turn order cards” (p. 8, Turn Order Deck).

IMG_8655

Over the course of about 4 days, I ended up playing the entire Expedition!  Although the game box says 60 minutes per game, I kind of think that’s bogus: I am an experienced Aeon’s End player, and I think I took about 2 hours per game.  To be fair, when I play solo, I tend to be more thoughtful and take longer turns.

IMG_8719

I chose to use a different Mage for each game: I started with Thraxir, went to Mezahaedron for my second Battle …

IMG_8727

Used Raven in my 3rd Battle …

IMG_8740

And finally ended Battle 4 with Brama .. the Leader!  

IMG_8747

Using a different Mage for each battle was absolutely the right thing to do!  I got to play 4 VERY DIFFERENT Mages throughout the game!  Each play style was very different, and it was fun to try to learn and discover the strategies for each Mage! I had to use Destiny tokens, Knowledge tokens, and all sorts of new stuff I had never seen before!  

IMG_8718

It was an absolute delight getting through this Expedition.  I had a blast!

IMG_8725

Although the true solo game has the solo mage advance quickly, I always worry that they may die sooner, because they only have 10 hit points total!  At least playing two-handed solo, there are 20 hit points total between the two mages … Luckily, getting too low was never an issue. I don’t know if I just chose well, but my Mages never skirted death!  I always worry about the true solo player dying too early because there are no hit point balancing mechanisms (i.e., solo player has 12 hit points or something), but it hasn’t seemed to be an issue.

IMG_8746

My only complaint might have been that maybe it was too easy?  I didn’t lose a single solo game along the way! And all of wins were pretty decisive!  Like I said, I am a fairly experienced Aeon’s End player, so that’s part of it.  Luckily, I noticed that every Nemesis does have a “advanced” mode, so if I play again, maybe I’ll do the advanced mode so it’s a little harder …

IMG_8706

In the end, I had a great time playing the Expedition solo.  I was able to learn the game to teach my friends (see Cooperative Play section below), but still enjoy a full story and campaign!  If I never play Aeon’s End: The Descent again, I feel like I still feel like I got my money’s worth. The thing is, I would like to play it again! It was fun!

Cooperative Play

IMG_0248

So, Robert, Becca, and Jeff and I played the first game of the Expedition! A 4-Player game!

IMG_0256

We ended up winning and generally having a good time!

IMG_8608

Becca, who doesn’t really like cooperative games that much, liked it enough that she expressed interest in ordering a copy!  I showed her the little catalog (above: came with the game) of all the Aeon’s Ends

IMG_0987

Generally, everyone was able to feel part of the team!  But, each Mage has their own personality, and I think everyone felt like they could do something interesting on their turn!  Sure, there were moments when one of us “took it for the team” and had a crappy turn, but it was always a conversation! Everyone was always involved, either figuring out their turn, or talking with others!

IMG_0991

The only “real” problem was that the game lasted a good three hours!  Granted, this is a learning game for most everyone but me, but 3 hours is a lot longer than the 60 minutes on the box!  Still, we were engaged the entire time and had fun.

Cooperative play went well, even with 4 people who are all very independent.  And none of my friends (except Becca) are really “gamers”, but everyone took  to the game pretty well!  Generally, it was a smashing success and we had fun.

One final thing: the 4-Player cooperative game seemed harder than the true solo game.  I think if we played through the entire Expedition as a 4-Player game, the game would have been much more challenging.  The game just seems harder with more people.

“Emergency Sleeving!”

IMG_0989

You don’t have to sleeve the game, but you really really really should sleeve the Turn Order Deck (see above).  Why?  You touch the Turn Order Deck every turn!  I didn’t sleeve my Turn Order Deck in the original Aeon’s End, and it got a little grody.

IMG_0251

Just as we were starting the Cooperative game, I remembered how “grody” the Turn Order cards, so we had to have an “Emergency Sleeving!!!!”

IMG_0245

Okay, you may now resume your regularly scheduled program.

What I Liked

IMG_8682

The Campaign, er, Expedition Story:  Once I got into the Expedition, I enjoyed the story.  I needed the graphic support of pictures of the characters to jumpstart me into the story, but once I got into it, it was surprisingly enjoyable. And maybe even a little moving?

IMG_8749

The Length of the Expedition:  I liked that the campaign was only 4 Battles: it seemed like just enough to be achievable.  It wasn’t too long to drag on, nor too short to leave me wanting more.  I said the same thing about the campaign in Astro Knights: Eternity: 4 Battles seems just right!

IMG_8637

Friends and Foes: I adored the Friends and Foes addition.  It not only fixed the Variable Turn Order problems (or at least strongly alleviated the issues), but also added some extra choices to the gameplay.  Overall, this module is a major win for the Aeon’s End system, and may now be a necessary module moving forward.

IMG_8735

Still Fresh:  Everything seemed “fresh”: the new Mages, the new Nemeses, the Friends and Foes, the new Gems/Relics/Spells, the new mechanisms (Knowledge, Destiny, etc)!  Somehow, even after 8 years since the original Aeon’s End, all this content still seems fresh!

IMG_8691

New Narrative Booklets:  I like that the Narrative Booklets and the Expedition mode gives you an “excuse” to play through all the content.  I like this idea!  An excuse!  It sort of went under the radar, but this also included Narrative Booklets for both the original Aeon’s End and the Aeon’s End: War Eternal.  If I need/want an excuse to playthrough those games again, I have it!  I think it’s really cool that Indie boards and cards “retro-fitted” the Expedition onto the original games!

IMG_0990

Standalone:  Were you always curious abut Aeon’s End but were turned away because of something (maybe Variable Turn Order)?  Maybe you found the Friends and Foe module  alluring?  Maybe the idea of a just-right campaign is alluring?  You do NOT have to get all the other Aeon’s End content … you can just get this standalone game and be very happy for a while!

What I Didn’t Like

IMG_8681

Wall of Text:  I grew to like the story that came out, but that wall of text from the Expedition booklet is very daunting; I suspect it will actually turn some people away.   I would have considered putting in some relevant pictures in with the next, or at least “suggested” that players keep out the Player Mats so they can have pictures of the characters as they interact.

IMG_8736

Friends Ability Activation:  I really think that the players should allow the Friend to activate abilities with a little more choice; right now they friend “must” discharge all their charges and activate their ability even if it’s not useful.   These seems against the theme; they are our friends, why can’t we work with them so they activate their abilities at better times?  This is my only real complaint in an otherwise wonderful Friends and Foes module.

IMG_8632

Rulebook and rules:  The Rulebook and Narrative books are pretty good, but have a lot of weird discrepancies!  Why is one-player set-up not mentioned in the Turn Order Deck section?  Why are Treasures not emphasized more?  It’s one page in a floating box you will miss on your first read!  The set-ups in the Narrative book seem a little … spartan?  There needs to be more emphasis that we can choose Gems/Relics/Spells between Battles! And the Turn Order cards are referenced in the Components but “hidden” in the intro decks … it needs a slightly better sentence there.

These are all minor things.

Conclusion

IMG_0992

I am not quite sure where I come down on Aeon’s End: The Descent, because I liked it so much! The Friends and Foes module, for me at least, is always necessary for any Aeon’s End game I play from now on!  My friends loved this game, even the non-gamers!  The cooperative experience has always been very strong in Aeon’s End: my plays with my friends accented how well it works! 

IMG_8726 

My solo games during the Expedition were so much fun, they will probably make my Top 10 Solo Games of 2024!

IMG_8739

Aeon’s End: The Descent breathes new life into the Aeon’s End system. I loved it. I think I will give it an 8.5/10 or maybe a 9/10. I don’t know, maybe even a 9.5/10? It was such a great experience both solo and cooperatively!

My only question: should it make my Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2024 (because it’s a standalone game) or my Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2024 (because it expands other Aeon’s End games)?

An Odd Little Duck! A Review of Cyber Pet Quest!

IMG_8203

Cyber Pet Quest is a cooperative boss-battler campaign game.  This game was on Kickstarter back in April 2024, and it promised delivery in October 2024.  My copy arrived late October just before Halloween, so it arrived right on time!  Congratulations to Dead Alive Games for shipping on time!  

IMG_8201

My version is the deluxe version with lots of little Kickstarter extras (see above).  

IMG_8206

This is a smallish game, but it still has a 6+ chapter campaign game contained therein!

Let’s take a look!

Unboxing

IMG_8208

This is a small game: see the can of Coke for perspective.

IMG_8218

Yet, there’s quite a bit crammed into this box!! See above!  So, what is this game all about?

IMG_8256

Players each take the role of the cyber pets (above, left-to-right): Roman the Canadian Goose, Clay the Australian Cattle Dog, Freya the North American Racoon, and Jane the Bionic Cat!  

IMG_8257

You can choose to pick up the pet minis, but I prefer the wooden meeples that come with the game (much like Run Run Run! from a few weeks ago!)  Wooden meeples for the win!

IMG_8285

Players embark on a 6+ campaign (starting with chapter 0 to get you acclimated) working together to find their master!  The campaign is all documented in the little book that comes with the game.  It’s a tiny but long (at 108 pages) book describing the rules and the campaign.

IMG_8233

Each cyber pet is actually quite different!  The cards (above) describe the differences: how many Dodge dice, how many hit points, what actions you can take and their costs, and their special powers!  If you look closely, you can see that each pet is very different than the others!

IMG_8293

For example, see above for the Actions of Freya with their cost!

IMG_8275

Each cyber pet gets a nice dual-layered board for marking energy, luck, hot points, and “sneak status”.

IMG_8252

On a cyber pet’s turn, it is either sneaking (metal name token above turned upside down) or in AGGRO mode.  When sneaking, most things cost more energy (except for healing which is cheaper) and that pet can’t attack!  When the pet has the AGGRO token (bigger metal token), it may attack … but the bad guys are naturally drawn to it AND it takes one more damage from them!  Choosing when to sneak and AGGRO is an important strategic part of the game!

IMG_8259

There are bad guys to fight: this is a boss-battler after all!  The bad guys are the red, green, blue, yellow and BIG BOSS pink meeples! See above!

IMG_8306

You generally have 4 CyMS (Cyber-Memetic Sociopaths) … these are generally “the minions” of the big bad boss.  See above as we choose 4 for the start of the game!  (That dual layer board with the CyMS is the top of the box. …. what??)

IMG_8283

Each Chapter on the campaign happens in a group of Location cards: See above for the apartment (where the cyber pets live and start on space 1).

IMG_8290

Each Location generally has some items of interest (like the Massage chair) where you have to “interact” or “look at it” to activate it!

IMG_8314

Once the cyber pets get comfortable with the mechanics of the game (chapter 0), the CyMS come out!  See above as the cyber pets try to get out of the apartment with the CyMS chasing them!

IMG_8288

Over the course of the game, you get many things to help you in your quest to find your master!  Sometimes you get Items like above (which are one shots) …

IMG_8340

Or you may get extra powers that help you! See above as Roman gets a Level 2 power!

IMG_8318

There’s also “Charms” which are permanent items that are usually powered by the “luck” resource.

IMG_8360

Finally, each cyber pet levels up as they get further into the campaign See above as Roman is on Level 3 … which influences his hit points, powers, and actions!  

IMG_8341

At the end of most chapters, the pets get some kind of upgrade, and usually it’s a choice!  Level up the character card?  Get a charm?  Get one of two powers?  The pets really do feel like they get better as you play!

IMG_8230

This is a boss-battler, so there will be big-bad bosses that you fight long the way!  See above for the bosses you may encounter!!  The story has a few turns along the way, so you may not see all the bosses on your first play-through!

IMG_8366

In the end, the components are a little small so they can fit in the smaller box, but they are all well-labelled and very readable  I have played through at least one full campaign, and I never had a problem with the smaller components: they are quite nice for this little game.  The theme is a bit odd with cyber pets.  And the game is surprisingly small.  So, this is an odd little duck of a game! (EDITOR: maybe better said, this is an odd little goose … since Roman is a GOOSE not a duck …)

Rulebook and Campaign Book

IMG_8212

The rules and campaign are all found in this little spiral bound notebook of about 108 pages (yes, 108 pages!).  See the Coke can above for perspective: I wanted to point out how little the rulebook is!

IMG_8301

This is about a B or B- on the Chair Test: I can leave the rulebook open on the chair next to me while I am playing , but the form factor is just a little too small; the font is just a little too small to be well-readable.  Since the spiral notebook stays open, we leave the grade in the “B” region, as it is still very usable.

IMG_8229

Now, the rulebook doesn’t have an index or glossary (booo!), but it does have a nice Table of Content (see above).

IMG_8227

The rulebook is replete with Story! It starts off with a nice intro (see above), and continues a story (I should hope so with 108 pages of rules and campaign!).  

IMG_8265

Although there are pictures of most of the major components, there are aren’t a lot of pictures of set-up except the one above.  There were MANY MANY time where the rules referred to some component, and I just had to guess which it was (I found the sleeper components, I think I found the Horde token, but I never found the Hack tokens).

IMG_8302

The rules were okay.  There were a lot of time when I really wish there had been further elaborations of some of the rules.   Many times, I just make the best call I could knowing the basics of the game.

IMG_8323

There’s a lot of cute story here, the rules are pretty good at getting us going, but there were just too many times when things were underspecified (which token? Explain this rule please?) so I can’t call this this a good rulebook.  

It was adequate to pretty good.  I was able to play the game and move forward quickly most of the time.

Solo Rules

IMG_8204

So, Cyber Pet Quest does support solo play!  (Thank you for following Saunders’ Law!)

IMG_8269

Unfortunately, the solo mode for Cyber Pet Quest is “play and operate all 4 Cyper Pets!”  In fact, at any player count, all 4 Cyber Pets must be in the game at the same time!  

IMG_3686

Some of you might remember Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles from earlier this year: it’s solo mode also has the players operate all four characters at the same time!  See above!  

IMG_1947

It’s not that uncommon to have the solo gamer play all four characters: recall that both X-Men: Heroes Resistance and Marvel Zombies: Hero Resistance also have the solo player play all four positions! See above.

IMG_4034

In Set A Watch, although we initially had our reservations about the 4-character solo mode, it really grew on us and became the default way we played the campaign game Set A Watch: Doomed Run!  See above.  This is because the Set A Watch characters are simple enough that it’s not too much work to context switch between them. 

IMG_4373

Marvel Zombies: Heroes Resistance is harder to play solo with 4 characters because the characters get more and more complicated as the game goes on.

IMG_8343

Cyber Pet Quest sits somewhere between Marvel Zombies: Heroes Resistance and Set A Watch.  At the beginning of the campaign, it’s pretty easy to context switch between the Cyber Pet characters as they don’t have too many powers, items, charms or actions.  So, the initial games are easier to play.  But later in the campaign, after each character has levelled-up significantly, each character has a wide array of Powers! Charms!  Actions!  Each character gets MUCH harder to play, as there so much to do!  

IMG_8366

See above as the characters have so many cards in the final game: Powers, Charms, Items!!!  I admit, the sheer amount of options for each character does get overwhelming … BUT … as the solo player, I have been playing and upgrading the characters by myself!  It’s gratifying to see all the characters get better.  I think since they have been levelling up gradually (between campaigns), it doesn’t feel that bad.  I think it’s actually harder in Marvel Zombies: Heroes’ Resistance to deal with the powers creep as the characters go up quickly in the same game!  At least with Cyber Pet Quest, you have a chance to become familiar with the new powers/abilities between games.

IMG_8360

Still, there is a lot of context switching between characters as you play.  I can recommend playing the first Chapter 0 solo to see if you think you can handle this 4 character solo mode;  even if you don’t like this solo mode, the Chapter 0 solo mode makes it easy to learn the base mechanics to teach your friends.

IMG_8364

I have to say, despite the complexity of the 4-character solo game, I had fun!  I found myself playing through the entire 6+ campaign game in a solo mode last weekend!  Wait, what??  It so easy to play each game, it was fun to level-up, it was interesting to see what happened next.  I must admit, I am a little surprised I ended up playing the entire campaign solo last weekend!  But I was having fun!  And the fact that each chapter is under an hour contributed to that.

Cooperative Play

IMG_8368

Cooperative mode is a little bit more fun than solo mode: for one, you have more people controlling the 4 Cyber Pets!  Above, Teresa and I split up the Cyber Pets so that she was operating two (Roman and Freya) and I was operating two (Jane and Clay).  I do think it’s interesting that we got very invested in our characters; so much so that we really did know them by name!

IMG_8371

This is a light cooperative campaign, where cooperation seemed to happen pretty naturally.  Clay was VERY good at taking out the CyMS, while Freya was VERY good at dealing with items and passing them around.  Jane was the mover, getting to far-away stuff and distracting the CyMS.  And finally good old Roman was good at doing a little bit of everything!  We focused on each pet’s strengths and naturally felt empowered and potent as we moved around the apartment.

IMG_8367

The game is light and fun!  I suppose the best recommendations we can give this game is 

 1) I am playing it again cooperatively EVEN though I have already gone through the entire campaign!
 2) We are planning to play more games (cooperatively) in the future

In a family situation, I can see this “4 characters” working out okay! Maybe give the “favorite” character to the little ones (Teresa really liked Roman, so she got Roman), but they can still give input as how the rest of the pets work.  In other words, assign the pets in the way that brings the kidlets in the most!  And the “adults” can just make sure the game stays on track!

What I Liked

IMG_8204

Game Length: Even though this is a campaign game, I like that each chapter feels “doable” in under an hour. The game box says the game is 30-45 minutes and that’s about right! (Oh! And you can jump into any single game of the campaign if you want a one-shot! There’s a nice page that describes “get theses upgrades for set-up if you just want to play a single session!”)

IMG_8244

Sense of Humor:  This game is kind of light and fluffy; it has a sense of humor!  See above as one of the cards is Red Dog Energy!  And there is a Cat Videos on the Internet item as well!  This is a campaign game, but it’s light enough that the game never feels “overwhelming”.  It just kind of fun.

IMG_8348

Readable: I was very worried, since this game was so small, that the components would suffer readability issues.  Although I wish the rulebook was bigger, in general, everything was readable at the small size!

IMG_8313

Story: The story is quite cute and keeps you in the game.  It’s a light story, but still engaging.

IMG_8335

Upgrades:  At the end of each chapter, there are SO MANY ways you can get upgrades! Charms! Powers! Levelling-Up!  And you get choices: Level 1 or Level 2?  Side A or Side B? It feels really great to be moving foward and making so many choices!  We saw a lot of this same feeling in Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders from a few weeks ago!

IMG_8348

Cooperation: There were a number of mechanisms in the game that encouraged cooperation.  The Pet Collars that you got in the very beginning allowed Cyber Pets to do extra stuff, but only if they were close to other pets!  This made for interesting tensions!  And many times, there were things to interact with that required TWO cyber pets in the same round to do something!  I liked that! It felt like the pets were cooperating to get stuff done!

What I Didn’t Like

IMG_8363

Underspecified: As the campaign gets further and further along, it feels like there are more and more places where the game needs a little more elaboration/specification. The final villain you fight has some real questions about how to operate him (Do you round up or down when you halve? How many hit points does he have?), and these kind of questions came up more than they should have during the game. As an experienced gamer, I know when to just make a ruling and move on. But I worry a family-friendly game like this might cause problems for families that aren’t as comfortable with under-specificity. Caveat Emptor.

IMG_8364

4-Character Solo Mode: Although I had fun playing the solo mode, the fact that you always have to have all 4 Cyber Pets in play isn’t ideal. I made it work, I had fun, but it’s hard to recommend the solo mode with a 4-character mode.

IMG_8353

Left-To-Right:  Every set of Locations had the Cyber Pets move left to right.  The topology was fixed in a straight line, and the pets almost always had to move all the way to the right from the left.  Although this kept a lot of rules simple (with the AGGRO token and CyMS movement), it felt a little “constricting” that every single Location set “moved left-to-right”.  It got a little tedious ALWAYS going left-to-right; I wish there had been some more topology to move around in.  And I am tired of saying left-to-right.

Turn Order

IMG_8243

The gameplay for Cyber Pet Quest has something of interest from turn order perspective:  the game play alternates between pets and CyMS!  It’s still variable, as you don’t know which pet is coming out or which CyMS is coming out, but it keeps the game balanced between the two!  Recall we have discussed Variable Player Turn Order many times here at CO-OP Gestalt (see here for a culmination of that discussion)!  The solution that Cyber Pet Quest employs against the problems of Variable Turn Order is the same as one from Adventure Tactics: Adventures in Alchemy: the Static Initiative Invariant.  Basically, this just means we alternate between Heroes and Villains.

IMG_0945

Now, I have to admit, even though I do like this solution overall, I was worried it might still be a little too random.   But, I was pleasantly surprised when I saw the game introduce Charms and Powers and Items that would mitigate some of that randomness!  See above as the Honk and Bonk Charm gives the pet some agency over turn order! As the game goes on, and the players become more powerful, they CAN affect the turn order!

So, I was happy to see both Static Initiative Invariant here as well as Power/Charms/Items to help the players control the turn order! 

Conclusion

IMG_8345

I like Cyber Pet Quest. I really didn’t expect to go through the entire campaign solo this last weekend, but I had so much fun playing, I went ahead and finished it! I like heavy campaign games like Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders (from a few weeks ago), but sometimes it’s nice to have a light campaign game (like Cyber Pets Quest) that feels “finishable”: there’s only 6+ chapters to this game, and you can do it in a weekend! I am living proof!

IMG_8302

There’s just enough wonkiness with the rulebook being underspecified that I worry non-gamers might get frustrated with the rules.  Although there’s a lot of unique and interesting set-ups and interactions in the game, sometimes they aren’t that well-specified.  Just be aware that you might have to make some rule judgements in order to move forward.  

IMG_8366

I think this game is better as a cooperative game, since it’s just easier to share control all four cyber pets with more players.  But I still quite enjoyed the 4-character mode; but you have to be aware what you are getting into with all the extra context switching!

IMG_8226

This is a fun little cooperative boss-battler for 1-4 players; it has a cute story and a light vibe that’s quite enjoyable. I’d give it a 7/10 overall: it loses some points for some of the rules wonkiness and limited left-to-right topology, but Cyber Pets Quest was an overall enjoyable experience!

Sentinels of the Defenders of the Pandemic Realm of Multiverses: A Review of Freedom Five. Part I: Unboxing, Solo Play and First Impressions

IMG_8022

I am very depressed as I write this.  Freedom Five made the #2 spot on my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games from 2021!  I was so looking forward to this!  But I find myself very disappointed by it.

IMG_8010

It’s not that I didn’t get a lot of stuff: I got so much!  The box arrived at my door October 26, 2024.  Freedom Five was on Kickstarter in Oct 2020, and it promised delivery in Nov. 2021.  So, it’s three years late. And it’s been four years since I Kickstarted it!

IMG_8016

There’s so much stuff here: no, they delivered everything they promised.  Well, most of it.  I still seem to be missing some stuff … (A Dice Tower unboxing showed them getting more stuff…)

This is going to be a little different than most reviews I do.

What Is This?

IMG_8014

Freedom Five is a basically Defenders of the Realm with Sentinels of the Multiverse theming, i.e, it’s a superhero game!  And I love my Superhero games!

IMG_8939

Defenders of the Realm itself is just a gyration on the game system Pandemic: in very coarse terms, Defenders of the Realm is really just  Pandemic with dice.

IMG_8941

In Pandemic, you fight disease cubes, but the randomness is mostly in the decks of cards; most players turns are very deterministic and players can make progress against the badness.    In Defenders of the Realm, every fight or check is a dice roll.  Let me repeat that: every fight or check is a dice roll.

Freedom Five is the newest game in the Defenders of the Realm game system.  Every fight or check is a dice roll.

Too Random

IMG_8134

First and foremost: this game, Freedom Five, is simply too random.  Everything in the game is a dice check: 
1) Fighting Henchmen (like removing disease cubes in Pandemic: you have to roll dice to get rid of Henchmen! And you frequently can’t do anything else on a space until you get rid of all Henchmen!)
2) Skill Checks: roll appropriate dice
3) Anarchy Checks (which are arguably just Skill Checks)
4) Fighting Villains or Masterminds: roll dice based on how many cards you discard

IMG_8103

The problem is that the Defenders of the Realm system is simply too random and frankly it feels out-of-date.  If this game came out 10 or 20 years ago, Freedom Five would have had quite the “wow” factor.  But now, we have seen many games in the Pandemic with dice ilk that do the dice better!  Here’s four more recent games that improve the Pandemic with dice genre … two of them are actually Pandemic games!

IMG_8948
The dice: no bad outcomes! All good stuff!

1) World of Warcraft: A Pandemic System (see our review here).  This is Pandemic with dice, but the dice are much less random: essentially, all good outcomes!  See above! Some of the outcomes are just slightly better than others.  When you roll, you have a really really really good idea what you will get.  

IMG_3431

2) Star Wars: The Clone Wars (A Pandemic system) (see our review here).  The same idea happens here as in World of Warcraft, except the “dice” is one 12-sided die with essentially all good outcomes, again some are slightly better than others (sometimes the hero takes a damage).  See above.

IMG_1652
Exploding Dice!

3) Hour of Need with it’s exploding dice! (see our review here). See above! This is one of my favorite dice systems: even if you fail (explosions are successes, masks are failures), you still get a FOCUS token for every failure … which you can turn a failure into a success at a later date! This feels intuitively like you are “learning from your mistakes”! It also makes it so you can still succeed even if you roll poorly! Even if you roll poorly, those FOCUS tokens turn failures into successes!

Given that Hour of Need is a Superhero game, this dice system is perhaps the most relevant here, and we will discuss it more later.

IMG_7880

4) Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders (see our review here):  The dice here are similar to World of Warcraft; they almost always succeed, but if you are clever and have flanking or enough FOCUS, you can do better!  Let me repeat that: If you are clever, you can do better!

These four newer games all improve on the basic dice formula; they don’t feel very random and there seems to be a predictable baseline of success which allows you to be smart. Freedom Force feels much more random as you can fail on every die when you roll. You have to roll above a threshold to succeed (just like Defenders of the Realm). You cannot have any sense of how successes you will get, as you have to roll “above” a number, …. but, if you roll all 1s … you are screwed! (Yes, yes, there are dice mitigation methods, but they are limited).

IMG_8081

My problem with so many things dependent upon these dice (and almost everything in the game is a dice check) is that Freedom Five is a game that makes me feel impotent and unlucky; I can’t tell you how many turns I had where I simply lost an entire turn (5 actions) when I couldn’t roll anything good!!  In fact, in some turns, I actually caused more problems: many of the Anarchy checks cause problems when you fail!   How is this fun?  You are supposed to be a Superhero and you can’t even take down one henchman?????

IMG_8168

There is an old mantra: “I’d Rather Be Lucky Than Smart” … and that mantra applies wholesale to Freedom Five.  It doesn’t matter how “smart” I play, if I roll poorly (which is easy), I will lose.  And that’s the fundamental problem I have with this game: I can’t be smart.  I can just try my best and hope I’m lucky.  Even worse, though, this is NOT a short game.  A game with this much randomness needs to be short, but the first few games I have played have lasted 3 hours?

I don’t feel like I want to play this again because it feels sooooooooooo random.    Right now this is a 4/10 for me. You heard me.   A Superhero game with great components:  a 4/10.

However, there is hope.  See below.

Other Problems

There are other problems I had with the game.  Given that I waited four years for this, I am still frustrated at some of the issues that came up: these issues also contributed to my 4/10.

IMG_8115

Bases: The bases of the miniatures should be the SAME COLOR as the type on the card!  And they are not!!! See above as Proletariat is BLUE type, but his base is purple?? Ermine is green and her base is not green!  Looking across the board, I’d like to be able to correlate the Villain to his relevant color!!  I don’t think the colors ever change for the Villains, so this is very frustrating visually.  This is especially hard after coming off of Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders (see our review here) where the minis all had color-coded bases!

IMG_8135
Backs of Villain cards need to be better:  When you defeat a villain, you flip his card to show he’s been defeated!  But, you have NO IDEA what color he was???  Why do you care?  Because the BLUE henchmen (who Proletariat was) are easier to defeat and it’s good to have a visual reminder!  But the back of the card has NO INDICATION of what the color of the villain was!  (If it had a color-code base … see previous point … that would work).

IMG_8177

Hint: I ended up putting a colored meeple on the DEFEATED side so I could remember which Villain was which color.   See above. (And get rid of the BIO: replace it with instructions what do when you battle a defeated HENCHMEN).

IMG_8040
Back of rulebook: There are no player help cards, or Turn Summary cards.  It might have been nice if they put the turn summary on the back of the rulebook. Or symbols or anything useful to gameplay.

IMG_8169
Upgrades: When you get an “upgrade” to your deck, THE NEW CARDS AREN’T LABELLED WHERE THEY CAME FROM!!!  The “better Flight” card (left) is from envelope #1.  From now on, I take pictures of my upgrades so I know where they came from.  That way I can reset my game.

IMG_8119

Bystanders:  There are 42 bystanders.  Note the Best Friends #1.  You know how unlikely we are to get all 3 best friends?  More untethered randomness.

IMG_8132

And some bystanders cause penalties.  Whee. That was fun. In a game where I have so much randomness, it’s good to know some bystanders will cause issues. It’s maybe thematic, but it’s not fun.

IMG_8114
Binding:  This binding on the scenario books is UNFORGIVABLE.   You have to have the pages of the book open to see the rules, the end of turn actions, and it’s SO HARD TO KEEP OPEN without overfolding/destroying the binding.  See above.  We saw this WAAAAAY back when we reviewed The Forests of Admiron when we hated the binding on the rulebook.  I can’t keep the scenario book open (easily) to look up the rules.  This is unforgivable; the scenario book should have been a book that could lay flat.

IMG_8160

I ended up using one of the unused character boxes to hold it open.  That was a workaround: see above.

IMG_8067

Minis:  The minis are just … okay?  I got the prepainted minis … and they look a little soul-less?  See Legacy above.  

IMG_0758

Compare the minis to acrylic standees in another superhero game: Tokyo Sidekick (see our review here).  See above.

IMG_8068

I kind of think Acrylic Standees with Legacy’s art (see above) would have been so much cooler.

IMG_8126

No Solo Rules: I played my first three or so games solo, but there is no acknowledgement of solo rules anywhere in the rulebook!?  I think you can play solo with one character, but I don’t know. In fact, Legacy has cards that affect “other heroes” … so do they affect no one?  Himself only?  Does the solo game change slightly so that they affect himself?  I think the game is “probably” better with 2-handed solo (the solo player playing two characters), but I wanted ONE SENTENCE in the rulebook:

“You can play Freedom Five solo with one hero: the only change is that any hero card that affects other heroes will instead affect the solo hero.”    

I am genuinely surprised there are no solo rules.  The only acknowledgement of any solo mode was a 1-5 Players notation on the bottom of the box.

IMG_8097

And the bottom of the box is so hard to read!

Conclusion

IMG_8173

Several of my friends have asked me “Are you going to sell the game?  Or can you come up with some House Rules to save it?”  Firstly, I have only played this game solo.  It’s possible the game will get better with more people, as they can maybe (maybe) help mitigate some of the randomness I hate so much. 

IMG_8171

At first I thought: “This game was irreparably random; there’s no way I can fix it“.  But all my friends encouraged me to try to come up with some house rules.  Given that I spent $375 on all this, maybe it’s worth a little extra time.   And after recovering from my depression about this game, I actually think I have some ideas that might help.

Right now, Freedom Five is a 4/10.  But that’s only from solo plays.   Come back in a few weeks after I get some cooperative plays, and maybe I try some house rules.  Maybe then I can recommend it?

I hope so. I really really really want to like this game.  As it is right now, I don’t.

UPDATE: I sold it. I couldn’t bring myself to play it anymore, and there’s too much negativity when you propose house rules. Those of you who are interested, I wanted to use the Hour of Need dice system (current failures become future successes) for all dice rolls EXCEPT the four villain rolls! There is a lot of fun when you roll 14 dice to see if you can take out the final Villain! But the piddly dice rolls for Henchmen and stuff, that wasn’t fun; that’s what I think needed the Hour of Need dice system.

Wait, What Am I Unfolding Again? Review of Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders

IMG_7706

Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders is a cooperative campaign that was on Kickstarter back in April 2022. This was the follow on to the original Tidal Blades game (which is really more of a head-to-head skirmish game). I knew nothing about the original Tidal Blades when I backed this: only that the components looked really cool. I backed it because it looked like it had a cool solo and co-op campaign.

IMG_7675

I went all-in and got the base game (lower right), the stretch goals (upper), and the miniatures (lower left): See above.  This is the deluxe version with awesome miniatures!

IMG_7679

The most important thing to realize is that this is a standalone solo or cooperative campaign game!  I.e., you don’t need the previous game at all!!! 

IMG_0939

It’s a little confusing because the side of the box says “Part 2” (see above), but this is really just the next game in the same universe! Tidal Blades 2 continues with the ideas of the original Tidal Blades (which was NOT cooperative) but in a solo and cooperative game!

IMG_7704

So, in some sense, this is still a skirmish game, as players play cooperatively against monsters in the game.  Honestly, this game really gives me a Gloomhaven (see review of Jaws of The Lion here) or Batman: Gotham City Chronicles (solo or cooperative mode: see our review here) vibe! Players move around on a map in a book and fight monsters!  You’ll see what I mean more below.

Let’s take a closer look!

Unboxing the Miniatures

IMG_7678

As much as you really want to see what’s in the main box, I gotta show you the miniatures first.  They are fantastic!

IMG_7680

The minis are washed, they are tri-color,  and they have 2 sets of bases!  These are some of the nicest miniatures I have seen!

IMG_7690

The top part of the box comes with the monsters you fight: they are all notated on a sheet (and, eben better, are labelled where they are in the box!!!) at the top of the box.

IMG_7686

Wow!  The monsters are all bluish and really great! See above!  Let’s take a look at a few!

IMG_7687

IMG_7688

IMG_7689

These are pretty awesome!  Below the tray with the monsters are the Heroes and Boss Monsters!

IMG_7683

The Heroes are light brownish, and the monsters are very purple: see below.

IMG_7685

Let’s take a closer look at some Heroes (below):

IMG_7722

IMG_7721

The Boss Monsters are very purple! See below.

IMG_7695

These miniatures are just awesome!

IMG_7693

IMG_7694

The game also comes with plastic bases for the minis so you can tell them apart.  The normal bases denote the normal monsters, and the sparkly bases denote the “mutant” monster (like the Elite monsters in Gloomhaven).  The “mutants” are just the tougher version of the monsters!

We also have really nice plastic Fruit and shells (replacing the cardboard from the base game).

IMG_7828

See above as the colored hit point tracks match the colors of the base?  And the “sparkly” yellow one is the mutant!

IMG_7807

These bases really make it easier to tell monsters apart so you can track the hit points.

IMG_7880

Overall, the colors and bases are well-thought out and make each entity stand out on the table. See above with some monsters, characters, and a boss monster all in the same frame! 

These minis are just fantastic.

Rulebook

IMG_7738

The rulebook is quite good.  But it has two major flaws.

IMG_7742

The rulebook completely fails the Chair Test!  See above as it flops over both edges being almost unusable!  This rulebook made a fundamental error by being the same size as the box!

IMG_7765

Much like Batman: Gotham City Chronicles, the solution is to use TWO chairs, and have the spine of the rulebook sit in between!  See above as we can keep the rulebook open and useful!  I do like that the fonts are big!  And the rulebook is full of good pictures!  It is easy to see the rules on the chair next to me … once there are TWO chairs!

IMG_7741

The rulebook has a Table of Contents that make it easy to look stuff up! Nice!

IMG_7770

The components pages are great, with every component having a picture and being well-labelled!

IMG_7750

The set-up is nice (it’s over three pages), but some of the set-up is deferred to the campaign book. See above.

In general, I thought this rulebook was great.   There’s a nice glossary in the back (ya), but no index.  I’ll forgive the lack of index because the glossary and Table of Contents were great.

My other major complaint (besides the form factor) was that the combat wasn’t quite as well specified as I want.  We’ll discuss that below.

Otherwise, great rulebook!

Unboxing the Base Game 

IMG_7676

This base box (and the minis box) and both pretty big!  My friends lifted the main box and were surprised how heavy it was! What’s in this gargantuan box?

IMG_7707

See how tall the box is too (relative to a can of Coke)!

IMG_7709

If you want, you can use the Foreteller app to read the “plot” as you go: this is a campaign game where a story unfolds and you may want to get some professionals reading it aloud.  I didn’t get the Forteller narration … and it was just fine without it (but it does have the option: sold separately).

IMG_7755

IMG_7762

There’s a LOT of stuff when you unbox (see above); we’ll go through the components as we discuss gameplay.

Gameplay

IMG_7711

Each player (1-4 players) chooses a Tidal Blade warrior to play. See the six options above and below.

IMG_7718

Each player gets a sheet with their character: see the six above and one (closer, below).

IMG_7717

Each character sheet is for recording stuff as your character levels up during the campaign. Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders is campaign game! Characters will be leveling up; you will be making decisions about how to do that! This sheet will become incredibly marked up as you play…

IMG_7926

See above as Caiman has experienced a lot and marked up his character sheet!

IMG_7895

On the back of your character sheet are “tracks” where you will make choices about how you use experience points and other forms of up-levelling.   To be clear: each character is different! They have a different sheet with different cards and powers that can be activated!

IMG_7776

But, what really distinguishes the characters are the combat decks: see above!!!  Each player has a different Persistent Power (see above) when they start, as well as a different deck!!!  (Well, some cards are in common, but generally the decks are different!!)   These decks will be augmented, culled, and clogged as you play!  To be clear, Tidal Blades 2 is not a deck-building game per se (as that implies you are dynamically changing the deck as you play), it’s what we called a deck-advancement game.  We made this distinction back in our review of Adventure Tactics: See that review here for more discussion of the difference.    Suffice to say, your combat deck only changes/updates  at the end/beginning of each chapter of the campaign.

IMG_7877

What’s even cooler is that when you use of the cards during play, you activate either a row or a column on your board!  What this means, of course, is that you piggy-back on our previous turn! For example, if we just played Careful Strike to the board (top middle), we are allowed to activate ALL the actions in either the middle column or the top row!  Some actions give you shells (armor), some actions allow melee strike (swords), some actions give you resources (yellow/pink), some actions give you movement, and so one!

IMG_7892

As your character takes excessive damage throughout the game,  you can take WOUNDS (see bottom right) which clog your board!  Now, if activate the last row or column, you can’t use anything from that last space!

IMG_7889

This mechanism of playing a card to a row is central to the game!  What card you choose dictates your initiative (Stand Fast! gives me +1 initiative), your current turn, and what actions you might want to play on future turns!  And it’s really fun, because you feel like you have a lot of choices:

IMG_7835
1) Which card do I play?  It affects my current turn and initiative!
2) Where do I place my card?  It affects which “core” symbols I block!
3) Which row or column do I activate?  What previous cards do I want to leverage?
4) Do I want to finish a row with 3 cards?  I may clear it, but I get a very powerful one turn!
Each turn is just rife of choice!

IMG_7827

Each character also has spirit, focus, and some “shells” which can serve as armor or activate other abilities!  Armor in the game is handled by putting shells from your uncharged area into your blocking area!  So, if you want to play defensive for a round, you can choose the shells action! Yet another type of choice: defensive or offensive!

IMG_7965

Players move around a map of hexes, fighting creatures! (Sound familiar? Gloomhaven, I am looking at you…)  See above.

IMG_7733

The map books remind me a little of Gloomhaven: Jaws of the Lion, as you just set-up the board from a book of maps and go!  This map book was the key innovation in Gloomhaven: Jaws of the Lion. What’s cool, is that Tidal Blades 2 furthers that innovation!

IMG_6063
The storybook is the play area! Set-up is easy! Just turn to that page!

Players move around the map, but the stupid spiral binding gets in the way of the map in Jaws of the Lion!  See above.

IMG_7798

What Tidal Blades 2 does is very clever! Rather than just one map book, Tidal Blades 2 has two map books (actually 3), but each book is rotated so that the spiral bindings are on the outside!  Instead, the middles just touch and make a contiguous surface!  See above!  The middle of the board, where a lot of action is, in untainted by the spiral bindings!  It looks more like a contiguous surface!

IMG_7982

It’s really easy to set-up each chapter of the campaign!  Just turn the book to the proper pages!

IMG_7880

Combats are decided by dice: every SWORD you generate from your cards gives you a die! Red symbols are a straight-up hit, blue CAN be a hit if you have advantage (if your compatriots are flanking), and yellow focus CAN be a hit … if you spend a focus point!  And that decides how much damage you do!

IMG_7883

Monster combats are similar: all monsters perform the actions of their current card: see above as the mudcrabs move 2 (to the closest character) and then just do 2 straight damage! (This is modified a little by a damage die).

IMG_7946

There’s all sorts of monsters with all sorts of abilities! Some poison you! (See above)

IMG_7828

Each monster is tracked by a hit point track (see above) with the bases differentiating them.  The purple die (lower left) modifies every monster attack!

IMG_7977

There’s a lot more to this game, but that’s the “flavor” of the game!

Campaign

IMG_7727

Let’s be 100% clear: this is a campaign game!  It last about 18 chapters, and each game is about 2 to 2.5 hours (including set-up and tear-down: a lot of your time will be set-up and tear-down).

IMG_7830

Each chapter describes in great detail which maps you need, which monsters you fight, and what the set-up is!  See the first chapter above! (Minor spoilers above).

IMG_7932

There is a story unfolding (pun not intended) about the folds of time.  Each chapter begins with some text describing the story (picture blurred on purpose above).

IMG_7898

After a few chapters, there will be Interludes which give you a chance to level up.  To be clear, there is SOME levelling-up after most chapters, but the Interludes offer significant levelling-up!

IMG_7900

At these Interludes, Players choose where to go to “spend” their resources: the market? The floating gardens? It depends how you want to level-up your character. Cull cards? Add Items?  Add skills? Whatever you want!

IMG_7698

Although this is a campaign, the Stretch Goals pack (see above) comes with 5 one-shot scenarios.

IMG_7724

Since this is a campaign, and you have to mark up your sheet, I went ahead and made a copy of all the character sheets so I don’t have to sully the originals.  There are enough sheets in there that you “probably” don’t have to do this, but I prefer not to mark up the originals if possible.

Solo Play

IMG_7705

So, Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders has two solo modes! (Congratulations for following Saunders’ Law!)  The simpler of the two solo modes is to just play two-handed: choose two characters and operate them as-if it were a 2-Player game.  This is the route I chose. And so should you!!

If you REALLY REALLY REALLY want a solo mode where you only play 1 character (but then still kinda have to operate some other pets/creatures anyways) with complicated exceptions, there is a second solo mode.  I usually eschew complicated solo modes because the exceptional rules are always SO HARD to keep track of!  Play two-handed: you’ll thank me for embracing the simpler mode … the simpler two-handed solo mode has NO exceptions to rules; you just play the game they way it was meant to be played.

IMG_7985

At the time of this writing, I am eight chapters into the campaign!  I have seen boss battles, several maps, several different ideas (jumping, running water, flying, etc), and some really great miniatures!    Every new chapter introduces new monsters and new ideas and keeps the game fresh!

IMG_7981

Playing two characters is juuuust about the right level of complexity.  Sometimes it’s a little overwhelming, since each character has their own deck with their own unique cards, but since the system is well-described and well-notated (seriously! The icons are VERY intuitive), it doesn’t make it too hard to context switch back and forth between the characters.

IMG_7976

One drawback is that there is a lot of maintenance for the solo player: set-up, run character 1, run character 2, operate the initiative track, operate the villains, lather-rinse-repeat, tear-down. This is really where the vibe felt like Batman: Gotham City Chronicles: there’s just a lot of work to keep the game going!  But, it’s kinda fun!  Everything is so bright and well-notated! The monsters are well-tracked (with the bases and colored hit point tracks), and the rules are pretty solid (so there’s not much second guessing, modulo one issue).

IMG_7858

I really like this solo mode: I hope to finish this campaign at some point during the year.  I am currently playing two campaigns: my solo campaign with 2 characters and a cooperative campaign with the other 4 characters (with my friends).

I fully expect this to make my Top 10 Solo Games of 2024: it’s that good!  There are just so many good choices!  Where do I go? What cards do I play?  How do I level-up my character? The choices keep me involved the whole time, even if there is quite a bit of maintenance per turn.

IMG_7705

The solo game took longer to play than perhaps it should: the box says 60-90 minutes but I frequently was at 2 hours; I also tend to like a little analysis paralysis when I play by myself.  There’s no one around, so I can try lots of things without fear of wasting someone else’s time.

Cooperative Play

IMG_7933

The cooperative experience is just in its infancy as we are only two games in, but my friends still keep wanting to play it!  “Let’s keep playing it!”  They really like it!

IMG_7943

Every player has agency on their turn; the game is just too complicated for an Alpha Player to come in and ruin a player’s experience … there are just too many choices for a single player: the Alpha Player will be too busy figuring out his own turn!! At the same time, there’s plenty of cooperation and players plan when to flank (see below), which enemies to engage, which actions to take, when to defend vs. attack!   This has a good blend of agency and cooperation.

IMG_7939

One of the things we DIDN’T like about the cooperative game Endeavor Deep Sea (from two weeks ago: see review here) was that the game didn’t “really” have any mechanisms for helping each other too much; players had a lot of multiplayer solitaire going on in Endeavor Deep Sea.  That’s not the case here!  Even you though you can choose to play multiplayer solitaire, you can also do quite a few things to directly help your compatriots!  You can spend shells to allow your friends to re-roll dice (if they run out of re-rolls)!  You can set-up flanking opportunities! You can use skills that help everyone within 2 spaces!  There’s a number of mechanisms where the sole purpose is to help your compatriots!  And that does increase the level of cooperation!  Even choosing the initiative order can be an act of cooperation!  And THANK GOODNESS there are no Communications Limitations in this game!  Just last week, we saw how the Communications Limitations ruined that cooperative game!  Luckily, you can talk all you want and work together in Tidal Blades 2!!

IMG_7940

The only real negative for the game is that sometimes it can take a while to get back around to your turn (as there is no simultaneous play): players must play in initiative order.  Like any game with lots o choices, sometimes a little Analysis Paralysis can slip in and slow down the game.  It’s still not too bad, because you can always be talking with your friends or figuring your own turn out while waiting for others.

IMG_7942

It’s easier to overlap turns in a cooperative game (like Tidal Blades 2) because you can ask your friends to leave the board “in a certain state” so you can preplan your turn!  In a competitive game, you always have to wait until the previous turns are over to re-assess the board every turn!  With a little cooperation, there can be much more overlap!  And we saw some of that overlap here in Tidal Blades 2!  It’s a minor point, but that overlap can make cooperative games (without simultaneous actions) move a little faster.

IMG_7941

Overall, this game was a lot of fun cooperatively.   It’s a good blend of agency and cooperation, and there are many ways players can help each other.  It’s fun to talk and plan with your friends!

Flanking and Advantage

IMG_7822

So, this is, at its core, a miniatures fighting game!  Which means you have rules for flanking and advantage!  If you flank  (players surround an enemy adjacently from opposite sides), you can get advantage (which allows you to turn the blue wave symbols on dice into hits)!  This is very cool, because it is a mechanism that encourages the players to cooperate and coordinate their attacks!  The best results come if you cooperate, flank an enemy and maybe get 50% more hits because you can gain advantage!

If you saw “Flanking and Advantage” and thought “What is this … 5th Edition Dungeons and Dragons?”  You are not the only one who thought that!!!  But, these ideas in this game really do help improve the cooperation: they encourage an easy way to increase the odds of hits! 

What I Liked

IMG_7691

The minis!  You can get the game and just use cardboard standees, but I would strongly recommend getting the miniatures! See above!! They are so well done, with the different bases, the beautiful sculpts, the different colors to highlight the different types!  I feel like they really made the game feel more thematic.  The minis add to the cost of the game (as you buy them separately), but I think in this case, they were worth it.

IMG_7876

Combat Mechanism! The combat mechanism of choosing a card, then choosing where to put it, then choosing a row or column to activate is so cool!   Your choices affect your current turn as well as future turns!! This mechanism is at the core of the game, and it makes you feel like you have choices at all times!

IMG_7828

Well-done Monsters! The monsters are pretty easy to run (modulo one problem, see below)!  The cards clearly specify what to do, the bases clearly denote which monster is which, and it’s pretty quick to set-up a game!  Heck, I spent more time putting plastic bases on monster minis than I did setting up the cards!  It really is easy and quick to SET-UP and RUN the monsters!

IMG_7880

Not too much Randomness!  I was very worried that there would be too much randomness with dice deciding combat … but here’s the thing, there’s not that much randomness!  There is usually at least one hit per die and sometimes your focus shows (which means you may have to spend focus if you want extra hits).  See the dice above! If you roll XXX dice, you will probably get about XXX hits!  If you have extra focus to spend, or some special abilities, or flanking (see below), you may need much better!  It’s like having a baseline of hits, and you choose (by having focus, or flanking) if you need to do better!  I really like this system!   I usually dislike the randomness of dice, but how it’s done here works for me!

IMG_7918

Easy-to-Read! The components are well-labelled, bright, and have very easy-to-discern icons!  This game is very intuitive and easy to read!

IMG_7834

The Components!  The components (even if you don’t get the miniatures ) are fantastic!!  The dual-book system solves the spiral middle problem, the cards are linen finished, the dice are clear and beautiful, and the cardboard components are well-done … just overall the components are a joy!

IMG_7965

Cooperation and Agency!  The game has many many ways to encourage cooperation, but still allow each character to have their own agency.   The card choice mechanism is very intense and full of choice; players are allowed to coordinate if they like (there are no silly communication limits)!!  Players must decide who goes after what!   Players must decide if it makes sense to flank!  But, you can’t really Alpha Player the game because each deck is so different, and frankly, each character is so involved (in a good way) to run!  Players will have intense agency on their turn to operate their character, while still having to work together to come up with a plan!  And that flanking mechanism I think really encourages finer cooperation: it’s so good to gain advantage, you just need to!

IMG_7870

Loot 2.0!  In some ways, Tidal Blades 2 feels like it should be called Gloomhaven 2.0.   One of the things we house ruled in Gloomhaven was the Loot Rule (see discussion here: Top Seven House Rule for Cooperative Games).  Basically, stopping to pick up  loot  takes you out of the flow as you have to stop and use actual resources to do that.  The nice thing in Tidal Blades 2 is that you can a free action every turn to “interact” with one item!  So, maybe you can’t pick up three pieces of fruit or five rewards, but you can move by something and pick it up without needing to spend one of your precious actions.  Granted, you may still have to spend movement, but usually a reward (when you kill an enemy) comes out right next to you, and you just pick it up!  We enjoyed this free interaction SO MUCH more than Loot in Gloomhaven!

What I Didn’t Like

IMG_7978

Wait, What Am I Unfolding?  I love story in my games (it’s why I like Astro Knights: Eternity better than the original … it has a compelling story!!), but the story and the writing here feels … forced and a little turgid.   And I like story!   But it felt like Tidal Blades 2 were trying to hard to have their own “surfer-techno” lingo, and it just didn’t work for me.   I tended to just skim over the exposition and head straight into the scenarios.

IMG_7767

Enemy Movement:  As easy as the monsters are to set-up and operate, the AI for the monsters movement is a little weak.  There’s some nonsense about “clockwise heading north” in the case of ties, but the description in the text and the picture don’t match (for me anyways).   In the end, the final rule for specifying things is done using “Fastest Initiative”: the character with the fastest initiative is the tie-breaker … that tended to be my goto rule!  Many times, that was the tie-breaker (when it was really unclear) for us because it just make things easier.  Otherwise, the enemy movement phase becomes an overwrought “look at all possibilities”, which isn’t fun.  Gloomhaven did a better job at specifying the enemy AI, but at the cost of more rules.

The AI basically works, but if you focus too much on it, the game can become overwrought.  I worry that zealots for rules will make playing this less fun as you spend the entire game getting the AI rules “just right”.  And that’s fine if that’s what you want, but I think most people won’t love that.  Just play the game; it’s good!

Bases didn’t Work? Some of the mutant bases didn’t quite work: the miniature just kind of “slipped” out the base: see the video above.  It wasn’t all the mutant bases, and most of them worked, but it was weird that some of them didn’t work!

Reactions

IMG_7942

Rich: This is probably a Top Ten Game of the year, both solo and cooperatively! I am keeping my solo campaign alive as I still venture cooperatively with my friends!  There is just so much to like!  This feels like the next evolution of Gloomhaven!  This is a 9.5/10 for me. I just wish the AI was better and the story was better: that’s what keeps it from a 10/10.
Sara: I really liked it! Let’s keep on playing it!  It’s probably a 7 for me!
Andrew: Ya! Let’s keep playing it! A 6.5 or 7 for me!
Teresa: I loved the minis and how the game worked, 7 or 8 for me! It was like a better Gloomhaven, and not nearly as dark!

Conclusion

IMG_7945

Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders is a fantastic game!  I still am not quite sure what we are unfolding (I think we are unfolding space and time), but there are so many things to love in this campaign miniatures skirmish game!   The components are first-class, the miniatures are stellar, the cards are easy-to-read and intuitive, the combat system has so many great choices, the leveling up is fun, and the campaign is really interesting! In some ways, Tidal Blades 2 is the next evolution of Gloomhaven as Tidal Blades 2  evolves the map book ideas, the Loot rules, and the combat with the row/column mechanism!

IMG_7890

The card “activate column/row” mechanism works so well, that I think it elevates the game significantly.  It’s such a unique mechanism and makes the player feel like they can do so much! I expect to see this mechanism in upcoming games because it just works so well.

IMG_7923

This is a 9.5/10 for me, with my group rating in highly with 7s and 8s as well. This will make our Top 10 Solo Games of 2024 and the Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2024!  

RichieCon 2024 and Top Interesting Games Since Last Year!

IMG_0671

RichieCon 2024 has come and gone!  This year there were some twists and turns, but everything worked out in the end!  For those of you who don’t know: RichieCon 2024 is the gathering of Richie and his friends … honestly, it’s just an excuse to play games every year!  It’s not even really a Con, but we like to put a little pomp into it to make it sound more bombastic.  This is actually the 10th year of RichieCon, but only the 9th actual convocation (as we skipped a year for CoVid).   

IMG_0737

This year’s RichieCon 2024 token is cool: it’s actually hollowed out and you can only see the year and RTS symbol if you hold it up to the light! See above!  You need the Token to get into the Con, and it can only be obtained through “secret means!”  (Find me or Max in the Hall).  Thanks to Josh M. for designing it and Max M. for printing it!

IMG_0713

The name RichieCon is a bit of a joke: I asked my friend Kurt many many years ago:
“Hey, you wanna go this board game convention that’s far away?” 

Kurt said, “Man! That’s like a $1000 plane ticket and then a $1000 hotel bill!  Why don’t you host your own convention and call it RichieCon! It’ll be a lot cheaper!”

And thus, RichieCon was born.

PreCon

IMG_0599

The week before RichieCon is a lot of putting boxes in boxes.  To have some semblance of order, I try to put related games in bigger boxes and label what’s in there.  See the “hot games” box above!

Sam and Teresa and Sara usually come over and help me put everything together. A big thanks to those three for all their help this year! See some of the boxes we put together above!  

RichieCon Day 0: Secret RichieCon House

IMG_0604

RichieCon has a lot of out of town guests that come into town a day early (Friday) and randomly show up with no place to go.  I learned many years ago that it’s nice to have a “secret” RichieCon house for out-of-town guests to hang out on Friday before the Con.  

The “secret” RichieCon house is modeled after the out-of-towners dinner you have for out-of-town guests for a wedding. It’s a way to say “thank you” for coming from so far away! This year, we had guests from Portland WA, Austin TX, Denver CO, Phoenix AZ, Las Cruces NM, Albuquerque NM, and from as far away as Madison WI!

RichieCon Day 1: Morning Pivot!

IMG_0619

RichieCon Day 1 hit a scheduling SNAFU, so we had to pivot and hold RichieCon Day 1 partly at the “secret” RichieCon house!  I guess it’s not so secret anymore!

Thanks to everyone who helped me move boxes and boxes and boxes of games to the “secret” RichieCon house! I couldn’t have done it without Sam, Charlie, Jeremy, Joe, Kurt, and a bunch of other people I didn’t see moving boxes because I was so busy! RichieCon is a community effort!

RichieCon Day 1: Part II!  This Time, It’s Personal

Once we got into the Rec Center for the second half of the day, many games were played!

RichieCon Day 2: More Games!

Sound Mitigation

IMG_0619

If you have ever been to a board game convention, you know there is a lot of background noise.  We had some issues last year with the background noise being too much, so we tried some sound mitigation techniques.  Basically, the Rec Center has very hard sonic surfaces, so sound bounces and echoes a little too much.  Luckily, the Rec Center bought a fairly large carpet (see above) to help with some of that.

IMG_0628

We also bought 5 CostCo rugs (for $18 each) to augment the sound mitigation of the  hard sonically bright floors. See above and below.

IMG_0631

I also have some friends who work in theater and they were able to hang up up some “quilts” on the wall:

IMG_0687

These quilts (see above) were hanging and absorbed some of the sound.

IMG_0672
The general consensus was that the rugs and quilts all helped, but not quite as much as we hoped.  We will probably hang more quilts and get more rugs for next year!  Thanks to Becca and Jeff for providing the hanging quilts!

Games of the Con

IMG_0642

I think the game of the Con was Slay The Spire!  I saw this game played more than any other game!  I think I taught it 3 to 4 times over the course of 3 days and it was played more time than that! See above!

IMG_0684

Flock Together was pretty popular! I saw this played a bunch of times! See above!

IMG_0690

The Cat Box was a running joke: “Play Games from the Cat Box!”  But, there were a lot of games played from here! Race To The Raft!  Cat In The Box!  Hissy Fit!  Power Hungry Pets! I saw all of those games played at least once!

IMG_0676

The Astro Knight games were popular: I saw both the base game and Astro Knights Eternity being played!  I suspect that’s my fault … see below …

IMG_0659

Casting Shadows was quite popular! I think that was played at least 3 times!

IMG_0715

The weirdest game I played was the RPG Fiasco: It reminded me a lot of Spirit of 77!  The point is to make each other laugh as you make up crazy stuff!

IMG_0706

Forest Shuffle may have the other big game of the Con after Slay The Spire: Kurt taught this game many many times!  See above!

IMG_0677

SO many great games played!  Set A Watch! See above!

IMG_0610

Leviathan Wilds was also quite popular!  I taught that at least three times, and I saw other people playing it!

Interesting Games

IMG_0673

Every year, we stop the Con for a little bit to have a “meeting of the souls” where we all talk about our favorite board games! It’s a chance for everyone to give feedback on games they’ve enjoyed since last we met!!  The real point of this is to try to recommend games that people might be interested in.  What happens is that we recommend games, and then we end up teaching them the rest of the Con! 

#6 What game from the last year surprised you the most?  Good or bad surprise?

IMG_4652

Rich:

Slay The Spire was a huge surprise to me! I almost didn’t back it on Kickstarter, but wow! My games groups loved it and it was probably the most played game at RichieCon!

Sam:

 – Hissy Fit. It’s a light, fast, cute game about getting your cat into the carrier to go to the vet. It is also surprisingly fun to play.

#5 What game in the last year do you disagree with reviewers on?”

pic7068528

Rich:

Two weeks ago, Daybreak won the Spiel Des Jahres.  Everybody seems to love this game except for me. I generally love Matt Leacock designs, but this one felt way too random for me.

Sam:

Tom Vasel didn’t like Race to the Raft. However, I really enjoyed the puzzley nature of creating the path and moving the cats to get them all off the island.

#4 What game (that you paid for) did you really dislike? It’s easy to dislike games other people paid for, but what did you pay for that you disliked?

IMG_5214

Rich:
The cooperative expansion for Valroc: The Legend of Aquiny.  The base game of Valroc is a card-drafting, worker placement game that’s pretty good.  The cooperative expansion looked cool with campaign envelopes, but the limited communication was too limited and the very very slow upgrade paths made this not fun.  I would still recommend people try the base game Valroc.

Sam:

I picked up a copy of Call to Adventure (a story crafting game) and felt kind of meh about my plays of it. I’m hopeful that it may grow on me as I play more and actually get the rules all the way right.

#3 What game that came out in the last year that you liked but other’s didn’t?
IMG_5623
Rich:
Gotham City Chronicles: Solo and Co-operative Expansion.  This was so much work to get to the point where I could play solo (6 days of reading and printing and setting-up), but in the end I had fun.  I don’t think most people like Gotham City Chronicles, especially Shut-Up & Sit-Down, because it’s so much work. But I still like it!
 
Sam:
 
Almost Innocent. I really enjoyed the logic puzzle aspect of it. Richie didn’t enjoy it but was also really tired that night and not necessarily sharp enough to do heavy logical deduction.

#2 What was your favorite expansion that came out in the last year?

IMG_3540

Rich: 
Set A Watch: the new stand-alone expansion and the Set A Watch: Doomed Run! (Strictly speaking, they came from the same kickstarter)!  I love this system because even if you roll badly, you can still place dice on powers to activate them!

Sam:

– +1 on Set a Watch: Doomed Run. I only played one of the missions but it was fun to play the characters that were assigned to me and use their powers and items. The two I had ended up chaining together pretty well.

To be different:: Astro Knights Eternity. It’s a good cooperative deck building game and the story parts surrounding the scenario were really good too.

#1 What was your favorite game that came out in the last year?
IMG_5877
Rich:
A cooperative bag-building super hero game set in the unique world of Invincicble?  Sign me up!  This game was so much better than I expected, the upgrade paths makes this game engaging and keep you involved!
 
Sam:
 
+1 to Invincible (Richie) and World Wonders (Kurt)
 
To be different: Age of Civilization. It’s a really tight worker placement game where you draft your unique civilization powers which include number of workers and then use your workers to research technology, get money, build wonders, and go to war to get victory points. Bonus points: it’s a small box, has good solo modes, and takes 45 minutes to an hour.
 

Theme Song

IMG_0674

During the “meeting of souls” and sharing of games, Joe shared with us his version of the theme Song for RichieCon!  Sung to the tune of the Suffragette City by David Bowie!  And yes, the entire room said said “Hey Man!” at the appropriate places!

RichieCon City: sung to the tune of Suffragette City by David Bowie (new lyrics by Junkerman)

Hey Man, you gotta play in the game
Hey Man, custom pieces ain’t no shame!
Hey Man, your kickstarter is drear.
She said your package should be shipping by the end of the year

Hey Man, you really gotta choose
Hey Man, which game you gonna lose
Hey Man, you better learn all the rules
She said you’re getting killed by Sauron or the Cult of Cthulu

[Chorus]
Oh don’t lean on us man cuz you can’t defeat the wizard
I’m back in RichieCon City!
Well don’t lean on me man cuz you blew up all the kittens
You know my RichieCon City!
It’s outta sight, it’s alright!

Conclusion

IMG_0733

As we bring all the games back to the house …

IMG_0718

As we clean the Rec Center and put it back the way it was ..

IMG_0729

And we lock the door .. heading home … we wonder …. was it all worth it?

Yes! It was! It so much fun to see everyone, despite the issues! We look forward to seeing everyone next year!

A Review of Weirdwood Manor: Putting a Weird Manner into a Cooperative Game!

IMG_5422

Weirdwood Manor was #7 on our Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024!  This is a bit of a weird entry into the cooperative games space: it’s a cooperative boss-battler worker placement euro game with elements of Pandemic! Whew!

IMG_5424

I backed Weirdwood Manor when it was on Kickstarter in April 2023, and it promised delivery in April 2024.  My copy of the game arrived in June 2024, so it’s about 2 months late … which is actually quite good in Kickstarter terms.

IMG_5426

This is a cooperative game for 1-5 Players, Ages 13+.  I think the 90-120 minutes (as reported by the box above) is too short: It’s been more like 2 hours + 20 minutes per player in my plays.  All of my 4-Player games have been 3.5 hours or more!

Let’s take a look!

Unboxing

IMG_5429

This is a pretty big boy, but it still seems about standard box sizes: see above with Can of Coke for reference.

IMG_5483

IMG_5484

This is gorgeous production! See above!

Rulebook

IMG_5430

The rulebook is pretty good overall, but has two major flaws.

IMG_5431

First problem: Weirdwood Manor makes the fatal mistake of making the rulebook the same width and height as the box!  It’s a giant square!  It gets like a C+ on The Chair Test, as I can’t really lay it on the chair next to me! It flops over the edges and is harder to read.

IMG_5447

The second major problem: there is no index.  In many games, that’s not a huge deal, but Weirdwood Manor  is a very complicated game with many, many, many, many rules: it is in dire need of an Index!  

Other than those two flaws, this rulebook is pretty good.  

IMG_5451

The Components page is great, even differentiating between the deluxe and retail versions!

IMG_5432

The Set-Up was mostly really good.

IMG_5435

In general, this rulebook is pretty good: it’s just long!  This is a very very very very complicated game with lots of moving parts (both literally and figuratively)!  The rulebook does a pretty job of explaining most of the pieces and showing nice pictures/examples!  See above!

IMG_5449

I always feel like the rulebook is doing something right if the back cover contains a summary of rules/flow/icons, which Weirdwood Manor does. See above.

This rulebook is pretty good, besides the square form factor and lack of index.  It taught the game pretty well.   Just be aware: it’s a long rulebook because it’s a pretty complicated game.

Good Guys and Bad Guys

IMG_5453

Each player takes the role of one of 6 characters (see above) in the game: these characters are all magically oriented.  These are the good guys!  They have magic powers and spells! Note how nice those dual-layer boards are! 

IMG_5465

Each player takes the corresponding standee: I have the deluxe version which has the acrylic standees (they are just cardboard standees in the normal version of the game). See above.

IMG_5480

Each player gets their own very specific deck of cards.  Every turn, each player must play exactly one of their cards to “do something”! See the decks above!

IMG_5455

As a cooperative boss-battler game, players choose one of three bosses (see above) to fight.  Each one is very different!

IMG_5489

As a cooperative boss battler, there will be a lot of dice rolled when attacks and defenses happen! See above!

IMG_5467

The monsters (and Lady Weirdwood, off to the left above) are also acrylic standees!

IMG_5493

The good guys characters and the bad guy monsters are all very different!  The good guys each have a different deck of cards with different emphases!  See some above!

IMG_5454

Each character also has a different experience track! When you “do stuff” in the game, you get experience which you can immediately spend to upgrade your character!  With experience points, you choose which track to advance, and each character has different annotations (see above) on their three experience tracks!

Other things make the characters asymmetric:

  • when the character rolls a STAR, a special ability (for that character) only activates
  • each players has different start resources
  • each character has VERY different spells they can activate
  • each character has a different progression to get dice

In general, these characters are VERY different and will play very differently!

The Manor: Worker Placement Rooms!

IMG_5456

The core play of the game is in the Manor (mansion) above.  It’s a bit of chore to build!

IMG_5473

You place tiles in concentric rings: the outer ring (above)…

IMG_5472

The middle ring … (see above) …

IMG_5471

And the inner ring!  See above!

IMG_5497

Players place their standees on the entrance to begin: see above.  

IMG_5495

This game almost has a worker placement feel as well: when you end your turn in a room (see above), you activate the special ability of the room.   See above for two rooms!  The top one will allow you to get resources and the bottom one will allow you to rewind time!  Each room has a very different ability to activate in the game!

IMG_0516

When the Manor is all built (see above), it has a very daunting table presence! See above!

Resources

IMG_5513

There are a number of different resources in the game you get (usually from activating a room): Power (pink), Scarabs (yellow), flame (blue), or books (green).  See above!  These resources are spent for many different things in the game: activating spells, buying dice, buying Companions, and many more things!  

IMG_5512

The small twist here is that the Scarabs, even though they are resources you need (yellow, see above) are also the “Bad News” tokens and they spread “kind of like” the disease cubes of Pandemic!

IMG_5510

Scarabs in a room make it so you CANNOT activate the special ability there! You would have to go into the room and specifically fight them to get rid of them … and if you kill all the Scarabs on your room, you may still activate that room at the end of your turn.

IMG_5568

Scarabs advance from the inner rings to the outer rings when “The Scarab Phase” happens. It reminds me of Pandemic for two reasons: 1) the Scarabs will “blight” a room if there are ever two or more in them (not unlike losing a city in Pandemic Legacy). This blight causes you to lose the room as a worker placement spot! (Don’t despair, you can always repair a blighted room) 2) The progression as Scarabs are always coming out and spreading … just like the disease cubes in Pandemic are always coming out and spreading!

IMG_5488

Generally, flames and books are easy to get from rooms, Scarabs have to be obtained from fighting, but power is harder to get!

IMG_5622

There are limited rooms with power tokens, but most power tokens comes from advancing the Power track on your character (the pink track above).

IMG_5518

There’s a reason we call this a cooperative boss-battler worker placement euro (with elements of Pandemic)!  The worker placement and resource management aspects feel very euro.

Time

IMG_5457

Many cooperative games have some flavor of timer on it: you must win in so many turns, you must win before the Bad News deck runs out, and so on.  Time is handled very interestingly in this game!  In between the concentric circles of the rooms are two rotating rings that tell time!  The first ring (above) is like the hour clock: as you play, time advances from sunrise to morning, to afternoon, to night, and back around!  See above!

IMG_5460

The outer ring is like a day clock: it has numbers from 1-12 on it (see above)!  Every time the inner ring advances from night to sunrise, the outer ring spins!  If the outer ring ever moves from 12  to 1, players lose!  They have run out of time!

IMG_5611

How does time advance?  In two ways!  First, the Monster “bad news” card moves the inner hour circle; see above as the monster card will cause hour time to advance 4 spaces!

IMG_5581

The second way is that a player’s card is to be placed in one of the 4 positions above his character sheet: see above.   Each position is labelled with a time of day: The Lore Master Meditation card (above, far right) has been played above the Night symbol, which means the player MUST SPIN the inner circle to the next night phase symbol!  Every turn, the player MUST play a card to one of the spaces above.  Part of the choices are trying to advance time as little as possible.

This time advancement mechanism must be balanced against matching symbols on the top of the card: see above as Prepare Defenses shield matches the Touch the Fae card!  (Wild)  If these symbols match, the player gets that symbol’s effect (a shield gives one more defense in combat).  Sometimes you may choose to waste more time to get a better symbol match!

This is just one of the many choices players make when playing a card: Which card?  How does time advance?  How do symbols match?

Doors and Connectivity

IMG_5616

These spinning concentric circles of time also controls the connectivity between rooms! See above as the characters in the room with the Chaos Ogre can’t get out to the middle rings! There’s NO DOOR between the middle ring and outer ring! When the day counter spins, the doors will spin and an exit will emerge!

IMG_5576

These “moving” doors take a few turns for players to get: “Wait, playing my card will move the rings before I move my character?”  Most of the time, we would “pretend” to advance the ring to see what connections would open up and then if the connections looked right, … then we would commit.  I do admit, this is very daunting the first few times until you get a handle on it.

Spells

IMG_5573

Each player has three spells on their character board: see above (Upper right of the board). These spells vary tremendously between characters!  Some characters are more help-focused, some are more defense-focused, some are more combat-focused  Each character’s spells are very different. 

IMG_5514

The spells are activated by spending resources … with Power usually being one component.  See above! This is why Power is such an important resource in the game component!  The spells are incredibly powerful, many times making the difference between a winning and losing combat!

Companions

IMG_5579

Players can also recruit Companions to help them!  Companions cost resources (of course), but give two main abilities!  First, they usually give a nice little power you can use once (before you recharge).

IMG_5622

Possibly more important, the Companions give another position to play cards, so you reset time less often! (Every reset causes a Scarab phase!) See above as Oliver has two companions, so he can play two cards without resetting!

Solo Game: True Solo With One Character

IMG_5444

The game has rules for a solo variant (congratulations on following Saunders’ Law)! Basically, you can play as many characters as you want!  The game recommends playing two characters, to get some synergies between characters going!

IMG_5504

You might notice, I spent quite a bit of time describing the components and mechanisms of this game!  I don’t know about you, but playing two characters seemed a little much for my first solo game!  I ended up choosing to play my first solo game as a true solo game: one character.  See above.

IMG_5501

The game really  needs no changes to play  solo with one character: the main balancing mechanism of the game is advancing time for each play, so the total number of plays of the characters remains about the same.  Very approximately, a game is “about” 2 * 12 = 24 turns total.  Each character moves up the hour wheel by 1 or 2 spaces per turn, but the monster moves the hour wheel by 2-5 spaces per turn.  On average, it takes about 2 player turns to advance one day, so at 12 days, the games lasts about 24 turns.  So a true solo player will have about 24 turns, a 2-Player game would have each player take 12 turns, and so on.

IMG_5516

The point of all that is — Sure!  You can play this game true solo without any real rule changes!  I always love it when the solo game follows the main rules: it’s usually so much work to apply solo rule exceptions to a game!

IMG_5522

After playing a true solo game, let me say three things:

  1. This is a pretty fun game solo. 
  2. It is a bit long.  I think it took about 2 hours 30 minutes?  
  3. I absolutely would suggest your first game be a true solo game!  This game has SO MANY RULES!  And SO MANY INTERACTIONS!  Your first game will struggle with rules, discrepancies, and just getting the game.  The last thing you want to do is to context switch between two characters!  Remember, every character is very different and plays very differently!  Context Switching between two characters (as we’ll see below) is rough.

The true solo game works, and it works pretty well. 

Solo Play: Alternating Between Two Characters

IMG_5565

So, because the rulebook “suggests” that two character solo is the preferred way to play, I ended up playing a two character game that way by myself.  At this point, I had at least one true solo game under my belt, so I at least felt ready with a decent understanding of the rules.

IMG_5570

You can see above as the game table became even busier!   And I remember this solo mode working, but I felt like I just had to “get through” it. There was so much work context switching between characters that it was overwhelming.  I’ve emphasized this point quite a bit: the characters in this game are very distinct and very complicated to play!  Each character requires a lot of focus to play it well.  

IMG_5575

Maybe this is your favorite game of all time!  Maybe you want to explore all the characters and how they work together!  I remember in Set A Watch (a cooperative dice placement game we reviewed most recently here),  the 4-Character solo seemed daunting!  Over time, I came to love that 4-Character solo mode after I had totally absorbed the game! Maybe the same thing will happen here?

But, I think focusing on a single character is a lot more fun.   The 2-character solo play felt a little like a slog; don’t get me wrong, it worked, but I just felt like I was going through the motions.  But, maybe after I absorbed this game some more, maybe I will come back to the 2 character solo mode? Maybe?

Right now, I can only recommend the true solo game, especially if it’s your first game!

Cooperative Play

IMG_5607

I was able to get two big cooperative games together: both of 4 players.

IMG_0518

These game groups are very different, but two things seemed to remain the same between the groups.

IMG_0515

One: This game is very long: both 4-Player games took more than 3.5 hours.  Some of this time will go away since it’s a learning game, but all my friends are seasoned gamers and jumped right in (with my help: I taught the games knowing the rules pretty well by this point).  It feels like Weirdwood Manor is going to last at least 3 hours no matter what.   See above as we all go away to dinner, leaving the game set-up to finish later!!!

IMG_0514

Two: All the games I have played had the players “multi-player solo” in the beginning of the game, but engendered cooperation more in the later game.    Well, we strictly speaking, didn’t have to cooperate, but we would have lost if we hadn’t!  Many times, we had to figure out cooperatively how to engage the boss, but someone would have correct the topology (remember the rotating rings?), or defeat Scarabs protecting the boss, or any other issues …  someone had to “blaze a path” for the next player!     Or the next player had no chance!

IMG_5620

Early in my first 4-Player game, I had to “clean-up”the Scarabs in the middle of the board (to protect Lady Weirdwood), but it meant I had to “take one for the team” to do this!  It meant I had to lose a lot of resources and be behind the ball for leveling up my character!  But we ABSOLUTELY had to do this, or we would have lost! (If Lady Weirdwood dies, we lose!) So, I took one for the team … enabling my compatriots to continue!

IMG_5615

Generally, the game starts out very “multi-player solo” because everyone is in dire need of resources!  To get anything going in this game, players have to concentrate on themselves … then, as the game gets further along, it’s clear players HAVE to cooperate, or they will lose!

IMG_5609

Some characters had more abilities or spells that enticed cooperation, so the choice of characters also can affect how much cooperation there is!

IMG_0509

What I saw in my game groups was that the Alpha Player was kept at bay because (as we saw in the solo section) there’s just too much to keep track for a single character!  It’s much much harder to Alpha Player when you are busy concentrating on running your own complex character.  The cooperation happened more organically by people asking for help! 

“Hey, can you get rid of those Scarabs? I need to attack the boss!”

“Hey can you make sure time doesn’t advance too far? I need to make sure the boss isn’t angry yet!”  

IMG_0517

In general, there was a decent amount of cooperation, it just happened more in the later game.

Things I Liked

IMG_5565

The production is amazing.  The game pops on the table!

IMG_5611

The Bad News cards (the Monster cards) are labelled on the back with a “hint” of the basic operation of the card!  The Monster Card (see above) tells us that the Monster will “move somehow”!  You flip the card and find the monster moves!  This is a fantastic mechanism!  It allows players to try to play cards with some general knowledge of what the bad guy will do!   I remember seeing a variant of this mechanism in the cooperative game Paleo (see our review here) where the back of the wilderness cards was labelled with a generic icon as to what was coming!  (We think a mechanism like this could have helped my friends like Hacktivity, from a few weeks ago, more).

IMG_5464

I adore the acrylic standees.   These alone made the Deluxe version worth getting!  They are beautiful, well-labelled, and just pop on the table.  They even emphasize the color on the bottom!

IMG_5581

Playing cards into a slot to control the time advancement is really neat and interesting.

IMG_5461

The rotating rings being used for both TIME and TOPOLOGY is very different and interesting!  It took a little getting used, but it was cool.

IMG_5454

The experience point tracks work really well: you get to make choices and advance your character at the same time!  I think this one mechanism engages players more than might have expected: you become attached to your character as you care how he levels up!   And your character just gets better and better as the game goes on, so you feel like you are doing something!

What I Didn’t Like

IMG_0515

Probably the biggest detriment is the length of the game: several of my friends complained how long the game was. There’s that table (above) left set-up while we went to dinner because the game was so long …

IMG_5616

As cool as the rotating rings are, sometimes we struggled to rotate them: this is a physical issue!  We had to readjust the board on the table to avoid the crack in the middle!  Even when it lay flat on another table, sometimes it didn’t advance great?  It usually worked, but it just needs a slight tweak to make it easier to rotate the rings.

IMG_5611

Speaking of the rings, why does time advance COUNTER-CLOCKWISE in the game???? When time advances in the game,  you spin the rings COUNTER-CLOCKWISE!!  In real life, when a clock advances forwards, it’s CLOCKWISE … thus the name CLOCKWISE!  The rulebook even used the terms clockwise and counter-clockwise in descriptions!  It knows the terms!  This seems very counterintuitive to me!!  It really seems like time moving forward should have been CLOCKWISE (like clocks).  I dealt with it, but this little thing really bothered me!!

IMG_5604

Complexity: this is a very complicated game with lots of moving parts and a long rulebook.  It will take a while to absorb this, and some people may bounce off of it hard because of the complexity.

IMG_5563

Even though this game has a lot of euro elements (worker placement, resource acquisition) and a lot of predictable elements, there’s still enough randomness to that it might just frustrate you.  The game is, at its core, a boss-battler with lots of dice! You will be rolling dice and you might roll great and you might roll poorly!   My friend CC got completely screwed early in one game, and had trouble recovering: he got completely smashed by the boss, and spent the rest of the game trying to recover  … meanwhile watching while the rest of us were doing really well!

That element of randomness … might make one of your friends have a bad game.

Reactions

IMG_0513

The reactions to this game from my friends was generally positive, well, except for CC who got trounced.   CC’s reaction was probably the most nuanced:

I think I might have liked Weirdwood Manor more if I had gotten to play to the end. Sounds like my character got to be useful later on, which was a feeling the game had lacked for me in the turns I got to play. I liked the theme of that one and some of the mechanics were fun, but I got pretty frustrated when I kept getting shut down while watching other players advance. Nice table presence, though, and it felt like it was telling a story in a cool environment which I liked.

Kurt: He started at a 7.5, but upped his bid to 8 or 8.5/10. He really liked it!
Joe: 7.5/10
Teresa: 7/10
Sara: 6-7/10, but want to play it again for more precision
Andrew: 6 -7/10, but wants to play it again for more precision
Me: Solo (true solo), 7.5/10, Solo (two character) 6.5/10, (Cooperative) 8.5/10

Conclusion

IMG_5559

Weirdwood Manor is a beautiful cooperative game with a beautiful production!  But you have to know what you are getting into!  This is a very long and complicated game with euro worker placement elements.  The game always seems to start “multiplayer-solo”, but evolves into more cooperation as the gameplay advances … if you don’t cooperate in the endgame, you will lose!

IMG_5605

I could easily see Weirdwood Manor being someone’s favorite game of 2024!  It has so many unique and quirky mechanisms, satisfying advancement, and engaging play!   Just be aware how complicated this game is!  The extra complexity does have the advantage of keeping the Alpha Player at bay!

IMG_5521

I recommend staying with true solo (take control of one character)  to learn the game, and only tackle solo with multiple characters if you want more challenge. 

IMG_5607

My groups all like the game, with ratings between 6 and 8.5, with most people giving it at least a 7.

Hopefully this review helps you decide if Weirdwood Manor is for you!

Point-And-Click Adventure for Families! A Review of Eppi: An Interactive Adventure Book

IMG_2581

Eppi is the second series of games in the Paper Point-and-Click line of games from Lookout Games.

img_9161-e1623455483876

The first game in this series was Cantaloop by Friedemann Findeisen: see our review here! We loved Cantaloop so much that it made the #1 spot on our Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2021! This was a series of three games: we liked all three of them! See here, here, and here!

IMG_2587

What makes these games so interesting is that they are the paper book equivalent of the old “point-and-click” video games! 

IMG_7336

Think of the Secret of Monkey Island, King’s Quest, or the more recent Thimbleweed Park. Players “point-and-click” at objects in their world (on the computer screen), combining objects to solve puzzles! Players also move around, exploring the world they play in!

underwater

These games are all about combining objects and exploring the world, trying to solve the puzzles in the story you uncover along the way.

IMG_2634

However, instead of a computer screen, these Paper point-and-click games have book and cards! You combine cards, solve puzzles, and flip through the book exploring the story therein!

IMG_2583

Let’s take a look at Eppi!

Unbooking

We can’t have an unboxing, as this is mostly a book. So this is an unbooking.

IMG_2589

Eppi is a book first and foremost: everything else is contained in the front pouches at the front of the book.

IMG_2590

The big bottom pouch contains the inventory page, the play sheet, a postcard map, but most importantly … the red decoder!

IMG_2596

This little red decoder is the main gimmick of the game! Hidden text in the book waits for you to unearth via the red decoder! The red decoder reveals important text in the adventure! See above as you encounter Eppi for the first time in the hall! 

IMG_2599

Most of the “objects” you will interact with come from the three card pockets. As you reveal text in the game, you will uncover more cards which you can combine!

IMG_2620

One thing that’s differentiates Eppi from the original Cantaloop series is that about a third of the cards are stickers rather than cards: see above That’s right, this is a legacy game (but see below)! As you explore, you will put stickers on locations to reveal new options or hide old options that are no longer relevant!

IMG_2607

The map tells you where you can go in the house, and the corresponding pages of the book. Note that you can’t get into certain rooms until there are unlocked via triggers! (You can’t get to Saira’s Study until you hit trigger D4!)

IMG_2616

The play sheet comes with a little matrix of “triggers”: as you explore and combine objects, you will mark triggers on the sheet to show you’ve “accomplished certain things”. 

IMG_2612

This same Play Sheet also has your “TODO” list: in order to win the game you have to accomplish 5 goals! See above. (Why are there two Play Sheets above? Keep reading!!).

IMG_2621

The rest of this game is the book! 

  • The introduction and tutorial is fabulous and tells you how to explore and combine objects!
  • The next section has the 12 Locations (2 pages each) in the game
  • The next section are Cut-Scenes (further expansion of the plot as you move forward)
  • Finally, the last section is a Help Section

IMG_2614

This game looks great! It has a very family-friendly and welcoming vibe to its art. It’s very clear this is aimed at younger kinds and families! I mean, it says that on the cover, but the art choices reinforce that.

Legacy or Campaign Game?

IMG_2634

Since you are supposed to put down stickers as you play, this is pretty much a legacy game! You won’t be able to replay it again … or will you? You really can’t remove the stickers (they are very sticky), and you also mark up the Play Sheet with the triggers. So, this is a legacy game (but see below)! And honestly, what kid doesn’t like putting on stickers? For some families, the stickers may the best part of the game.

IMG_2627

Having said that … If you are very careful, you can reset the game: you can use little pieces of tape to “tape” the stickers in the book rather than stick them.

IMG_2664

I was able to play the entire game all the way through, using just little bits of tape on the edges to hold the stickers down (see above). After I was all done, I was able to reset the entire game by just carefully pulling off the tape! If you use small, little pieces of tape, you can keep the stickers down without too much work to remove it later. The bigger the piece of tape, the harder it will be to remove!

IMG_2612

The only thing other thing you need to do to reset it: make a copy of the trigger sheet! That’s why I have two copies of the Play Sheet above: one is a copy!

IMG_2644

So, with those two “tricks” (tape and a copy of Play Sheet), I was able to reset the back to pristine condition after full playthrough (it did take a little bit of time to undo the tape).

IMG_2631

It’s a little fiddly to keep making little pieces of tape, but I suppose no more fiddly than trying to stick the sticker on and aligning it just so. However, I suspect the best way to play is to just put the stickers in: the best part of being a kid is playing with stickers!

IMG_2586

The only reason you may not want to put stickers in your game is that this is a 3-Part series (I think): this is Part I after all.  The next Eppi book is “probably” a year away, so you may want to replay this game again just before the next one comes?

In general, it’s probably more fun to put the stickers in (it’s a legacy game)! If you are just a little careful, you can get by and make it resettable (making it a campaign game). It’s up to you!

The World

IMG_2597

Most locations in this world look like the above: the left side of the page has a lot of hidden text (to decode with the red acetate) and the right side of the page is a picture of the room you are currently in (with objects you can combine with). As you explore the room, you will combine objects and read some of the text on the left!

IMG_2608

The typical way to combine objects is to align the left side of a card with either a location or the right side of another card. If the two letter code (u6w6 from the picture above) corresponding to the arrows shows up on the appropriate sheet, you can read it with the red decoder! Otherwise, if there’s no such code, nothing happens! (It’s like trying to combine a bowling ball and a feather, it doesn’t make sense, so nothing happens).

IMG_2635

Sometimes, the little red decoder will tell you to read a cut-scene: it looks like the above, where characters talk to each and further push the plot and character development.

IMG_2655

This game is all about “trying” things in this world: Do these objects combine? Do this object combine with this location? Nothing here? Let’s look around at a new Location! You try stuff, go to new Locations, and just keep exploring this world.

Flow

IMG_2654

This is an adventure game: you will start off making tons of progress, then slowly and slowly start making less and less progress until you hit a wall. Eppi has the same ebb and flow as most adventure games: sometimes, when you are stuck, you just have to go around and just “try stuff”! Arguably, the least exciting thing about adventure games is the brute force approach is sometimes needed: it can be boring and soul-crushing to just try stuff that makes no sense. Even worse, it’s harder in this game because you physically have to do a lot more work to just “try stuff” (turn pages, combine items, look up text, see if it decodes: Lather, rinse, repeat). But once you break through that wall, it’s so exciting! The story picks up again, and things make sense again!

565435-the-secret-of-monkey-island-special-edition-playstation-3

Eppi is an adventure game! Every point-and-click adventure game I have ever played has this same flow: lots of cool stuff then some frustration, then excitement, some more frustration, then more excitement!

Help

IMG_2640

If you do get stuck, there is a Help Section in the back of the book (see above). In this case, you lookup help sections by seeing what trigger conditions you are missing! You correlate your Play Sheet and find the lowest trigger you are missing! This is usually where the problem is! 

IMG_2639

A few times, I had to look up some help, but I had to look at more than one trigger to find what I needed. But it was there! It’s a little confusing the first few times you try to use the help. One of my biggest problems was that I sometimes forgot to mark off a trigger, so that prevented me from moving forward!

This isn’t the best Help system, but it seemed to work for me once I kept at it.

Story: Solo vs Cooperative

IMG_2586

So, Eppi is a family friendly story! In fact, the main characters of the game are a family! Mom and Dad and some kids of all ages!  As you explore this game, a story moves forward.   But, why read a story when you can play it?  

IMG_2657

The two main ways to play Eppi are solo or cooperative.  Cantaloop (the first of this kind of games) definitely felt like more of a solo game, although arguably you could play it cooperatively.  Eppi feels like it is better at being both solo and cooperative: it absolutely works solo (that’s the way I played it), and then it absolutely works in a family environment (a 7-year old girl and her family gave us some feedback).

Solo

IMG_2584

I ended up playing the entire game solo one Sunday: it took about 5 hours (the box says 5-8 hours, so that’s accurate). 

IMG_2643

I definitely stopped and took a break at some points when I was getting frustrated, so wall-clock time was probably more like 7 hours, with 5 hours of play and 2 hours of taking a break.

IMG_2631

This would be easy to reset if you needed to: you just take a picture of the cards you have, and put everything away. If possible, it’s probably just a little easier to keep everything set-up between sessions, but you may not have that luxury.

IMG_2654

The solo game worked pretty well. I got stuck a few times and had to consult the Help. In general, it was pretty fun.

Cooperative Family Mode

123_1 (4)

What I Liked

IMG_2621

Turning pages to explore and move through Locations worked great: the binding is good for that, and the pages are high quality: they definitely learned from the Cantaloop experience! The very first Cantaloop game had lesser quality paper, and it actually made a difference, as you were much more careful turning pages (afraid to tear them)! With the higher quality paper and binding, it’s easy to make your way through the book.

IMG_2623

The stickers are cool. In Cantaloop, they “new scenes” were on cards, and if you turned the page, you would have to reset the scenes. By putting the “new scenes” on stickers, you can work through the book quicker, as you don’t have to worry about “new scenes” flopping around! Besides, stickers are cool … especially for kids! (And, like we said, if you are careful you can get the equivalent experience with taping the cards, but you should use the stickers!!!)

IMG_2586

By making the Eppi game more “family-friendly” (to be clear, Cantaloop was NOT family-friendly), it opens the door to cooperative play more than the original Cantaloop: the story and art is very inviting in Eppi! It’s just something the whole family can be immersed in. This definitely feels the cooperative mode is much more accessible. I loved Cantaloop, but it really is best as a solo game. I think this might Eppi might be more fun as a cooperative game.

IMG_2587

I adore this genre: the Point-And-Click Adventure game is fairly rare! I am so glad Cantaloop did well enough to spawn further games in this genre. I love this genre so much! More games like this please!

IMG_2598

The tutorial was very good: it showed what you can and can’t do when you combine objects.

What I Didn’t Like

IMG_2645

In the original Cantaloop, when you combined cards, the lowest number card ALWAYS had to be on the right: this reduced the number of ways you could try to “combine” two objects. Why didn’t Eppi adopt this rule?  You effective may double the amount of work you have to do to combine objects, as you may have to combine the cards twice! 

IMG_2636

I liked the story here, I did.  But, the wit of the original Cantaloop isn’t in here … which makes the game seem like a little more work.  Even if you got a puzzle wrong in Cantaloop, frequently there were funny jokes or amusing turns-of-phrase!  So, every time you worked for clue, you got rewarded by either advancing the plot or some joke!  I didn’t realize until I played Eppi that the jokes in Cantaloop distracted me from all the physical work you have to do to move the story forward!  Let’s be clear: there is a lot of physical activity of moving cards, combining objects, reading red text, turning pages, marking triggers, turning to cut scenes!  Whew!  All physical activities!  

I think some of this will go away if you play cooperatively, as the game is more about the cooperative experience with your family.  But I think the “work” to move the game forward is a little more prevalent in Eppi if you solo it.

IMG_2661

The final puzzle was pretty hard.  I feel like it was almost out-of-scope/too hard for a family game: I suspect you will have to use the Help System to finish the game.  That last puzzle seemed a little too much, even with a whole family looking at it.

Conclusion

IMG_2659

I am so happy there are more Interactive Adventures like Cantaloop! Eppi is a fun game solo or cooperatively, but I think the best place for it is the cooperative game with the family …

IMG_2582

… and that’s what the cover says! It doesn’t lie!

I like Cantaloop better overall, partly because of the non-stop humor, but I had a lot of fun with Eppi. This is a solid 7.5 solo, maybe 8 cooperatively with your family.