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

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

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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!

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

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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!

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

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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!

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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.

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

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

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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! 

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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!

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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!

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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!)

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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”. 

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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!!).

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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

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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?

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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.

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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.

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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!

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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!

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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).

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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!

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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

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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!

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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).

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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.

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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

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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!

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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

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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! 

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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

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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?  

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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

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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). 

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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.

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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.

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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

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What I Liked

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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.

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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!!!)

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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.

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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!

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

What I Didn’t Like

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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! 

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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.

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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

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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 …

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… 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.

Union City Alliance: Heroes Unite! Like Marvel Legendary, but Now With More Theme! A Review

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Union City Alliance is a cooperative super-hero deck-building games that was originally on Kickstarter back in March 2021.  The game looked great and promised delivery in October 2021! I was so excited for this game that Union City Alliance made the #1 spot on my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2022!

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Unfortunately, the game is about 2.5 years late: The game arrived at my house April 30th, 2024! It’s basically been 3 long years since I backed the Kickstarter.

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Interestingly enough, I was never worried that this wouldn’t finally arrive.  The designer would do a pretty decent job of keeping us updated (with Kickstarter updates): he would offer full timelines of delivery and discussions of progress.  I was grumpy that Union City Alliance was 2.5 years late, but at the end of the day, the Kickstarter was well-run … and they delivered!

Let’s see what we got!

Unboxing

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The base game is about the size of a Ticket to Ride sized box: see above with a Coke can for perspective.

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The rulebook is the full-size of the box on top!

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There’s a lot of punchouts; these are just handy tokens to keep track of Heroism and other resources (Valor, Speed, Might).  Interestingly, the Heroism and Damage tokens, which persist between rounds, are circular tokens.  The Valor, Speed, and Might tokens, which evaporate between rounds, are square tokens.   Even though the game never calls this out, that subtle consistency (persistent vs. ephemeral) was a nice touch.

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Also included is a source book;  It has both set-up for various scenarios and tons of flavor text and back story for the heroes and villains: see below.

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There are a TON of pre-punched standees that are both the Villain and Hero markers.   See above.

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There’s also a GIANT (see can of Coke per perspective above) pile of Locations!  These Locations come out slowly as the Heroes explore the city!

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But, this is cooperative deck-building game.  So, at its core, this game is all about the cards. When you first open the box, it’s a little daunting to see so many cards!

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From an initial Unboxing perspective, this game looks great! 

Uncardening

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I feel like this needs to be a new phrase: uncardening.  It’s the event when you have take a lot of  cards out of a new game box and sort them appropriately.  But it’s not just sorting: it’s about collecting together “like” cards, figuring out where the cards go in the box, and making sure they are ready to go for play!

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Basically, we had to do the same thing in Earthborne Rangers: go through the cards, sort them, put like cards together (for some notion of “like”), and figure out where they go in the box.  See above.   Earthborne Rangers had a fairly grumpy uncardening (see our review of Earthborne Rangers here): the components page was misleading, and we spent far too much time trying to uncard the game.

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I almost think that the word uncardening (which is a word we coined for Earthborne Rangers) has a negative connotation: it implies you have to spend an extraordinary amount of time putting cards in order.  

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I remember when I first got Legendary: A Marvel Deck-Building game some 10 or so years ago.  It has the worst box opening experience I have ever had!  I just have tons of cards and no idea how to put cards together!  The rulebook is completely silent on how to sort!  As a gaming nubie at the time, I asked my friend John N. to help me (because he had Legendary), and with his help, I was able to put things together.  The phrase uncardening applied to Legendary, it applied to Earthborne Rangers, and unfortunately, it now applies now to Union City Alliance

If you think all deck-building games need a negative uncardening, I suggest you look at the Aeon’s End series of games! They do an amazing job of making the uncardening (in a good sense) easy.  See our review of Aeon’s End and Aeon’s End: War Eternal here, and Aeons’ End: Outcasts here!

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The first two pages of the rulebook … DO NOT address how to take the cards apart, sort them, put like cards together, and fit them back into the box.  I am actually annoyed by this: The Union City Alliance rulebook wasted two very large pages (see above) with huge fonts for credits and an introduction.  I am all for getting credit, but I was very annoyed at these designers because it was so hard to uncard their game!  They SHOULD HAVE used those two pages for something useful: how to uncard the game!

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A simple question: why is there a Playable Hero and a Team-up Hero for Wrangler?  See above. Which cards for Wrangler go where? This is an easy concept (once you know it) that should have been presented on those first two pages.

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And it takes some knowledge of board games (and perception) to know to look in the lower right corner of the card: the Wrangler cards are the W!  See above!

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Once you start looking around some more, you’ll notice there is a manifest on the back of the dividers!  Yay!  They list both the number and the card title (good job!).  

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I am SO GLAD they have both the title and the card number on the manifest!  The card number on the cards are SO SMALL as to be almost unreadable!!  I had to zoom in pretty heavily with my phone in the picture above to see the #2 Captain Jupiter card!  But having the titles on the manifests helped.

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There’s just a lot of cards.   I probably spent about an hour and half, maybe two hours uncardening this game.  It really shouldn’t have been this much work, and it really shouldn’t have been so cumbersome.  The cards are well-labelled, but throwing someone at the game without any directions is a misstep.  I am an experienced gamer (now), so I was able to get through this, but I worry a newbie will just give up in disgust trying to uncard this.

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But, everything is labelled (once you know where to look: bottom right, and the divider manifests) so you can get there.  And once everything is back in the box, it’s very satisfying. See above.   This lack of uncardening direction may be the biggest misstep in the entire game: the uncardening just needed a little bit of discussion in the manual.

Rulebook, Er, Play Guide

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This rulebook is gigantic, being the same size as the box.

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How does this rulebook do on The Chair Test?  Unfortunately, it gets a D on the Chair Test.

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It is almost impossible to have this on the chair next to you spread open because it was so big!  It does have lots of good pictures and good font, but it was almost unusable on the chair next to me.

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However, this game has spawned a new test: The Two-Chair Test.  If you put two chairs together (see picture above), you can have the rulebook open and readable without taking up valuable table space!  So, the rulebook gets a A in the Two-Chair Test (a second tier test) So, the rulebook lays flat, the fonts are big and readable, and I can read it easily from my chair.  In the end, The Chair Tests are all about keeping the rulebook(s) off to the side so I can look stuff easily and not take up valuable table space!

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I have to admit, I was a little non-plussed to learn that this wasn’t the full rulebook! It was only the Play Guide!  See above: “… but it is only a quick reference...”. You have to go to the website for a full rulebook.  It’s cool they have all this on the website (FAQ, full rulebook, etc), but at the time I went there, the web site wasn’t up yet! See below.

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At the time of this writing, however, the web site is up.  But, I had to play using only the Play Guide!

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Once you get past how HUGE this rulebook, pardon me … Play Guide  … is, it’s pretty good at getting you into the game.  I don’t usually like thematic fonts for rules (see our review of Hour of Need here and Obliveaon here), but it works here.  I think I like it because it’s a very big font, and it’s peppered with a lot of supporting pictures and colors: see above.  

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There’s no Index to the Play Guide (boo), but there is a Glossary (yay)!  See above, In fact, the Glossary seems very complete; it covered just about everything that came up when I played.

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Once we got going with the two chairs and through the uncardening, the Play Guide was pretty good at getting me set-up: there were lots of pictures, lots of flavorful text, lots of helpful annotations.

I am still annoyed I didn’t get the full rulebook.  I look at computers all day; the last thing I want to do is look online for full rulebook for a board game.  The Play Guide has been “good enough”, so I have been just pushing forward with that.  I haven’t needed the web site … yet.

Gameplay

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Union City Alliance is a cooperative super-hero deck-building game.  That tells you a lot about this game already!  See our Top 10 Cooperative Deck-Building Games for more discussion of deck-building games!

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Each player chooses a hero to operate: that player gets the Playable Hero deck for that character: see above as Player One chooses Captain Jupiter.

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An interesting thing that Union City Alliance does is the cards are divided into two groups: your initial deck (with the 0 in the upper right corner) and the Power deck (with the green in the upper right corner).  See above.   Power cards are separated out, and only that player can buy those Power cards later in the game, using the (green) resource Heroism.  It’s a real neat way of keeping each character very distinct, as each character has their own set of Power cards!

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So, when you set up, you have your normal intro deck and your Power deck “tempting” you with some cards you can buy! See above as Captain Jupiter sets-up with two Power Cards available to buy, with her initial 5 card hand at the bottom.

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Each card can be played for Resources! The three main resources are Valor (blue), Speed (yellow) and Might (red).  See the Plucky Interns above giving 1 Valor! Valor is generally the resource used for buying Hero Upgrade cards!

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You need at 2-4 characters to play: see above as Doctor Tomorrow and Captain Jupiter are set-up!

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One of the curious things this does as a deck-builder: you don’t usually get upgrade cards you can buy unless you go exploring!  As you explore the city, more Hero cards come out that you can buy!  This is different from other deck-building games like Legendary and Dominion and Aeon’s End where there’s just “9 types of cards to buy!”.  See an example from Aeon’s End below.

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As you explore Union City, new cards come out: see below.

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Every time you explore a new Location, two new Hero cards come out! (And a City Card, which is typically Bad Newsish).

This is interesting, as it forces the player to explore and look around to get upgrades.  There’s no “set set” of upgrades: you get what you get as you explore!  And you can only buy (generally) Hero Cards from the Location you are on!  This is a nice and thematic twist on the deck-building genre.

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To win, players must take out the baddies!  See above which represents “the bad guys!’  The bad guys in Union City Alliance are pretty complicated to run: there’s a Peril deck, a Plot deck, issues #1-4 of the Plot Deck, and specialized baddies (Mobsters and Gangsters in this case).   To win with Pterano-Don and the Dino-Mafia, players must defeat all the Mobsters!

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It’s quite hard to take out the Mobsters!

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The city has to be big enough for the Mobsters to come out (a rule requires that), so that also forces the exploration aspect!  See above as the city is pretty huge with one of the Mobsters looming!

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To win, take out all the Mobsters! As I took them out, I put them in “jail” on top of the box! See above!

Solo Play

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Unfortunately, there is no provided solo mode in the game!  See above, as the game is only listed for 2-4 Players.  

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It’s very discouraging that they didn’t follow Saunders’ Law here:  no solo mode!  So, I went ahead and played my first game two-handed solo.  That’s right, I operated Doctor Tomorrow and Captain Jupiter and just played this as if it were a 2 Player game, alternating between the two.

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I think I know why they didn’t include the two-handed solo mode in the game: it’s pretty complicated.  I ended up playing my first game (granted, a learning game) in about three hours.  Each character in the game is very distinct with a very different play-style!  There is a lot of context switching between the characters, as each character has their own specific cards and Power deck that players need to be thinking about!  And the game can get pretty overwhelming as you play: see the picture above near the end of my solo game!  There are a lot of distinct Hero cards and distinct challenges and distinct Locations! 

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And the Villains are complicated to play too!  Plot card, Peril Cards, issues, distinct baddies! So, the solo player has to run two characters AND the Villain deck!

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See above at the end of my first solo game!  The board is a bit of a mess between two characters, the villains, the Locations, and all the cards!  

I can see why the Union City Alliance people chose to avoid the two-handed solo mode: this game is very overwhelming in solo mode!  My first solo game took about three hours to play! It probably wasn’t the best way to learn the game, but I believe in trial-by-fire for learning games: the only way to learn is to jump in!  So, I think, if you are determined, the two-handed solo mode will work. And once you learn the game, the basic flow is pretty straight-forward.

Cooperative Mode

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My second game was a two-player, two character game!  I learned quite a bit in my solo game: things to do and NOT to do!

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First, I learned to allocate signficantly more space for the Locations!  See above as I leave half the table for that!

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I also learned to be more methodical when placing Locations: each Location (when explored) adds Two Hero cards and one City Deck card.  Since space is at a premium, we tried to make sure the two City Cards are on the bottom half, and the City Card (whether a challange or a Bad guy) is on the top of the Location.  Since each Location also has a unique ability, we made sure that text was readable!  So, there are four things you need to see on a Location: let’s make sure they are consistent and readable as we place!  That makes the game … less messy … as the city gets explored!

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See above as the city is a little less daunting as we have more space and the layout is a little more consistent.

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Even though each player runs their own character, which tends to make the players more isolated turns, Union City Alliance still encourages cooperation.  Players have to work together figure out how to take out certain monsters and challenges to clear the way to take out the Mobsters!  The game ramps up in difficult pretty quickly, and some coordination between the heroes is necessary to keep the badness under control.

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I liked the solo game, but the game is better at two or more: there’s more people to share the responsibility!  Union City Alliance can be very overwhelming (there’s quite a bit of maintenance per round) as solo gamer, but the sharing of responsibilities made this much easier to get through.  Teresa was in charge of The Green Death (that was here hero) and the Locations, and I was responsible for Captain Jupiter (that was my hero) and the Villain decks.  Off-loading some of the maintenance to other players made the game much more fun!  I could play without worrying about keeping the game up!

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Solo was fun, but the game is just more fun with more players. I see why they chose NOT to put 1-4 Players on the box.  

Theme

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This game is dripping with theme!

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Each hero is very distinct and plays very differently, representing the sum of their powers!   

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There’s a ton of flavor text on the cards, which you can ignore if you like, but it really does draw you into your character.

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The Source Book just digs even deeper into each character!  You want back story? You got it!

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The Power Decks, which are unique to each character, also contribute to making each character just feel so different and flavorful! 

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The Villain deck is quite complicated to run, but is very thematic! The “harder” cards come out in later issues of the game!  There’s quite a it happening per round with the Villain deck, but it is all unique to the Villain .. again contributing to the theme.

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The larger than normal standees (especially for the dino-mob) makes the game feel thematic! They are so cool looking!

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If you haven’t noticed, just about every card has unique art on it! It’s all the consistent from the same artist and just draws you into the game!

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This game has so much theme to it: I’d give it a 10/10 for theme.  The events, the characters, the Locations, the heroes, the art, the standees, the vibe of the game: 10/10.

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You do pay a price for this theme, though: from minor costs like flavor text (“Oh man, there’s flavor text on the card I should read“), to annoying costs (“set up the next city Location“), intrinsic costs like understanding you Power cards, to major costs (like running the very distinct Villain decks).  My games of Union City Alliance have run about 2.5 to 3 hours.  Some of that time  is just the sheer maintenance of immersing yourself into this universe.

The Art

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I love the art in this game.  It’s pretty clear the art is mostly the product of one artist (Antonio Garica), and I think he just knocked it out of the park!  The art feels very comic-booky and super-heroey.  It’s so thematic and so good.

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My only complaint, and this is not even really a complaint …  is that his style might be thought of as too cartoony!  I don’t have any problem with that, but if you saw the game cover in a store, you might this this is a game for younger audiences.  While Union City Alliance is generally family friendly, this is a deep complex game that might be too much for younger audiences.

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The age limits of 14+ should absolutely be adhered to (see back of the box), as I think someone who’s just starting in games might think “Oh that game looks cartoony and kinda cute! Let’s get it!”  Union City Alliance is much heavier than the art belies. Caveat Emptor.

Conclusion

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If you want theme, you have to pay for it!  If you want a lighter super-hero deck-building game, you should bring out Marvel Legendary: It has your Marvel heroes and is pretty straight-forward to teach.  But honestly,  I always thought the theme was lacking in Marvel Legendary: “Wait, you are buying a team of heroes? What?”  

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Union City Alliance is a deck-building super-hero game that has the theme I always wanted in Marvel Legendary.   In Union City Alliance, characters have unique powers, Villains are distinct, exploration/upgrading is both natural and encouraged, upgrades are tailored to your hero, and the art is very consistent and thematic.  

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If you want theme, you have to pay for it: Union City Alliance takes longer than many games (2.5-3 hours), has more upkeep per turn, and has more complicated set-up and interactions.   You pay for this incredibly thematic game by having a game that’s more complex.

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I want that theme!  Union City Alliance would easily make my Top 10 Cooperative SuperHero Games with a 9/10 and it will probably be near the top spot of my Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2024.  It took about 3 years to get Union City Alliance, but I was totally right to make this my #1 on my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2022!

Shadow of the Colossus Lives Again (in Board Game Form)! A Review of Leviathan Wilds

Leviathan Wilds was on Kickstarter first in July 2022, but then they pulled it down and re-tooled it: they were on again on May 2023 (see Kickstarter link here) and ended funding at a pretty good level at about $208K. This cooperative boss-battler game was on my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024 and finally delivered to me in early May 2024 (about 2 weeks ago).

This game has a very interesting theme: it’s basically the old PS2 game Shadow Of The Colossus!

The board game plays 1-4 players, but the original PS2 game was a solo game! In the original PS2 game, players have to take down very large creatures by climbing their huge bodies and attacking certain points, all the while with the Colossus attacking them! It’s a very interesting theme!

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In this board game (see sample above), you fight one of 17 Leviathans (you can’t call them Colossus … you wanna get sued?) and win if you can free the Leviathan of its constraints! Leviathan Wilds has a friendlier theme than the original Shadows Of the Colossus: rather than attacking the Leviathan, you are healing the Leviathan by taking out the Binding Crystals. So, when you and your friends cooperatively win … you have freed the Leviathan, rather than killing it!

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Let’s take a look!

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Unboxing and Gameplay

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Players choose a Leviathan to help from the Book of Leviathans

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Each Leviathan is a massive 2-page spread from the book! Sage, above, is the suggested first Leviathan to help.

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Each Leviathan has its own small deck of Threat cards (5) and some story cards.  See the Introduction above.

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The 5 Threat Cards (just below the Leviathan) control what the Leviathan does at the end of the turn(s).   

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Some Threat Cards attack the current player with an area of effect!  

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See above as the area of effect above on the Threat Card (it’s just the orthogonally adjacent to the original site).  If your climber can get out of the area by the time your activation is complete, you can avoid the attack completely!

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At the end of 5 turns, the Threat deck is reshuffled and comes out again.  To escalate the game’s difficulty, each Threat Card has two rotations:  blue and purple, with the blue rotation being the “harder” challenge!  See above!! As the game progresses, more and more of the blue sides are revealed, making the game harder!  

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To win, players cooperatively must take out all the Binding Crystals (represented by dice) at various points around the Leviathan.   See one such Binding Crystal above.  You spend Action Points (or cards) to reduce the value of the die, until it is zero, at which point you remove it!

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There are quite a number of Binding Crystals set-up at the start of the game (purple and blue: purple Binding Points are straight-forward, blue Binding Points have side-effects). See above.

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Each player takes control of one of eight Climbers! These Climbers climb (duh) the Leviathan to take out the Binding Crystals! See the eight different Climbers above and below.

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Each climber has a personality and special unique ability: see above.  Each climber also has a small hand of cards.

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Climbers then choose a Class (one of eight) to play:  See above.  Each class also adds a number of cards to your deck.

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Combined together, the Climber and Class form your personality and your deck! See above as Kestrel the Breaker takes form and becomes a character in the game!

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The deck is what powers your character!  You have three multi-use cards (in hand) every turn that you can use for Actions Points or their Special Abilities!  See above and below.

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Players have a certain number of Action Points per turn, depending on which card they play to start their turn.  Like we said, the cards are all multi-use cards: you can either play them to get Action Points (upper left corner), or as-is to get its effect (bottom of the card).  

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There are basic Actions (see above for a list of actions on your character board) that each cost a number of Action Points.  Some Climbers (like Kestrel) have special Actions only they can perform with their Action Points.

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Every turn, a Threat card comes out, specifying what the Leviathan does.  You may/will take that effect after you activate … sometimes you can avoid the effect completely if you play smartly (by either blocking or moving out of the way).  The player takes his full activation and DOES STUFF: moving around, playing cards, and trying to take out the Binding Points.  Threat cards take effect after the activation, and play moves to the next Climber.  

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Repeat until players take out all Binding Crystals or lose (by dying)!  See above for a winning game with two Climbers!

Cool Things

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The number of cards in your deck represents your grip: if your deck (left) is ever empty, you immediately fall until you hit a platform!  This deck sort of reminds of Gloomhaven, but rather than the deck being your hit points, the deck represents how “well” you are holding on!  It’s a cool ballet in the game, knowing when to rest (to recoup your grip) and when to push ahead (to get stuff done).

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The multi-use cards are quite clever: you HAVE to choose a card to play for its Action Points at the start of your turn, but that means you can’t use the special ability on it!  It’s a very clever way to make players really think about what they want to do with the cards they have!

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The components are pretty top notch in this game.  

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There’s a lot of variety in this game: there are 64 combinations of Climber/Class, each with their own unique deck!  There’s also 17 Leviathans, each with a very different Threat Deck!   Some of the fun in this game is exploring the best combos for the different Leviathans!  I expect to lose many games as I learn some of the later Leviathans … but with loss comes knowledge on how to win!

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It’s also clever that the Threats don’t take effect until AFTER you have activated your turn: this sort of represents the interplay in a Video Game! You see what the Leviathan is about to do, and you can react! Sometimes you can mitigate the effect and sometimes you can’t, but it’s a clever way to that Video Game interplay.

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One other multi-use card thing that’s cool is some cards that you play as Action Points have a “blocking” icon underneath the Action Points!  If you play Hidden Paths above for 4 Actions Points, that also means you can’t lose any “grip” (cards from your deck) during your activation!

So that means you can using the cards for Action Points as well as possible blocking!  That makes the choices even more delicious!   The multi-use cards are just fantastic in this game.

Solo Play: Two Modes

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So, Congratulations on offering an official solo mode!  (Thank you for following Saunders’ Law!)  The official solo mode has the solo player operate two characters with a combined deck.

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The Solo Play is described on page 11 of the rulebook (see above).  

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The solo player chooses two Climber and one Class deck, and  then combines them to form “the solo deck”: both characters use this same deck for their play.  Play alternates between the two Climbers, using that same deck for both characters.  The idea, I think, is to reduce management overhead by only having one deck.

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This is the official solo mode (above).  It is fine. I played and was able to win with the second Leviathan.

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However, I think the better solo mode is simply to take complete control of two Climbers, each with their own deck!  (Like above)! I like the “solo player takes control of two Climbers with separate decks” rule better than the official solo mode.  Why?

  1. The official solo mode has “exceptional” rules you have to remember (only get 7 cards when you rest, both chars fall when the grip runs out, etc).
  2. The solo player with two characters with separate decks is more like the cooperative game; I have to teach my friends this game, so I’d rather just learn the cooperative game as it is!

Basically, the official solo mode has exceptions to the base rules which I have to remember.  I’d much rather just play the game in “normal” mode without any exceptions: it makes it that much easier to teach!

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Both solo modes are very fine and very fun and very playable.  The official solo mode has less management and takes up less space (see above).  The unofficial solo mode with two Climbers and two decks requires operating more cards and takes up more space, but it feels more like the normal game (see below). I personally prefer the latter: play as if it were a 2-Player game, just alternating between the characters.  Decide for yourself! They both work!

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Cooperative Mode

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Cooperative mode works great!  Sara had a chance to watch a rules playthrough earlier, so we were able to jump right in!

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We tended to mostly play our own characters, with a little bit of coordination about which Binding Crystals to go after.   I think each player felt very different: my Climber/Class had a lot of blocking power, and Sara’s never saw a single blocking card!

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Sara also reminded of a rule that tends to evoke more cooperation … you can throw Mushrooms to each other!  The maps have some Mushrooms (see above) scattered about!  And Mushrooms all do good things! You can throw a mushroom to help your compatriot … if you are close enough!  

Generally, this game went over very well ! The theme really impressed by friends, they loved the art, and they loved the quick 60-minute game!

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I think the amount of cooperation depends a little on the Climber/Class pairs you choose. The “Saavy” Climber (see above) tends to be very useful at helping everyone in the game at some point, so playing “Saavy” will elicit more cooperation! “Fix” (above), on the other hand, is just focused on “Hit It Harder”, so he will tend to just do his own thing.

The amount of cooperation will depend on a lot of things: the Climbers, the Classes, the Mushrooms, and the topology of the Leviathan! The game may feel multi-player solitaire in some games, and incredibly cooperative in other games!

Conclusion

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Leviathan Wilds was, luckily, a good game! I was a little nervous about it, because frankly I hadn’t heard too much about it from any other source.  But I think this game is great! It has some really unique ideas that make it feel almost like a video game: deferring Threat activation until after the player finishes, player cards that can be played instantly, multi-use cards, Threat Cards that rotate to get harder (levelling up!), and a Leviathan topology to maneuver!  

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I am a big fan of this game: the official solo mode works well enough (although I prefer the unofficial solo mode), but the cooperative mode works even better.  There’s not too many rules, the game is a short 60 minutes, and yet it feels like this is a deep game with lots of replayability!  The Climber/Class combination system works great for keeping the game interesting! The 17 Leviathans give the players lost of creatures to help!

This is a fun, fun game.  Right now it sits at an 8.5/10 for me, but this could easily go up to a 9 or 9.5. This totally deserved to be on my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024! It’s a blast!

Full Campaign Playthough: A Review of Set A Watch: Doomed Run

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Set A Watch: Doomed Run (see above) took over my life and my game table (see below) for 10 days in late April 2024.

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For those of you who don’t know, Set A Watch: Doomed Run is a campaign game set in the Set A Watch universe from Rock Manor games.   If you don’t know what Set A Watch is, check out our reviews of the three standalone games: Set A Watch (see link here), Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin (see link here), and Set A Watch: Forbidden Isles  (see link here).  The summary: Set A Watch is a cooperative dice-placement game set in a fantasy universe.  Four characters work together to travel home, fighting monsters along the way.

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Set A Watch: a cooperative fighting game: protect the campfire!

The original Kickstarter that introduced us to the Set A Watch universe was way back in September of 2018: See above.

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The most recent Kickstarter (above) introduced us to two products: the standalone expansion Set A Watch: Forbidden Isles and the campaign version of this game called Set A Watch: Doomed Run.  We reviewed Set A Watch: Forbidden Isles about a month ago (see our review here).

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After a very long (but fun) 10 days, we were able to play through all of the entire campaign of Set A Watch: Doomed Run.  Let’s take a look below!

Unboxing

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Set A Watch: Doomed Run is a pretty big box: see Coke can above for scale. The box is definitely taller than the soda can!

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Right when you open the box, there’s a little pamphlet telling you how to organize everything: we’ll come back this later …

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In the top section of the box is the game board, the rulebook, the board, some extra characters, and a Foreteller: Doomed Run advertisement.  Foreteller is an app that will use professional actors to read parts of the story to you … but you must buy it separately!

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The original Set A Watch game(s) are self-contained with fairly small boxes where the board is the wrap-around board: see above.  

The box here for Doomed Run is huge, so there’s no wrap-around board! The board just comes in the box: see below.  But basically, the board is the same: it’s the dice placement board where the player who “stays back” chooses his actions.

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Most of the box is surprisingly empty:

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Wait, how much did I just pay for an almost empty box???”  Well, there’s two answers to that question …

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First, there’s some content hidden under the top plastic divider!

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This is a campaign game!  Each stage of the campaign has extra cards packed into the appropriate Realm envelope: see above.

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There’s some new locations, some new creatures, some new Unhallowed, some new ability cards, a few new summons, some new dice, and some dividers: see above!  There’s more than you think in here … and at the same time, there’s not.  What do we mean by that?

The Elephant In The Room

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The elephant in the room is that you need to own all three standalone games Set A Watch, Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin, and Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles (and the Outriders small expansion) in order to play Doomed Run!  See above. That’s right, you have to love this game enough to have bought all the content available!

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The Doomed Run campaign pulls content from every single expansion over the course of the campaign!! See above: I have each expansion separated out so I can pull the appropriate cards.

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For example: take a look at the rulebook above! It describes all the cards you need for Realm 1 (the first act of the campaign).  The cards needed for Realm 1 are taken from the four expansions AND the Doomed Run box!

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That’s why the Doomed Run box is so empty! They want you to store ALL OF YOUR EXPANSIONS in it!!  Again, we will discuss this more later …

Rulebook

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The Doomed Run rulebook is good.

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I think the Doomed Run rulebook may get the best score on The Chair Test we’ve seen in some time!  It’s an A!!! It fits perfectly on the chair next to me, the rulebook stays open, the font is big enough to read, and it’s a good font!   It would probably get an A+ on the Chair Test if there were a few more pictures and it had a slightly bigger font!

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The components page is well-marked: it does suffer from a lot of the cards being the envelopes, so you can’t pull all the cards out and “correlate them”! But the label at the top of the page clearly says “..some components listed here are separated and stored within the Realm envelopes in the box….”  At least they show what the components look like!

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The Set-Up spans 4 pages (!), but it does show a nice picture you can use.  Part of the extra pages are needed because … this is a campaign game!  This is significantly harder to set-up Doomed Run than the plain vanilla version of Set A Watch.

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There’s discussions about winning and losing and saving the game …

Some save sheets:

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But the most important thing is that the rulebook has the list of the cards needed for each of the 7 Realms (each Realm is an act of the campaign): See an example of Realm 7 list below. Note that each Realm has some flavor text on the left, with the cards needed on the right.

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There is a no index (boo), but there is a Glossary (yay: see above).

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The rulebook ends with a record of how you did in each Realm!

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Overall, this rulebook was pretty good: A solid A on the Chair Test, good components, good set-up, readable font, and fair number of pictures. 

My only complaints are more rules themselves: they could have been a little better!  For example, I know that I read that Mythic Items don’t get discarded between realms, but I went absolutely spare trying to find the rule!  You’d think it would be listed under Mythic Items section, yes? Or under the Set-Up?  Only in Ending A Realm, a sentence says “Any Adventures not selected as the Warden must discard all their non-Mythic items”.   I would have tried to be clearer! It’s okay to repeat yourself to make rules clearer! I would have:

  • (a) said this in a positive way: “Adventurers keep all Mythic Items between Realms, but return all non-Mythic items to the Items deck
  • (b) reiterated this rule in the Mythic Items section
  • (c) made space on the Doomed Run historical record as a place to record each character’s Mythic Items (as they have space for all the Warden’s items).    To be fair, the Mythic Items are listed on the Save Sheet  Expeditions page, but it’s not clear that you keep them … and in fact, I never used the Save Sheet Expeditions page! I played through each Realm in one sitting, so I never used them!
  • (d) put this in a FAQ (see below)

As the campaign went on, there were several times when we had questions:  a FAQ (that we’ve seen in the previous Set A Watch rulebooks) might have been nice.  

So, the rulebook could have used a little more work.  A FAQ and a few reiterations would have been helpful.  So, the rulebook was good … it could have been great.

New Idea: Side Quests

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There’s now Side Quests: at the start of every Expedition, players choose of one of 3 Side Quests to take!  See above for three samples Side Quests!  Basically, player take one, trash one, and put the third away.  Now, these Side Quests aren’t little adventures that take time away from the game: they are just cards with a cost and a reward!  The cost is pretty varied, but the reward is almost always either (a) a new Character to add to the party (b) a Mythic Item.

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For example: if you want to get the Healing Staff (above) for the Cleric (so worth it!), you have to exhaust 3 ability cards!  This is another place where the rulebook doesn’t do a good job explaining!  Do you pay the cost immediately?  Do you pay it as you play?  Do you get the reward immediately after you pay the cost?  Or do you get the reward at the end?  This was poorly specified in the rulebook.  We played so that we “generally” payed the cost at the start of the Expedition and got the Reward at the end;  it was unclear.

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Still, the Side Quest idea was cool: it made the players talk and strategize about the directions of the party: what do they want to focus on?  The new characters are important, as they shape the direction of your campaign: you need diversity for new Wardens!  You also really need new characters for sheer numbers: your characters can die the campaign, so you need to always have four characters available or you immediately lose!

New Idea: Wardens

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At the start of every Realm (after the first), the players can choose one character to become a Warden and watch the Kingdom!  There are two major benefits to choosing a character to be a Warden

  1. Each Warden offers a special good effect at the start of the Realm
  2. A Warden keeps all of his items (both Mythic and non-Mythic) between Realms, whereas most characters can only keep the Mythic items (the non-Mythics go back to the item deck).  (See what I did there?  I repeated information to make it clearer).

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For example, the Cleric (above), when he becomes a Warden makes it so the characters start with all abilities refreshed!  (Usually, each player starts the Realm with one ability exhausted).  IMG_3969

You can see on the Record above that the Cleric got the Healing Staff (so good!), as well as two other items.  In my campaign, the Cleric was the Warden for Realm 2, which allowed the players to start fully healed!  See below.

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The only problem is that the character who is currently stands as a Warden CANNOT PLAY the current Realm!  They can play later Realms (and come back with all their stuff), and indeed, the Cleric came back in my final Realm (spoiler alert!).

The Warden idea was really nice: it forced players to have a new character sit out every Realm and add a new character in!  New characters were slowly cycled in and out over the whole campaign!  It kept the campaign fresh!!! Over the coarse of 7 Realms, I got to play 4 + (7-1) = 10 characters! I’d keep three of the same characters as I moved from Realm to Realm (for consistency, since I had just played them and wanted to keep their play style active in  my cache), but I would add a new character in at every Realm!  

I really liked how the Warden system gave you a reason to keep cycling in new characters into the campaign!  This was a very cool mechanism to force new blood!

New Idea: Nemesis

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You might also notice the Cleric has a Nemesis notated on his Warden card: the Sewer Ghoul!  See above.  What does that mean?

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This means that, whenever the Cleric is one of the four characters in play (not a Warden), the Sewer Ghoul must be shuffled into the Creature deck!  In other words, it makes the game a little harder by having more creatures! The Nemesis seems to specifically targeted to the character and his powers!  For example, the Cleric has can simply Cleanse Undead to get rid of the Sewer Ghouls if they show up …

The Nemesis idea worked okay: I think they are mostly to help balance the game a little.  For example:  The Warrior Nemesis is needed to keep the big dice of the Warrior under control … see below.

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The Enraged Farmer Nemesis (above) is pretty hefty! But the Warrior is a heavy-hitting character, so it helps balance out the Creatures so they are more balanced with the characters.

The Nemesis idea worked, but the idea made the game slightly more fiddly; I had to go hunting for the cards many times (“Oops! I forgot the Nemesis!“)! Since each character has a unique Nemesis, there is some looking around.

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At least the Warden card tells you which game the Nemesis comes from!  The little scarab next to the Nemesis name means Doomed Run: see above.

The Nemesis idea was slightly annoying to remember to seed the Creature deck, but it did seem to work.

New Idea: Mythic Items

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We’ve mentioned Mythic Items several times previously during this review: they can only be obtained as a Reward from a Side Quest: see above.

As we said, Mythic Items persist between Realms, so it’s really great to get them if you can!  Unfortunately, only the character listed on the Item can use it!  The Healing Staff? Only the Cleric can use it!  

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There’s exactly one Mythic Item for each character.  But, I think Mythic Items are probably my favorite new part of the game?!?!  They felt so cool! When a character finally got their Mythic Item, they felt so cool and powerful!!

The only problem with Mythic Items: It was a bit of a crapshoot when choosing Side Quests though: Don’t you always want the Mythic Item?  Only if you had or had a chance of getting the character who can use it!  If you have already “thrown away” the Ranger, you don’t want to Side Quest for the Multiplying Arrow … no one can ever use it! (Although, every Mythic Item counts for points towards your final score).    The Side Quest mechanism really did make these Mythic Items feel precious … and when you got them!  Wowiee!!! So cool!  

Mythic Items were very thematic and fun: they were my favorite part of the game.  The Mythic Items reminded me of old games of Dungeons and Dragons when your Paladin got the +5 Holy Sword!  It felt so cool!

New Idea: Game Break

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The base game of Set A Watch is about an hour of playtime: players have 9 Locations to get through, and it moves along quickly.  In Doomed Watch, however, each Realm is a little longer than the base game! Each Doomed Watch Realm has about 12-15 Locations (depending on where you are in the campaign), with later Realms being longer.  The new notion of a Game Break comes after 4 Locations!

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The Game Break seemed to do a bunch of things: 

  1. Keep the coins from accumulating too much
  2. Cycle Side Quests in and out quickly so you see more of them
  3. Keep the Creature deck “fresh”

 The Game Break is also a natural save point for the game: since the Realms are longer runs, this gives the players a natural place to save the game if needed.  The rulebook has some pages for saving (see below), or you can download some sheets from the Rock Manor website.

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I never used the Save Sheet (above) because I always saved games between Realms, never at a Game Break.

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To be clear: each Realm in the Doomed Watch campaign is longer than a base game of Set A Watch.  Over the course of the campaign, I saw Realms take about 2 to 3 hours.  The Game Break helps add more “save points” to the game.

Doomed Run Campaign

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My Doomed Run campaign took place over 10 days.  I played about one Realm a day (skipping a few days here and because of work): the earlier Realms were about 2 hours apiece, but the later Realms became longer and longer.  I think the final Realm (Realm 7) was 3 hours of playtime.

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To emphasize, that’s 2-3 hours of playtime!  The set-up and tear-down for each Realm was also pretty hefty! I think it’d take upwards of 45 minutes to set-up and 20 minutes to tear-down.  The issue is that you have to put cards back in the appropriate place!  

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Each card in the game is marked with where it comes from on the lower right of the card, mostly.  Each Realm tells you where to get the cards from: see below for Realm 2.

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After the game was over, I would spend some time putting cards back where they belong during tear-down so I could find them again.

To summarize, each Realm was about 30-40 minutes of Set-Up, 2-3 hours of gameplay, and 20 minutes of teardown.  I think my final Realm was a 4 hour game: 40 minutes of set-up, 3 hours of play, and 20 minutes of tear-down.  Whew!  There was a lot of overhead in setting up and tearing down games.

But Was It Fun?

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Yes! It was fun!  I love the Set A Watch system!  The newer ideas of Wardens, Side Quests, Mythic Items really helped evolve the game! There were new things to think about, new ways to strategize, and just more decisions.  I don’t think I would played through all 7 Realms unless I was having fun!  I really do like this game!  I really feel involved at every step of the game, and the strategies of choosing Side Quests, characters to play, Items to buy, who to watch the fire, when to cull the Horde, when to cull the Unhallowed, and so many other things … keep the game from just being a “roll dice and kill things” game.   

I’ve said it before: I like that dice can be used for their value AND/OR to activate character abilities!  If you have a good roll, you can straight up do great damage! But, even bad rolls can be useful when you activate abilities!

Solo And Cooperative

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The majority of the Doomed Run I played solo: this means I ran four characters at the same time.  I admit, when I first encountered that “you must play four characters” for the solo game back in the original Set A Watch, I was a little turned off!  The typical problems of context switching and game elongation rear their ugly head, but I’ve since grown to love the solo game.  I love to think and contemplate, so even if the solo game takes twice as long as the multi-player cooperative game, that’s okay! I like the puzzle it presents!  What’s the best way to use the three characters on watch?  It’s so much fun to reason that out!

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However, I was able to slot in two 2-Player games during the campaign!  Teresa filled in for Realm 4 (see above) and did a great job!

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And Sam filled in for Realm 6!  See above.  The two-player games just mean we play 2 characters each, but we still have fun communicating and strategizing together!  In fact, I was worried Sam wouldn’t have fun with the Merchant character (see above), but he ended up having a great time!

It was VERY EASY to put new players in and out of the game!  If some player doesn’t make it one week, or someone else comes, it’s still really easy to just slot them in to the game!  Since new characters are cycling in and out all the times (partly because of the Warden idea), it’s much easier to slide new players in and out!  Honestly, that makes this an easier campaign game to get to the table!  Your group can change every week during a campaign of Doomed Run, and everyone would still have fun playing!  

So, Doomed Run is a campaign where you can play both solo and cooperatively, changing the player makeup every game!  

Theme or No Theme?

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Is there a lot of theme here? Yes and no.  When you are playing a Realm, it feels very thematic! This Realm has been built to have Goblins, or Undead, or some other theme to it.  The game, when you are playing, feels very thematic as monsters come out and you have to deal with them!  

BUT … the Doomed Run campaign itself, wasn’t particularly thematic.  There’s some flavor text at the start of the Realm that sets the stage … and that’s about it.  It doesn’t feel like the Reams are particularly connected.   The Doomed Run idea is great: it’s an excuse to play all the Set A Watch content!  But did I ever feel like I was playing through an integrated campaign with twists and turns? Nah. 

The upside of the campaign being less-than-thematic means that it’s easier to bring in cycle in new players and characters (see the Solo and Cooperative section above).  It also means you don’t really need to buy the Foreteller text for this: really, it doesn’t look worth it!  The only thing it will do is read is the little blurb at the start of each Realm … which you can do in 2 minutes. And like I said, eh, it wasn’t that thematic.

When you are playing, the game is thematic and fun! But the theme and integration of the campaign is a whole isn’t really there.  If you are looking for a campaign with lots of play twists, theme, decisions, branching narrative … Doomed Run is not the game for you.  It’s still a fun game, but it’s just not particularly thematic overall.

Mixing and Matching

I really like Set A Watch: Doomed Run. But there are some things to be aware of.

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First, you need to buy absolutely everything Rock Manor has made for Set A Watch to play the Doomed Run campaign: Set A Watch, Swords of the Coin, Forsaken Isles, The Outriders and Doomed Run itself!  That will be a non-starter for most people.

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It’s hard to reset the campaign!  The Doomed Watch does NOT tell you what’s in each envelope! I think each envelope should have had a manifest, or at least labelled them!   

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Bizzarely, the Side Quests were labelled appropriately! I could immediately tell the Poison Recipe Side Quest belonged back in envelope for Realm 7 because of the R7!!

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Luckily, I was taking pictures (for this review) as I went, so I was able to piece what was in the envelopes, but the cards were not labelled!   It have been nice if the lower right of the card said DR1, for Doomed Run Realm, and DR2 for Doomed Run Realm 2, etc  … (just like they did for the Side Quests!!)  As you play, make sure you take pictures of what’s in the envelopes!

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Although the Creatures, Unhallowed, and Locations are marked with which game they come from, it’s not clear some times!  There was no legend in the Doomed Run rulebook which explained all the symbols!  The flower symbol (on the Locations) above means Doomed Run, but which deck?  I don’t know!!

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Even worse, the Items cards are completely unlabelled! I want to be able to separate all my decks out when I am done, but I can’t resort the items!  So, for my entire game, I only used the items from the Swords of the Coin deck!!! At least then, I knew which deck they went back to when I was done!  

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The ability cards are unlabelled as well, but it’s not as big a deal as you can always figure out which box (or envelope … if you take pictures) the cards came from, as each Set A Watch lists the characters that come with it.

This seems like a big deal: I wish that Rock Manor had labelled the cards better.  It made it very difficult to reset your game.  I did it, but the pictures I took helped me.  If you decide to take the plunge, make sure you take pictures of what’s in each envelope!

Storage

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The first thing in the pamphlet is the recommended storage: they want you to unpack all of your Set A Watch games and combine them in the Doomed Run box! Nope nope nope nope nope.

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I want to keep my games separate!  The base game is so easy to pull out and play!  If you, all of a sudden, mix everything in one box, it muddies the experience!  When Set A Watch should be a quick game to set-up, play, and tear-down, putting everything in the Doomed Watch will make this so much harder to bring to the table.  The base game is small and approachable.  The Doomed Run box is daunting. If I ever want my friends to play Set A Watch again … the games have to stay separated!!

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In the end, I opened up and placed all the Set A Watch games on my table, visually separated so I could easily correlate which games held which content!  See above!! I hated the idea of combining all my games into one box (especially since cards like the Items are unseparable and unlabelled)!  So, I played with one half of my table taken up.  It worked for me, but you may not have the space to try this solution.

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It turns out you can have your cake and eat it too … you can actually store all 3 Set A Watch boxes (and the Outriders expansion) in the Doomed Run box without separating the games out! See above!  Basically, the games slotted into the big bay on the left (see above).

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So, I can store all my Set A Watch together, but not have the terrible terrible consequences of combining everything!  That’s a win in my book. 

My recommendation: do not separate the games out.

Conclusion

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It’s hard to recommend Set A Watch: Doomed Run.  You have to buy four expansions and the Doomed Run box to even play this!  Yet, over 10 days in April 2024, I had a blast playing through this campaign!  It’s rare that I get so excited that I want to play a campaign this long, but I love the Set A Watch cooperative dice-placement system so much that I couldn’t stop playing!

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This campaign is unique because you can easily combine solo and cooperative play through out the campaign!  The Warden system encourages cycling characters in and out, which makes it easy to cycle in new players as well!   Although this cycling is a great feature, it partly comes from the overall campaign being fairly athematic: it’s easy to cycle in new players and characters partly because there is no theme connecting the acts of the campaign.  Be aware: Doomed Run isn’t a deep, thoughtful campaign with lots of twists and turns!  Doomed Run is really just an excuse to play through all the content of this game system.

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If you find yourself intrigued by this campaign, pick up any of the Set A Watch base games and make sure you like it! If you find yourself wanting more, you can always get more expansions … and if, like me, you find yourself loving the Set A Watch gameplay, maybe the Doomed Run campaign makes sense to get. You just gotta get all the content!!

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Doomed Run made my Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024!  And I am happy that I got it!  It will probably make my Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2024 this year! I had a blast playing it this year, and I expect I will play through it again in the future.  

A Review of Robinson Crusoe Collector’s Edition: from the Perspective of the First Edition

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Can you say a game is one of your favorite games of all time if you haven’t played it in five years?

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Is it even worse if you have all the expansions and have never even opened them? See the shrink wrap still on my expansions above and below!

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Although some might answer differently, I am going to answer with a resounding .. YES! Robinson Crusoe can still be one of my favorite games of all time even though I have all these unopened expansions and I haven’t played it in a while!  It reminds me of a favorite musical album I haven’t heard in years: when I hear it again, it just evokes all the feelings of joy and happiness … even if I haven’t heard it in a while. I still love it!   When I play Robinson Crusoe after five years, I still love it!

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Robinson Crusoe Collector’s Edition was on Gamefound a VERY LONG TIME AGO …  and it finally delivered to me in February 2024.   I backed the campaign on March 24, 2021, so it took three years for this to deliver!!!  I know a lot of people who were very very upset with Ignacy (the designer and publisher) over this lateness.   I guess I wasn’t as upset as others, but I also had to wait five years for Sentinels of Earth Prime to deliver, so three years feels like a breeze!

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This is a deluxe version/expansion for the game.  If you have the original first edition game (which I do), this is just an deluxified expansion for the game.  Now, the Gamefound claims that this expansion works with the first edition of the game (which I have).  And it …. mostly does.  We’ll discuss that more later.

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The expansion box adds some great minis, as well as some deluxified components.  

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However, since this was a Gamefound event, they also offered a lot more stuff to expand the game. See above!  We’ll take a look at a little of this below.

Unboxing of the The Big Box

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A big box arrived outside my door February 2024.  What’s this?

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Still not sure even after opening it … is that a playmat?

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Oh ya!  It’s Robinson Crusoe Collector’s Edition! Holy Cow! I forgot that I also ordered the playmat as an extra!  This is literally THE BIGGEST playmat I now currently own!  It takes up more than half the table and is huge … see the pencil and Coke can for perspective.

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Inside are also a lot of deluxe additions and expansions to the game. Note: these components do NOT come by default with the Collector’s Edition!  They are stretch goals and just generic add-ons from the original Gamefound event.

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I also got upgraded components for the food, wood, and other resources.

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There’s some very nice wood dice to replace the plastic dice in the game.

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There’s some more cards??? What are these??? See above.

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There’s some more minis to expand the already crazy minis we’ll see in second.

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And a few other expansions.  To be clear, the Coke and the pencil are there for perspective, they dot no come with the game!

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It might be easy to get lost with all this content (I did), but there’s a nice booklet in the box that explains what everything is!

Those cards we didn’t know what they were .. they are described in detail.

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In general, everything is described, in some detail! This is something this deluxe edition got right: within the book, they make sure to describe everything that comes in the box … even the Gamefound expansions! It’s too easy to let that stuff lag and say “just look at the Gamefound site” … nope! This explains everything that comes with the game!

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One final thing I want to mention: I got the Book of Adventures.  This is one of the nicest spiral bound notebooks I have ever seen.  It essentially collects together all (?) adventures and scenarios we’ve seen for Robinson Crusoe over the year into one volume. This is gorgeous.

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This is just all the extra stuff from the Gamefound event! See above.  But, what actually comes in the box: Robinson Crusoe Collector’s Edition?

Unboxing of Robinson Crusoe: Collector’s Edition

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The actual box is pretty large!  This is the box you can buy in stores …

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It’s taller than my can of Coke!

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At the top is the Introductory Campaign Guide!  

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This guide looks amazing, but it gets only a C on the Chair Test: Why? Because it hopelessly flops over the edges of the chair next to me… see below.

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Underneath that is the content guide we saw earlier … 

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Under that is some cardboard pieces: the volcano and some tokens.

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But what everyone wants to see are the minis!!

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These are the sundrop minis … that I paid way too much for.  But they look cool.

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Most of the minis replace the two worker placement tokens.

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Underneath the minis are some space.

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The players boards in the box replace the original player boards: they are 3 level boards and look fantastic!

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The rest of the box is pretty empty … it holds a few mini expansions and cards.

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Basically, this box is supposed to replace and hold all of your original Robinson Crusoe content.

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You can see everything in (and not in) the box above!  This is a really nice expansion.

The Case of the Missing Monkey

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Those of you paying attention might notice the missing mini in the upper right of the mini box.  Did I lose a mini when I unpacked it?  Did the publisher forget a mini?

Turns out the missing mini is a Monkey … that I had to specially order.  I didn’t just get it.  Supposedly, they publisher will offer the mini on the website after the fulfillment is done.

See this Board Game Geek thread here about the Case of the Missing Monkey!

First Edition

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To be clear, I have the original first edition of Robinson Crusoe which came out in October 2012. See above and below: it’s not exactly the best organized. But I played the heck out of this solo over the years!

The rulebook for the first edition worked for me, but a lot of people complained about it .. they also wanted to upgrade the game as well. So, the second edition of Robinson Crusoe came out: it had a much better rulebook as well as numbered the cards on certain decks and other things.

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Now, I backed the Collector’s Edition because the publisher said “it does support the first edition!”  And they are mostly right.   The real issues come up when playing the Introductory Campaign; These issues are three-fold:

  1. The cards in the original First Edition are NOT numbered: a lot of the set-up instructions refer to cards numbered xxx-yyy.  Luckily, they also list all the cards, so this isn’t a deal breaker.
  2. Some cards are missing.  A few cards that the tutorial refers to are simply not in the first edition.
  3. Some cards are relabelledThe Cure is labelled something else … the card is there but has a different name in the First Edition.

We’ll address each of these in more detail when we discuss the tutorial, but other than that, the Collector’s Edition did work with the First Edition. To be fair, none of these issues made the game unplayable, but you do have to be flexible.

The Introductory Campaign

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The most interesting thing to come in the Collector’s Edition (besides the minis) is the Introductory Campaign Scenario Book.   This is basically a 4-scenario long campaign that slowly brings you into all the rules of this big complex game called Robinson Crusoe!  It’s basically a very guided tutorial to get people playing.

The campaign starts very simple, showing off some of the base rules.  Every new scenario in the campaign builds on the previous rules until the last game is a “full” game of Robinson Crusoe!

Over the course of March 2024, I played through one scenario a week (solo) until the end of March 2024.

Scenario 1: Warm Welcome To Tamatoa

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Scenario 1: Warm Welcome to Tamatoa from the campaign doesn’t use the main map.   It uses the actual campaign book: see above and below.

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This particular scenario is a very very abbreviated version of the rules. I figured since I was an experienced player that I’d walk right through this: nope!  it’s actually a nice little puzzle.  I had to play it twice to win!

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You’ll also note that I forgot to use the minis for the workers in my first game: I used the original wood disks.  I know, how did I miss that???

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In my second game (after losing the first), I did use the minis.  Look how nice they look!

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This is a real nice way to ease people into the Robinson Crusoe game.  This first scenario was a fun little puzzle.  

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My only real complaint was the that I had to go looking for cards #1-#3 for the Event Deck .. but remember that the First Edition doesn’t have the Event deck cards numbered! Luckily, the card names  were listed so I could just hunt for the right cards: Vertigo, Fight, Memories of the Cruise.

But in general, this first scenario is a great way to get people into Robinson Cruose.

Scenario 2: Which Way The Wind Blows?

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My second game didn’t start off great. Why?  You build the Event Deck with cards #5-#8 (Loss of Hope, Bear, Body on the Beach, and Despondency) … and there is no Despondency card in the First Edition!!! See this Board Game Geek thread for more details.

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In the end, I just picked a random card from the Event Deck (Fight) and moved forward. 

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You’ll note, of course, that I put a sticky note in my scenario book describing the issue (so I don’t have the “rediscover this issue” in the future).  

After getting through this rather aggravating issue, I was able to play the second Scenario: Which Way the Wind Blows without any further issue. 

The second scenario also uses the map in the scenario book and just builds on the rules from Scenario 1.  It worked well, despite sometimes having to page through both the rules for Scenario 1 and 2 (as the rules from Scenario 2 build on the rules for Scenario 1).

Scenario 3: Looking For Answers

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Unfortunately, we also ran into set-up issues for Scenario 3: Looking for Answers.  The Medicine Invention card is called Cure in the first edition … so it’s there, but if you don’t see that right away, you could be looking around for quite some time!  Also, there are no Poisonous Spores card: I just used Poison.  Again, I noted the issues on stickies so I could replay this again without issue.

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Again, because the cards aren’t numbered, I had to go searching for Mystery Cards …

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And Adventure cards.  Luckily, everything was labelled but remember … there are no numbers on the cards in first Edition!!

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It’s here at Scenario 3 when then full map comes out!  That’s right, the game starts to really flesh out and start to feel like a true Robinson Crusoe game: Inventions are out, Risky Actions are out, and Mystery cards are out!

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I ended up keep the instructions on the right, with the full mat on the right.

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The game really starts coming alive in this Scenario as you are exploring and look for Treasure Chests!

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Scenario 4: Lords Of Fog

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Finally, by Scenario 4: Lord of Fog, you are playing the full game!   There’s no special set-up of the cards (thank Goodness!) so no issues from the First Edition come up!

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In game 4, you add hunting mechanics and the weather dice back into the game.  By this point, you are fully invested in this adventure and want to see it through!

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It’s a bit of  table hog at this point, as I need to have the mat and rules and original box on the box (for components).

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I will also say that this game really tested me: I should have lost.

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My last round needed two build actions to win … “I have this in the bag…” until the Strong Winds Event came out!  “What??? I can’t build because I don’t have enough actions???? I’m screwed!!”

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I needed to get some characters on Brew to win, but I also needed to build some things!  

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In the end, I figured out a very clever way to get what I needed!  It was such a trying moment to feel I had come all that way just to lose because of Strong Winds!  

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I think this is just a testament to how strong this game is: there’s so much choice you can usually do something interesting and useful in response to bad news.

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What a blast! 

Set-Up

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By far, the worst thing about the Introductory Scenario was the set-up: between First Edition problems and just so many components and books, I was struggling to keep everything in reach and organized as I set everything up.

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The reason this took me a month to play was that each Scenario really took it’s time to set-up and tear-down.  I mean, I guess Robinson Crusoe has always had that problem to a certain extent, but it seemed more pronounced this time.

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Other than that issue, I think this Introductory Campaign is a great way to get people into Robinson Crusoe! I am … or I used to be … an experienced Robinson Crusoe player, and I had fun playing the abbreviated versions of the game.

Conclusion

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Do you really need the Collector’s Edition of Robinson Crusoe?  Nah, not really.

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There is so much content out there for Robinson Crusoe that you probably would want to get first: both Mystery Tales and Voyage of the Beagle have tons of stuff for you to do.

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But if you love the ideas of amazing minis (especially as your worker pieces) and a really well-designed intro, then maybe this is for you!  I feel like the introductory scenario(s) got me to fall in love with Robinson Crusoe again.  

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It’s hard to recommend the full Collector’s Edition (which has the base game and minis and intro) because it’s a lot of money, especially if you don’t know if you like the game!  But if you know you like the game and want to jump into this world, it’s a very cool place to start!

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 If you are like me (with the First Edition) and like the game, there is a way to get the “minimal” Collector’s Edition which just has the new stuff.  Although First Edition has its own problems, I am still happy I got this.   It’s breathed new life into my Robinson Crusoe and reminded me how much I like the game … and isn’t that the purpose of an expansion?

Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles Review

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I love Set A Watch! The Set A Watch system is a cooperative dice-placement/selection system for 1-4 players and plays pretty quickly in 60 minutes. The original Set A Watch came out in 2019 (see our original review here) from a Kickstarter: see the box cover below.

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Set A Watch: a cooperative fighting game: protect the campfire!

We loved the original Set A Watch so much it made the Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2019 and our Top 10 Cooperative Dice Games! This is a cooperative game we could bring to game groups … and both lighter and harder gamers seemed to like it! See box above.

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Then, the Set A Watch people (Rock Manor Games) had another Kickstarter for Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin. See above. It arrived at my house in 2021 and was in my Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2021! Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin is a standalone expansion which you can combine with the original Set A Watch or play by itself! It makes the game slighly more complex (but with slightly more options) by offering a coin system that allows you to buy items! See below.

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Now, what we’re talking about is the latest in this line! Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles is the latest standalone expansion in the Set A Watch world! This was on Kickstarter and our Top 10 Anticipated Cooperative Games of 2024! It arrived at my house very early April 2024 and I was so excited!

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This Kickstarter actually had two things it delivered: the standalone Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles and Set A Watch: Doomed Run.  We hope to talk about Doomed Run in a few weeks: it’s a big campaign!

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Let’s see what comes in the Deluxe Edition of Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles!

Unboxing and Gameplay

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Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles is a pretty small game box: see Coke can above for reference.

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There’s a surprising amount of stuff that fits in the box, considering how small it is!

To be clear, the cover/magnetic clasp of the box is part of the board used in the game.

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This is first and foremost a cooperative dice placement/action selection game: the dice take center stage in this game   The dice are well-labelled and easy to read (especially compared to the first edition where the dice weren’t quite as nice).

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There must always be four characters in play: the players select four from the six above.

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Each character gets 3 dice: which ones?  These are clearly notated on the top of the character! Note that the Golem gets the 3 12-sided dice (see above and below).

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Each character also starts with 3 of the 5 ability cards in play (with 1 starting disabled).  During the game, players can swap out their abilities for different ones.

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Like we said, there must always be 4 characters in play!  See above as each character has their dice and abilities (with the extra abilities in the wings).

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This game has an interesting decision to be made every turn: one player must stay back and watch the fire while the rest of the group ventures out to fight the baddies!  Each character must stay back twice, as indicated by the little camp tokens above (1 for first time, 2 for second time).

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So, one character will do “campfire duty”, stoking the fire, checking the maps and a variety of actions: basically the board serves as the dice placement portion in the campfire phase (see below).

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The rest of the characters go out and fight the line of creatures!

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The dice can be used for their value to straight-up defeat a monster, or a dice can be placed on an ability to invoke it.  See as the Sorceress uses a d8 for Rekindle ability above.

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Note you can only see a few of the monsters in line: it depends on the level of the fire.

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After you (hopefully) defeat all the monsters in line, you travel to the next location!

To win, you need to make it to the final location!  There are 9 locations in total, where the very last location has everyone fighting the final line of monsters!

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Rulebook

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The rulebook is pretty good.

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It gets about a B on the chair test: the font is pretty good sized, and I can see it on the chair next to me, but I have to either hold it open (see above) or I have to bend it back so it stays (see below).

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I don’t love having to break the spine of the rulebook to keep it open: it feels “wrong” to have manually fold so hard!

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In general, this rulebook is pretty good.  They have pictures when needed for set-up and components.

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And I used the back of the rulebook for the Round Overview quite a bit.

Good rulebook, but I should hope so: they’ve had three chances to perfect it!

Other Touches

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There’s a lot of other nice touches in the game: like Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin, players (as a group) can accumulate coin to allow them to buy useful stuff.  Take a look at our review of Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin for more info about the coin/merchant mechanism!  It’s basically the same idea here.

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The new idea in this version of the game is the Doom Tokens: they sound more complicated than they are! If you get 4 Doom Tokens, you really just put stuff into the Horde and bring out Unhallowed a little quicker.  It’s just slightly more fiddly.

Solo Play

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Just like Set A Watch (the original) and Set A Watch: Swords of the Coin, in order to play solo, the solo character must play 4 characters!  See above! (So it does follow Saunders’ Law: there is a viable solo mode)

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I think I was more cautious about the solo game having four characters in my earlier reviews, but after playing through this game for years, I think it is a great way to play.

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Although nominally the game takes 60 minutes to play, I found myself taking 90 – 120 minutes to play solo!  Why? Because each character is complicated and has a complicated set of abilities.  So, if you enjoy thinking a lot, trying to asses the situation with no one breathing down your neck, I think this is a great solo game!  Just be aware that the solo game will probably take 1.5-2x longer to play because there’s so much context switching between characters and abilties.

I think I have really warmed up the solo mode with 4 characters here in Set A Watch. But you have to understand that I have a lot of familiarity with the game after three iterations of it!  I still think the solo mode might be too much for the novice player coming into this … especially since Forsaken Isles is probably the most complex of the three Set A Watch games.

Cooperative Play

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My group played the best way to play this cooperatively: 4 players, each with one character.  Honestly, that’s by the far the best way to play this cooperatively.  Each player plays their own character!! That’s usually the funnest way !

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I will say that 3 players isn’t that bad in this game because one player must always stay behind to tend the fire anyways … that makes it so the three players can all fight the monsters together, each with their own character!  It does “rotate” the characters a little more, but it’s still very doable.

And it’s not  big deal to have two players operate two characters each.  After all, the solo player has to do four characters … what’s two after that???

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There’s many ways this game promotes cooperation:

  • The coin is shared, so player must decide as a group what to buy from the Merchant
  • This game use Player Selected Turn Order (fine grained, see discussion of PSTO here) so that players must work together to discover the best order to use their actions!  “If Teresa goes first, she can take out the baddie at the front of the line! Then I can go!”  These decisions permeate every moment of the game and keep the players talking and engaged
  • Players must decide, every turn, who stays back.  The game forces everyone to stay back twice, so everyone has stay back and mind the fire: who makes the most sense?  That’s an interesting discussion every turn!

Overall, this is a fantastic cooperative game.

Which One?

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There are literally three standalone sets of Set A Watch: if I am interested in the game, which one do I get?  

  • If you are a newer gamer, the original Set A Watch is probably the simplest, as it doesn’t have any of the newer mechanisms (like coin/merchant or doom tokens). 
  • If you are a seasoned gamer, you can’t go wrong with either Swords of the Coin or Forsaken Isles: they both have a more mechanisms in the game (both have the coin/merchant), but nothing too overwhelming.  
  • The latest, Forsaken Isles, is probably the most complex of the lot (because it has the Doom tokens), but honestly, it’s not really that much more.

Honestly, you can’t go wrong with any of them.

Conclusion

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I love Set A Watch, and I am glad to see this new standalone expansion Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles!  It stands alone as a great game, or you can use the monsters and/or characters in here to expand any of your previous Set A Watch games!

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The dice placement mechanism is unique and simple!  It’s easy to explain and tends to suffer less from randomness as the dice can be used for their number or to activate an ability!  Which is better: the number or the ability? You choose!

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Even though I have grown to love the solo mode, I understand that a 4 character solo mode can be very daunting.  Once you embrace it (and double the length of the game), this can be a very satisfying puzzle for the solo player!

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But I think Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles really shines as a 4-Player cooperative game (and to a lesser extent, 2 and 3 player).  The fine-grained Player Selected Turn Order, the decisions when to stay back, and the decisions when to buy all keep the players engaged as they play.

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Set A Watch: Forsaken Isles gets 8.5/10.  I love this game: I’ll play it solo anytime! And I have had great luck with this game in my game groups!  People seem to enjoy the simplicity of the dice placement here.

Top 10 Cooperative Point-And-Click Adventure Board and Card Games

Welcome back to Cooperative Adventure Game Month! We have talked a lot about cooperative adventure games this month, from the silly Starlings Box One to the grimy noir Saints and Sinners.We end this month with a discussion of a Top 10 of one of our favorite kinds of cooperative adventure games: the point-and-click adventure!

Make sure you re-read that! Yes, this is a list of Board and Card Games (not Video games) that work like the original LucasFilm point-and-click adventure games such as The Secret of Monkey Island, The Day of the Tentacle, or the more recent Thimblewood Park! Granted, a board or card game doesn’t have a mouse pointer to move and click, but there’s certain elements that make a game feel like a point-and-click video adventure game!

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What makes a board game a point-and-click adventure game? For us, it breaks down into three fundamental elements:

  1. You explore a world!  The game is about exploration and discovery, as you “move” from location to location.  In the point-and-click video games, you could “point-and-click” to move around a map!
  2. You solve puzzles by combining objects!  You need to find objects and combine them in unique ways to solve puzzles. In the point-and-click video games, you would “point-and-click” on items/verbs to combine them!
  3. You move along in a story!  You are part of a story: this is interactive fiction!

So, if a board or card game has these fundamental elements, we call it a point-and-click adventure game! If it moves from location to location like a duck, combines items like a duck, and is part of a story like a duck, it’s a duck!

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Take a look at our review and discussion of the newest  Monkey Island game for more thoughts on what we like about these type of games! 

To be clear, all the games on this list are “play-once” because you reveal the plot and main elements!  You can play it again, but you probably want to wait a few years until you forgotten everything!

Honorable Mention. Choose Your Own Adventure: House of Danger

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Ages: 10+
Play Solo? Yes, but best with a group
Number of Players: 1 or more Players
Time: 60 minutes per chapter (5 chapters)

This isn’t quite a pure point-and-click adventure game, but it’s so close we have to mention it!  You explore a very silly world, find objects, and use them for both dice mitigation and helping you with puzzles.

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But this feels so much like a point-and-click adventure!  We make choices in the game and we explore the world, but it so silly! The dice are the only reason House of Danger is down at an Honorable Mention: the dice take the pure puzzle aspect out and poke just a little bit of randomness here.

There is another game in the Choose Your Own Adventure series, but House of Danger was the funnest!

10. The Shivers

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Ages: 10+
Play Solo? No, there has to be a GM: best with a group
Number of Players: 2 or more Players
Time: 60 minutes per chapter (5 chapters)

The Shivers is almost more of an Role Playing Game (RPG), as you have to have to have one player “run” the game, so you can’t really play it solo.  That’s really the only reason this is #10 on this list ….

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Otherwise, this is a beautiful game with Pop-Up Components!  The physical nature of this game makes it feel more like point-and-click than many of our games on this list!  But the RPG nature and lack of solo drop it just a little. 

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This game is a fun little cooperative point-and-click type adventure game with a sense of humor and beautiful components!  Take a look at our review of The Shivers to see if this is something you might like.

EDITOR: We recently got a comment on our blog about the Shivers from William T Tiller:

Its funny you should compare it to Monkey Island because I did the Shivers art. I am Bill Tiller, and I worked at Lucas Arts as a lead artist on the adventure games The Dig, and Curse of Monkey Island, and A Vampyre Story. In fact there are a few refences and easter eggs that refer to Monkey Island in The Shivers. Larry Ahren, a writer, designer, and animator on Day of the Tentacle, Full Throttle and director of Curse of Monkey Island also wrote one of the scenarios in the game. Those may be the Shivers game feels a lot like a point and click adventure game.

9. Coded Chronicles: Scooby Doo! Escape From The Haunted Mansion

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Ages: 12+
Play Solo? Yes, but best with a group
Number of Players: 1 or more Players
Time: varies (there are a number of interconnected scenarios)

Players take the role of their favorite Scooby Doo characters and explore the Haunted Mansion, solving puzzles to pursue the mystery in this box! The object interaction is very simple (using the first number of the character combined with the number of an object), but it’s a pretty simple and elegant way to combine objects! 

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This is one of the simpler point-and-click adventure games on this list (with House of Danger being the simplest), but it’s a really fun mystery! And it totally feels like a point-and-click adventure as you explore the house, combine objects, and work towards solving the final mystery!

There are other games in the Coded Chronicles series as well if you like this style of adventure game!

8. Paper Point N Click: Eppi
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Ages: 8+
Play Solo? Yes, but best with a group. The solo mode is still quite good!
Number of Players: 1-4 Players
Time: 5-8 Hours for the whole adventure

Eppi is the next adventure book game series in the Paper Point-and-click line of games.

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This game is an exemplar of the great things a board game can do in the  point-and-click genre!  This particular game is aimed more towards families and is probably best in a cooperative group, but it still works very well solo.  The exploration, story, and puzzles that come out of this game are just outstanding!  This feels like a real point-and-click adventure game.  This is aimed at a younger or family-friendly audience, which may be outside your wheelhouse (which is why it’s only #7).

Unlock Epic Adventures: Mission #07

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Ages: 10+
Play Solo? Yes, but probably best with a group
Number of Players: 1-6 Players
Time: 60 minutes

The Unlock! games are nominally called Escape Room games, but they share quite-a-bit of DNA with point-and-click adventures!  The Unlock! games, which use cards and an app on a phone to direct the action, are a perfect example of point-and-click adventure games!  A story unfolds as you unlock new locations and items, and you to explore and combine items to push forward!

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This particular box has three adventures in it (See Unlock!  Epic Adventures, which we reviewed here), all of which are great point-and-click adventure games!

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But it was Mission #7 (the last of the adventures) that really captivated us!  This story was fun and interesting and tried a few new things we haven’t seen in Escape Rooms before!

6. Unlock! The Adventures of Oz

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Ages: 10+
Play Solo? Yes, but probably best with a group
Number of Players: 1-6 Players
Time: 60 minutes

The original Unlock! games came 1 game to a pack: later on, they started packaging them up up three at a time.

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Before we got Mission #07 in the Epic Adventures box, The Adventures of Oz was available and one of our favorite Unlock games!

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My favorite explanation that this is a Point-and-Click adventure is the back of the box: Search the scenes!  Combine Objects!  Solve Puzzles!  The Adventures of Oz was a really fun adventure that I was mesmerized back at an early RichieCon in 2018: it tried some really interesting things and was such a great adventure!

5. Chronicles of Crime

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Ages: 12+
Play Solo? Yes, but probably best with a group
Number of Players: 1-4 Players
Time: 60-90 minutes

Chronicles of Crime is very much an app-driven game!  It made the #2 spot in Top 10 Cooperative Games 0f 2018! To quote:

If I had to characterize this game, I’d say it’s an old text-style adventure game!  What?  In the old adventure games, you could only “manipulate” the items on screen on in your inventory.  “Get light”, “Drop light”, “talk man”, “ask guard about skull” and so on.  In this game, all your items are on cards in front of you!  When you want to interact with the items, you use your smart phone to scan a code on some cards!  So, if you want to “ask guard about skull”, you’d scan the code on the Guard card, then scan the code on Skull card!  And the phone would tell you what he said!
 
This interaction is great!  Except, you are trying to solve a crime by interacting with the world in front of you!  Really, really fun!   You move around from location to location, physically LOOKING at animations at locations (really!), and then scan cards.  (“I think there’s a shovel here at this location … Um … Oh! There’s a ‘gardening tools’ card!  Scan that!”)
 
Surprisingly fun, amazing graphics (you HAVE to have a smart phone to play), but a lot of content!  It’s also easy to play!  A GREAT game!

There are multiple versions of this game: 2400, 1400, 1900, all of them very interesting iterations on the base game! I’d recommend any of them! In fact, 2400 made our Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2021!

4. Unlock! The Treasure of Tonipal

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Ages: 10+
Play Solo? Yes, but probably best with a group
Number of Players: 1-6 Players
Time: 60 minutes

So, this is one of the more difficult of the Unlock! series!  The pirate theme and puzzles really kind of make of you feel like you are reliving some of your Secret of Monkey Island days!  

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Without giving away too much, this point-and-clock adventure had one of the funnest stories and the best “last puzzle” I’ve ever played.  I want to replay this again it was so much fun!

3. Adventure Series: The Grand Hotel Abaddon

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Ages: 12+
Play Solo? Yes, but probably best with a group
Number of Players: 1-4 Players
Time: 90 minutes per chapter (3 chapters)

This is a very different kind of point-and-click adventure game: it’s quite text heavy, but it uses cards to denote objects and locations.  

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The Location cards are oversized cards, and the objects in the game are plain cards marked with numbers.  

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Every player assumes the role of a character, with little standees moving around this world.  The story centers on a hotel as “strange things” happen.  It’s quite an interesting story that unfurls over 3 sessions!  This is the 4th game in the Adventure Series line: it made our Top 10 Cooperative Expansions of 2022! We really loved this game!

2. Adventure Series: The Dungeon

Ages: 12+
Play Solo? Yes, but probably best with a group
Number of Players: 1-4 Players
Time: 90 minutes per chapter (3 chapters)

The Dungeon is in the same series of games as our last entry: The Adventure Series.  This game series burst onto the scene in 2019, and it was so fun it made it all the way to out #2 spot on the Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2019!

This was probably the first board and card game that really felt a point-and-click adventure game!  You explored a dungeon!  Combined items!  Solved puzzles! You ventured through a story together!   There was nothing else like this, and this series totally captured my game group!

1. Paper Point N Click: Cantaloop

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Ages: 16+
Play Solo? Yes, probably best solo
Number of Players: 1+
Time: 5-8 Hours

Cantaloop nails the point-and-click adventure book game better than any game I have ever played!  When this came out in 2021, it was ground-breaking!  Using the book format with red acetate decoder to move through an adventure game was new and original.

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The way players moved through Locations, combined objects, and solved puzzles was very innovative! Even the help system was innovative!

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What made this so good was the writing! Jokes were strewn everywhere, and everything seemed well-thought out! Remember when Monkey Island would tell you a joke when you tried to combine two weird things? The same happens in Cantaloop! Cantaloop rocketed to the #1 Spot on my Top 10 Cooperative Games of 2021 !

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This series is an ongoing story over three books, told in 3 standalone books: Breaking Into Prison, A Hack of a Plan, and Against All Odds. See our reviews of all three games here, here, and here.

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The only thing to be careful of is that the games are slightly raunchy (see above) and some adult material slips in (which is why the game is 16+ for ages), but it’s always done to be funny and doesn’t detract from the game.

Does It Spark Joy? A Review of Spark Riders 3000!

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Spark Riders 3000 arrived at my house in the USA on Saturday, March 16th 2024. This is a cooperative game for 1-4 players about flying a spaceship … but trying not to blow up! Players work together to keep a ship operational as they try to deliver some packages, but asteroids, nebulas, bad guys, space pirates, and other wacky things conspire against the players!

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This was originally on Kickstarter back in September 2022.  It has already delivered to most of the world, but we here in the USA are just getting the game.  It promised delivery in November 2023: it’s 6 months late, but in Kickstarter-land, that’s not too bad … at least they delivered!

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The version we got from Kickstarter was the Commander Version which is the deluxe version (with lots of plastic instead of cardboard standees).  We also got the Prosperity Box (which has 2 new characters and some really nice tokens we’ll see later).

Let’s take a look!

Unboxing

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Spark Riders 3000 is a pretty standard sized box.

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See the #2 pencil and can of Coke for scale above.

The component for this game are just gorgeous and brightly colored and easy to read!

The cards are all brightly colored and easy to read as well! See above.

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The plastic minis (in this Commander Version) are just so neat!

The dice and other tokens are also quite nice!

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Honestly, this game looks like a big, brightly colored toy!  It has very nice components!

Rulebook

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Like the components, this rulebook is big and bright and easy to read.

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It gets about a B on the Chair Test: it flops over a little too much, but at least the text is all bright and fairly easy to read with a big font.

Unfortunately, the component section (on the first page above) is not great: there is no picture of the components, just a list.  So, you have to guess what everything is.  It’s not a big deal, but it is annoying.

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The set-up pages (above) are very nice:  they are well annotated and very clear!  Good job!

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The rest of the rulebook is quite nice: it’s well laid-out, pretty easy to read and pretty easy to look stuff up.

I would almost complain that the rulebook is too “colorful” (see composite above) because all the color and pretty pages can distract from just reading the rules. I don’t know why I am complaining about this … it’s dumb to complain about that when the rules are quite well done. But all that overload of color is a little distracting.

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There is no index. Sigh.

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But the last back page is a very useful quick summary.

This was a good rulebook overall.  I wish they had an index, but generally it wasn’t too hard to find rules when you needed to look them.  The lack of annotated components was easy to get over, but it was still annoying with such a (generally) good rulebook. I suppose the Tutorial takes care of some of that (see below).

The App

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This game requires an App!! You CANNOT play Spark Riders 3000 without an App!  So, I downloaded the the app to my phone.

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It’s a little small on my small phone screen …

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However, you can see (above) why I switched to the iPad: I couldn’t press the buttons on the very bottom on the screen!  See above. Sigh!!  When I saw this, I then downloaded it my iPad.

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It’s actually nicer on the iPad: it’s easier to see everything.

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But the I got this message … See above?!?!?!  I cannot use it on either?!??!?!  This is going to be a short review!!

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It turns out, even with that message, I could still use the iPad to run the game.  Honestly, the iPad is better because everyone can see it a lot easier!  I am a little grumpy that I struggled with my iPhone and my iPad.  For a very short 5 minutes, I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to play the game! (Basically, I was able to press the button … barely … on my phone, and then I found I could still go forward in the game for my iPad.  So either way would work).

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I recommend using the iPad if it works for you: it’s bigger and easier for everyone to read.

UPDATE: After waiting a few days, they updated the App, so I don’t have the iPad error messages anymore!  So that’s good!  Unfortunately, the voice recognition is much worse and almost unusable in the most recent version.  Sigh.  Gain one thing, lose another.

Learn How To Play

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So, I learned how to play by first watching the animated video …

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… and then reading the rulebook.  

Why do both?  I found the animated app useful to introduce a lot of concepts, and show some basic examples, but it wasn’t enough to start playing.

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I needed the rulebook to look stuff up.  Caveat Emptor.  Maybe you can just learn it from the Tutorial, but I needed the rulebook.

How To Play

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Download the app. Select your heroes!

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Each player chooses to play one of five characters (there’s two more characters in the Prosperity Box).  Each player has a special ability, basically helping him do one of the 5 major actions just a little better:

The major actions are Pilot/Shoot/Tinker, Move, and  Help.

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Each character also has some special Help actions specific to their character.

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We used the upgraded Help tokens from the Prosperity Box, but there are also cardboard help tokens. See above.

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Basically, on the player’s turn, they can each do exactly three things: Move, Help, and “Perform Action” (Pilot/Tinker/Shoot).  The cool thing is that this is fine-grained Player Selected Turn Order!  That’s right, each player can intersperse their three actions amongst each others actions! For example: Nova can move, then Igor can Help, then Igor can Move, then Nova can Help, then Nova can Perform Action, then Igor can Perform Action!  This allows the characters to more easily support each other, as they can break up their turns any way they want!

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Players move around the ship, trying to position themselves to do major actions!  For example, Igor (above) can Pilot as his major action because he’s in the cockpit!  Nova can move three to end up at the laser and shoot!

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This game is all about trying to decide when to repair parts of your ship, when to build weapon and their upgrades, pilot as fast you can to complete the missions, while fighting spaceships off the left and right sides of the ship!

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See above as Nova can operate the cannon to fire at the Grey Alien!

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All the major actions in this game involve dice, but the color coding is pretty clear!  Piloting actions require the green dice, Shooting requires the red ice, Tinkering (repairing/upgrading) requires the blue dice, the orange dice are for armor-breaking rolls, and the Black Dice are for armor checks.

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After you do a check, you will tell the app what you rolled! Click on the little Robot Icon and say “Speed Piloting Level 3!” (if you rolled three successes on a pilot roll), and the app will respond with what happens!

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My first game, the app worked pretty well: I was able to tell the app something, and it seemed to recognize everything just fine!

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My second game (after I upgraded the App, only a few days downloaded the original app), the voice recognition stopped working, so I had to use the manual system (inside the app) to specify my dice rolls.  This was very annoying, but at least the system allowed me to continue and still enter the information.

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Basically, each game has a mission to complete: it specifies what you have to do and the flight you have to take.  You have to decide when to run, when to repair, and when to fight in the game!

Solo Game

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So, the game does support solo play (Congratulations on following Saunders’ Law: this cooperative game has a viable solo mode!) In this case, it’s very easy: the solo player plays as if it’s a 2-Player game, taking the role of two characters.

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In my first game, I played as Igor and Nova: see above.  Igor is better at piloting, and Nova is better at shooting.  

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I was able to barely pull off a win in my first game … but I lost part of my ship!

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I choose to make a run for it in the end, which caused me to lose a compartment off the ship!  Luckily this thing will fly as long as “most” of the ship is there!  

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As I played, I would make rolls and and then tell the app what I rolled.

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I would generally try to get Nova to shoot (see her operating the cannon above) as her Shoot special ability gives her +1 success!

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Igor piloted when he got the chance, outrunning some of the enemies!

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Occasionally, my team would come across aliens, and we’d have to make decisions … Fight them? Give them something?  Out-run them?  There were about 3 to 4 interludes like this, giving us some “Choose Your Own Adventure” type options as we played.

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I won my first game … but for some reason, I thought it was just okay.  Why?

Problems With Solo?

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Over the course of my first solo game, I think I did the Help action exactly three times, and none of them helped at all!  (The main “Help” is to allow a reroll, and all the rerolls failed).

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The main problem with the Help action is

  1. You have to be close to each other to offer Help  (so you can place your help token down).  In a two character game, you have to roam the ship to get stuff done and are very likely not near each other!
  2. The Help actions are specialized per character!  You can only help on certain actions!  “I can help you shoot!  Oh wait, you are tinkering, I am no help…”.  You can always help with a reroll, but you HAVE to take the second roll of a reroll, and sometimes that’s worse!

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Remember, you only do three things on a character’s turn: Move, Place a Help Token, or Major Action.  If you can’t place a Help Token anyplace useful, it feels like your Help turn is completely useless!  

I felt very much ennui after playing my first solo game.  Most of the time, I couldn’t do a Help, which means I lost a third of my turn!!

Solo Game Revisited

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To make sure this wasn’t an isolated event, so I played a second solo game, trying to concentrate more on helping.  

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I did a little more helping, but because the characters tend to be far away from each other, even leaving help tokens laying around to be picked up later still didn’t result in a lot of help!

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I think the solo and 2-Player game might not be the best way to play this game: they don’t offer enough opportunities to Help each other! In a game where a third of your turn is offering Help, you can feel very impotent if you can’t offer help!!   I am hopeful that this “can’t help” problem will go away in a 3 or 4-Player game, where players will physically be closer to each other a lot more (and thus have more opportunities to help). See that discussion below …

I am not sure I will play the solo game again. This is partly because of the of Help opportunities, but partly because of the “along for the ride” issue we’ll discuss later.

Cooperative Play

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We started the cooperative play (4 players) with the Tutorial video.  The tutoriual worked really well at introducing the team to the game.  It was still helpful that I had read the rulebook, but I was able to shepherd people along pretty quickly.

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The cooperative game lasted about 2 hours.

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But in the end, the Help actions were MUCH MORE effective in a 4-Player game!  It actually felt like you were helping much more!  That one little detail seemed to make all the difference in making the game fun … With 4 people wandering the ship, it was much easier to help somebody do something on their turn, even if it was just a reroll …

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The cooperative game for 4-Players seemed to fix the main problem I had in the 2-Player/Solo game: the Help actions were much more … helpful.

The App

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The app needs to be connected to the internet.  That may or may not turn you off, but you should be aware. And the App is required.

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The video tutorial in the app was really good at getting everyone into the game quickly.

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My friends noted that the App really felt well-integrated into the game! It was very thematic to have a spaceship with a console in the App!  It just seemed like having this on a computer seemed so thematic in a space-based game!

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We were still having voice recognition problems in the cooperative game.  We were able to work around them in the app, but it was still annoying.

Along For The Ride

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So, after a number of plays, I realized especially in the solo game, that I felt like I was just “along for the ride” a lot of time.   I had no idea what a failed or successful dice roll would do!!  For example, When I piloted well, would I out run the enemy ships?? Maybe?  I had NO IDEA what the odds were!  Was it worth wasting a HELP on Piloting to get that extra +1 for Piloting???  I don’t know!  

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I don’t know the odds of a ship coming up, I don’t know what part of the ship it will attack, I don’t know the odds of a Orange ship versus other ships.  Things just kind of happen to you … and you do the best you can!

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Some of you are probably saying, “What are you complaining about?  This sounds so cool!  You just fly around like Firefly and make decisions!  You don’t have to worry about computing any odds or looking up charts, you just do stuff and see what happens!!!:

But that’s the thing, that’s not why I play board games.  I like to know what’s going on, what are the odds, should I go for that extra +1 because the difference is huge??  

I felt like I was just along for ride: I would roll dice, tell the app, do a few things and just see what happened.  It felt way too easy to lose just because they bad guys attacked a random part of the ship, or my armor failed, or something else.

There is a lot to like here: it really does feel like an adventure, flying through the galaxy.  But I just felt disconnected from the game (mostly in the solo game) because I didn’t know the odds or have any sense of what a success of failure is. I can see some of this going away if you play the game more and more (and can see the results of your actions), but that’s not what I want to be doing with my time.

Interestingly, a lot of this “Along For The Ride” bad feeling went away when I played the 4-Player game … maybe because I was okay being along for the ride … because I was with my friends?

What I Liked

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The production is phenomenal and the game looks like a bright toy!

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The app, when it’s working, offers some interesting story elements to help keep the game engaging (both with the story and “Choose your Own Adventure” moments!).

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The app feels so thematic because it feels like how you would be piloting a space ship!!

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The cards are all easy to read. The color coding system is consistent throughout and makes it easy to correlate pieces and their contributions.

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Even when you fail a dice roll, you still get a crystal: if you get enough, you can buy Prosperity tokens in the future!  I like this!  A failure at least offers you the hope of  cool item, so that’s kind of a nice dice mitigation mechanism.  Even though this is a dice game, this mechanism makes it feel much less random.

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This really is an adventure where you don’t have to worry too much about stuff: the app takes care of a lot of stuff and you can just sit back and enjoy the ride!

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I really liked the colorful rulebook .. even though it didn’t have an index, it was still pretty easy to look stuff up!

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The tutorial was very good at giving you a sense of the game.

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The game is cooperative and has Player Selected Turn Order (fine-grained), one of my favorite mechanisms in a co-op! You feel that much more involved if you get to pick the order!

What I Didn’t Like

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Like I said in the “Along For The Ride” section, I didn’t feel engaged because I had no idea what my dice rolls meant. I just rolled the dice and see what app told me to do. It didn’t draw me in.  Again, this was mostly in the solo/2-Player modes …

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The app sometimes worked, and sometimes didn’t.  It looks like they got rid of iPhone vs iPad issue with the latest update, but now my text recognition doesn’t quite work.  I am pretty confident they will address these issues and fix them (because they are obviously still updating it), but it’s something to be aware of.

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The lack of Help opportunities in the solo or 2-Player game was frustrating.

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The Help actions seemed a little rough.  Since every help token can do different things (you can always reroll, but everybody also has “special” specific help they can give), why didn’t they notate that on the tokens you give?  Then you could SEE ON THE TOKEN what the help actions could be!Have side 1 of the Help token show actions 1 and 2, and have side 2 of the Help Token show actions 1,2 , and 3 (because the helpee has to unlock the third Help action).  This would have help smoothed out the Help action quite a bit …

Conclusion

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Spark Riders 3000 is an absolutely joyful design: the components, the colors, the app, all bring you into this world!

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If you want a game where you are traversing the galaxy, making quick decisions, and not sweating the small stuff, this is a game for you!  The game is an adventure in space making the right decisions: Fight? Flight? Repair?  Everything do you matters!

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Unfortunately, I personally had some trouble with the game because I many times I didn’t have sense what my dice rolls meant.  I would jut roll dice and consult the app … should I have tried harder?  Should I have gone for that extra help?  I didn’t know because I didn’t know what the dice rolls meant.  I’ll be honest, I really think this is just a “me” problem.  This problem seemed to be really exacerbated in the solo/2-Player game.

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Cooperatively, this game a is fun romp with your friends!  The main problems I had with solo/2-Player (can’t use Help very often) went away with the higher player counts: you are engaged with your friends and all your help actions all matter! I was much more okay being along for the ride when I was with my friends!

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There are some problems with the game, but in general this is a joyous adventure in space!  I probably would objectively give it a 7/10 at 3 Players or 4 players (but maybe only a 5/10 or 6/10 at solo or 2-Player play).  I didn’t love this game, but that’s a me issue: I suspect a ton of people will LOVE LOVE LOVE this game because it’s such a neat adventure.  My friends didn’t see the solo issues I saw, so they only saw the joy of the 4-Player game … so much so that they want to play again.

If this game sounds fun to you, I would suggest only playing at higher player counts: that’s when it sparks the most joy.

 

Cooperative Rules For Comic Hunters

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Comic Hunters is a game originally from Brazil: it took the world by storm as a drafting game with 4 different types of drafting and also Marvel comics covers as the cards (see below)! We really liked it! See our review here!!

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This game has been so popular that they translated the rules to English, and it has been selling for $200 or more on e-bay!

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After all this popularity, it looks like Arcane Wonders is going to pick up the game in the United States: see here! You don’t have to pay $200 for it anymore!

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My only lament was that the game was either solo-only or fully competitive … until now.

Development of Cooperative Rules

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These cooperative rules for Comic Hunters have been in development for about 6 months now.  (Let’s be clear: I have no affiliation with any of the developers or companies, I am just a fan of the game).   I’ve had some basic ideas, thrown some away, playtested, tried new ideas, lather rinse repeat …

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You can see version 0.9 of my beautiful, hand-crafted Whim cards above.

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We’ve been playtesting at 2 and 3 player counts: the current rules only work for a 2 to 3 player cooperative game.  We run out of cards when we try to play 4 players (see why below), so currently the cooperative mode only supports 2 or 3 players.

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There’s been quite a bit of playtesting and editing: hopefully you’ll find this something you can enjoy!

Introduction

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Here’s the introduction from the rulebook:

You and your friends have been collecting comics together for years! You love to go to the comic store, conventions, and flea markets together, looking for some rarities.  Sure, there have been some friendly rivalries for comics along the way, but you and your friends love comics.  If only your allowances were bigger, but that makes you appreciate the comics you do have a little more…

Then one day the Jerk comes into your life: he’s an Insufferable Jerk who just ruins everything!  He thinks he knows everything, he thinks his way is the only way to do anything, and he puts down everything about you and your friends.  He just happens to be rich and inserts himself into your groups.  He tells everyone his collection of comics is the best! He is so annoying!

Your job in cooperative Comic Hunters is to get bragging rights over the Insufferable Jerk (sometimes referred to as IJ).  In order to win the game, players must get bragging rights over the Insufferable Jerk in all aspects of comic collecting.  To do this, at least one of the cooperative players must outdo the Insufferable Jerk in every aspect of the game:

   a) Combined, your collections must have more variety than IJ!

   b) From size perspective, at least one player must have more comics of a hero for each hero!

   c) For each highlight, at least one player must beat IJ!

   d) At least one player must have more Secret Stash points than IJ!

As a group, if you can outdo the Insufferable Jerk in every single aspect of comic collecting, you can shut him up! You hope to teach him collecting comics is supposed to be fun, not some sort of power play.

Players work together get the best comic collection they can, as a group.

Downloads

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See above for the version 1.0.0 of the game! (The current version is 1.0.2 in the downloads section: the changes are mostly just very minor clarifications and rewordings). To play cooperative Comic Hunters, you need three things:

  1. A copy of the original game Comic Hunters
  2. The cooperative rulebook:  see the PDF download at the end of post.
  3. The 5 Whim Cards: see the PDF download at the end of the post.

The cooperative rulebook you might want to print, but you can always just look at in online (see below). The 5 Whim cards you must print! They will be “about” 3x5in when you print them.

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The cards are all one-sided, so you want to print each card on a separate page and par it down to about 3×5. I used cardstock for mine. The idea is that these cards will go above the comic board:

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These Whim cards are the AI that controls how the Insufferable Jerk works.

Feel free to download and try this out! I currently am keeping all rights to this, but I may release this to the public domain later on.

Feedback

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We’d appreciate any feedback!  Problems?  Mistakes?  Please feel free to reach out to us at returnfromsubroutinellc@gmail.com or post on BGG in Comic Hunters section!

See downloads below (remember, you need to download 2 things).

Play An Episode of House! A Review of NYC: Emergency Room (A Medical Mystery)!

Welcome back to Cooperative Surprise Month! This month has seen a surprisingly good cooperative game set in 700 BC called Sammu-Ramat, a “lost” review of Chainsomnia, and a light-and-fun cooperative game called Hissy Fit with the surprisingly weird theme of taking cats to the vet! This week, we take a look at another game with a surprisingly weird theme: NYC: Emergency Room!

NYC: Emergency Room is billed as “A Cooperative Medical Mystery Game” for 1-4 players, Ages 14+. That lower bound of age may seem low or high, depending on who you are, as there are discussions you would want “mature” adults discussing (birth control, the human reproductive system, death, pain, diarrhea). So, be aware that this medical mystery game requires an adult attitude!

NYC was a game I picked up at Target a few weeks ago (early February): I was on the fence about it. On one hand, I love murder mystery games (see our Top 10 Cooperative Detective Games) and escape room games. On the other hand, I generally don’t like medically themed games (too depresssing). Should I pick it up?

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Then I remembered how the TV show House was originally billed as a a medical mysteries show. If you don’t know the TV show House, it is basically Sherlock Holmes as a doctor solving strange mysteries, but in the medical field (Get it? “House” & “Holmes” … “Wilson” & “Watson”). The show, while pretty dark, is quite interesting!

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In the end, that’s why I picked up the game: “a fun medical mystery like House”. Or at least, that was my hope!

Unboxing

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NYC: Emergency Room is a pretty standard sized box. See the Coke Can and #2 pencil for perspective.

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The game is really just a bunch of envelopes!  All the components are in one of six envelopes.  

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Four of the envelopes are cases for four different patients.  Each one of these is a different case.

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There is one envelope that has components every game needs: that’s the Code/Research/Rules envelope. See above.

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The first patient, though, is not one of the four envelopes… there’s a tutorial that walks you through your first case: Nurse Judy recognizes you are just starting out, and tries to help you through the process!

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It’s kinda cool is that every envelope tells you exactly what’s inside (see above)! I can totally see passing this game onto other people after I am done, so it’s good to make sure each case has everything you need to do it!

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Considering this is a game from Target, the quality is actually pretty good for everything (see above for some contents of the first envelope).   It’s surprisingly good how good these components are!

Rulebook

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There is a rulebook, but you don’t even start with it.  You start with Nurse Judy’s tutorial pamphlet.  It walks you through your first game, and honestly, it does a fantastic job.

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By the time I got through the Tutorial, I don’t think I ever looked at the rulebook!  (It comes in the black Codes envelope).  Seriously, I can’t complain or laud the rulebook because I never needed it.   The pure joy of the Tutorial made the rulebook almost unnecessary.  I may have looked it at once later for a rules clarification, but I’m not sure how much you’ll use it.  Listen to Nurse Judy, and you’ll be fine!

The Tutorial

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The tutorial takes you quickly through a simple case with Luana Kapule: see above. IMG_2927

This was very easy to set-up and a very quick game.  I think I got through the Tutorial in about 20 minutes.

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Seriously, this is one the best tutorials I have seen in a while.  You see all the things you should do, the things you shouldn’t do, and the game walks you through the playthrough very precisely.  

You know that a Tutorial is good when you don’t think you need the rulebook anymore:  20 minutes in, and I think I know the game.  I call that a successful tutorial!

Gameplay

The game is all about what tests and consultations and medications to administer to a patient over a night (a timeline).  You are measured by, frankly, if the patient survives the night.  You have a sheet that you keep track of everything you do and what time you do it: see above.

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As you run tests on your patient, you will get codes to look up in the code book: they tell you what happens: frequently, this means you draw a card from a deck of “how the patient is doing”.  Note: the results of the tests do change as time marches forward!  Gulp! Make sure you run that test at the right time!!

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What tests do you run?  Holy cow, all the things you can do or know is presented in about 5 pamphlets brimming with medical information!  See above.  This particular mechanic kind of reminds of Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective. 

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Not directly, but the sheer volume of medical information in the game reminds me of the sheer volume of materials in Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective: the maps, the phonebook, the newspapers.  This is a good thing: it really feels like medical mystery! You just have to look in the right place to solve the mystery!

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If you can keep the patient alive by running the right tests (remember, tests can be invasive in many ways) and finding the right thing to do (which may be medication or something else), you win!

It goes without saying, but if your patient dies, you lose!

Solo Game: Patient 1

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Strictly speaking, my first solo patient was from the Tutorial: but Nurse Judy basically kept me out of trouble, so I don’t know if that counts.

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Before I began, I made a copy of the timeline sheet (see above) and left room for notes on the left.  I strongly recommend you do this as well!  First, by making a copy, you can reuse the first case later.  More importantly, I think, is that having the extra space to make notes was a big deal.

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You never forget your first patient: mine was Shyla Patel.   

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I had to make sure I interviewed her to make sure I knew what was going on.

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I was able to do the proper tests and figure out what was going wrong with her.  Along the way, there were places where I could have done “something bad”, but in the end, I kept Shyla alive.

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She left the Emergency Room alive and in good health. It was a good day.

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Shyla never saw me looking, but my head was buried in these medical pamphlets the entire time.  This is a game about research, it’s a game about following up, it’s a game about what it’s like being a doctor.  (I always wonder if doctor’s do the same thing when we aren’t looking … “What the heck was that?  I gotta look in my pamphlets!”)

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It was incredibly engaging, but there was a lot of research, a lot of taking notes (see above) and a lot of reading.  I love that stuff, but some people don’t.  

Why watch an episode of the TV show House when you can just play it? I really enjoyed this game solo.

Cooperative Game

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It’s Charlie’s fault I started watching the TV show “House”, so I felt it was apropos that he and Allison play this with me!

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Rather than try to explain the game to them, I simply had Charlie and Allison go through the Tutorial.  This was interesting: I am so used to explaining games to people, but I realized this game is just complicated enough that it makes sense to use the Tutorial again!  Rather than teach the game, just play the Tutorial! It really is that good!

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After they finished the Tutorial, we encountered Patient 2: Adrian Alexopolous.

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The cooperative game was very much like the solo game, but now we have a group of “other doctors” we could bounce ideas off of!  I like this shared responsibility: it’s a little scary to take full responsibility for a patient yourself, and this shared burden made it a little easier to endure.

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The burden of taking notes, reading cards, consulting pamphlets also made the game move a little more quickly than the solo game.

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Although I liked the solo game, and didn’t have any problem taking the full responsibility of a patient myself, I can see many people bouncing off this!  By having a team of doctors helping each other to help the patient, I can see many people preferring the cooperative mode over the solo mode.  

What I Liked

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The Tutorial is fantastic.  It just gets you into the game right way: it’s the best way to teach new players, even if you already know the game!

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I like all the medical information available.  I wish the medical pamphlets were bigger books written in a bigger font. I did a lot of reading and research with these!  It felt like the world was large, something to explore, even though I was only reading medical texts.

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The mysteries are interesting and engaging.  And the components are great too, especially for a Target game.

What I Didn’t Like

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I already said this in the What I Liked Section, but I wish the medical pamphlets were bigger with bigger fonts.  In fact, a lot of these pamphlets had two or three different things in them! I wish they had been broken up a little better … I am sure this is a “it costs money to make big pamphlets” issue, but they would have made it a little easier to use.

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In the end, I made copies of the charts/timeline, but it bugged me a little that there weren’t multiple copies of these little sheets: there was only one for each patient!  For multiple reasons (extra space for notes, enabling this patient to be re-used), I strongly advise you to make a copy like I did above!

Conclusion

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I really enjoyed NYC Emergency Room and so did my friends.  As long as you don’t have trouble with the theme, mature situations, and potentially life-or-death situations, this is a great mystery game! 

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In fact, you could argue that the theme is very engaging because you are making “real” life-and-death situations for a person you meet in the Emergency Room!  Those tense situations may be too much for some people, but if you can handle it, I think it is fantastically riveting!

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Allison gives this a 8/10, Charlie says it’s a “Solid Game” (I couldn’t get a number out of him).  I think I am right with Allison: this a 7.5/10 or 8/10 for me.  My hesitancy comes only the theme being potentially being very divisive: “I don’t want to be a doctor right now, that sounds too stressful!“.  I get it, sometimes it might not be as appealing to be a doctor in a stressful situation! Having said that, in the cooperative game, that burden is shared making the game a little more palatable. 

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Why watch an episode of House when you can play it?  Just remember when doing patient interviews: “Everybody Lies.”