Star Trek: Captain’s Chair. My Solo Game of the Year.

Star Trek: Captain’s Chair is a solo and 2-Player head-to-head game in the Star Trek universe (from publisher Wizkids).  I bought my copy online sometime in early 2025 (I don’t even remember when; March? April?), but the game was so daunting that I was scared to open it up.

Look above to see a full solo game set-up!  Gulp!

I literally spent almost a year learning this game!  See above as I JUST set-up the game, to get a sense of it!  I ran out of time, so I had to tear it down before I even played it!  In fact, I think I set-up the game at least three times before I actually played it!

What is this thing and why is it so daunting?  To call it JUST a deck-building game with Victory Points seems to do the game an injustice, but at its core, it really is a deck-building game; if you get the highest score you “win”.

Let’s take a closer look.

Unboxing and Gameplay

The Captain’s Chair is about a half-sized box. See can of Coke above for scale.

Each player takes the role of one of six Captains from Star Trek: see the Captains above.  And NO Captain Kirk is not in this set;  you have to get one of the Expansions (due out sometime in Q4 last time I looked).

The Captains each have their own little deck hubby hole in the box.  See above.

There is a metric ton of cardboard in this box.  

Most of the cardboard is is tokens and the 6 player boards for the 6 captains.  See above. 

To be fair, I think you WILL have to throw away the Punchout Skeletons to fit everything in the box (what are Punchout SkeletonsSee here).  It hurt me a little to throw these away, but the game just barely fits in the box, and all the Punchout Skeletons do is puff up the box.  So, you will have to throw away them … see a video of me doing it here …

https://www.youtube.com/live/aMSZ3QDeQYM?si=4z8aaQzBlCOyjh8V&t=1073

Like I said, this is, at its core, a deck-building game.  So, you have all sorts of cards that you can buy/accumulate into your deck!  See above all the Common cards: Allies, Cargo, Persons, Ships, Incidents, Locations, and Encounters!  These are “generally” the plain cards you will acquire to build your deck.

But there are lot more very thematic rules than just “build a deck!!” You can acquire ships, and warp them around!

Very thematically, you take control of a Location if you have enough landing parties and/or ships there!

Each Captain has their own very special deck of cards, which only THEY may use!  These cards in the Captain’s deck represents their “style”.  So, even though a Captain can buy/acquire Common cards, a Captain’s deck is a thing unto itself; it slowly unveils itself.  The Captain’s deck (see above) start with Available cards, slowly adds Reserve cards (as the deck cycles), then you can develop Development cards as you see fit!   

Captain Picard, for example, is all about getting Allies!  His Mission (each captain has a base mission which shapes his play-style) is to beam 3 Allies onto a ship!  See above.

Koloth the Klingon has a very different play-style; he is all about getting Ships into play and controlling planets! 

The game also has the notion of the Duty Officer; if you play one, it will allow you some extra activities.

For example (see above), if Ryker is your Duty Officer, he can use one of his Activations (as well as his Play if needed).   There is this notion of “deploy” which allows you to put ships, duty personnel, and other things into play so you get that extra Activation possibility on your turn!

If you deploy the Enterprise-D above, you can use it’s Activations!  (Right now, Picard is fulfilling his Mission of getting 3 Allies beamed aboard!)

There’s also an interesting notion of “play”.  For example, the Set A Course card above has two choices for how to play; you can either use one of your 3 Actions (represented by the blue isolinear chips) to play for the “major” action, or you can just play the card as-is for the lesser play ability (but it doesn’t take one of your 3 Actions).

You can take Control of Locations (see above).

As you play, you need to advance your Specialty tracks.  There’s many ways to advance your Specialty track as you play (it’s all on the cards), but the higher the Tracks are, the bigger the multiples for end-scoring.  See above as Picard has advanced Research (blue) to space 4 (for a multiply of x2), Influence (yellow) to space 3 (for a multiple of x2), and Military to space 0 (for just x1).  

At the end of the game, you look at the bottom right of the cards and they will get you victory points! Right now, Picard would get 3 cards times 2 =6 Victory Points for the Research, and  5 cards times 2=10 Victory Points for Influence.

Of course, some cards just give straight Victory Points.  See above.

Whosoever has the most Victory Points wins!

The gameflow is controlled by the 27 Stardate cards (see above).  Depending on what mode you play (solo easy, solo hard, 2-Player), these cards control how the game unfurls.  They usually just act as a timer (you put Victory Points on the card and when the Victory Points run out, you move to the next cards until the game is over), but they also keep the game flowing by wiping the market occasionally and wiping the Neutral Zone of uninteresting planets.

Over the course of the game, your Captain will warp ships, launch away parties, try to take control of Locations in the Neutral Zone, acquire Tech or Allies or People or Ships or Encounters to meet their Missions in an ultimate attempt to get the most Glory (what we have been calling Victory Points)!

Honestly, there are still plenty of subsystems and rules we didn’t talk about; there is so much to this game!  There is alternate way to lose via a “Burn” if you get too many incidents, there are special Encounters which feel like cool Star Trek vignettes, and many other cool things that if you know Star Trek, you’ll say “That’s very Thematic!”

Rulebook

This is one of the best rulebooks I have read in a while.

First of all, the rulebook gets an A on the Chair Test!

The rulebook opens up, stays flat, and is easy to consult.  The Font is very readable, but they somehow mix the thematic font of Star Trek for headings with a readable font for rule text, and it works.  There’s tons of pictures scattered in with the text, there’s tons of examples!  The rulebook also uses color and italics well!  Seriously, maybe this is an A+ on the Chair test!

The Components pages are great; pictures are notated.

The Set-Up (even though it spans 4 pages) still is done well …

With both a Common Set-up (above above) and a per-player set-up (above).

The rulebook ends with a good summary of symbols.

About the ONLY thing this rulebook does wrong is that it doesn’t have an index.  It has a table of contents and a Keywords in Detail section, but for a game this complicated, an Index is essential.

Other than the lack of an Index, this is almost a perfect rulebook.  I have to be honest, the rulebook almost reads like a legal document (because there are so many rules and systems), but everything is in there and well-explained.

Ways To Play

So, there are three major ways to play The Captain’s Chair (four if you count the unofficial cooperative mode, which we’ll discuss in the Appendix).  The “main mode” is the 2-Player head-to-head mode; this is the way Star Trek: The Captain’s Chair is meant to be played—Captain vs. Captain.   Even though this is a thinky and complex deck-building game with Victory Points, there is some take-that in the 2-Player game, as you can do things to mess up your opposing Captain.  Honestly, it really depends on the Captain(s) you choose; Koloth will have a very different play-style than Picard, who will have a different play-style than Sisko.

For solo play, there are two solo modes built-in:  The Cadet Training Mode, aka The Easy Mode and the Official Solo Mode aka the Hard Mode.   That’s what’s so great about this game; you can choose the mode that fits you!

The Cadet Training Mode

The Cadet Training Mode is probably the best way to learn the game!  Honestly, I can’t imagine jumping into the head-to-head game without learning the easy solo mode first.  See above for the rules for this mode on page 28 of the rulebook.

My first game (strictly my third game, since I set it up 2 times before I ever played!) was The Cadet Training Mode! See above.

The basic idea is that you are fighting an opponent that has “1 of everything”; you are fighting a faceless and nameless opponent.  

Basically, you are just playing turn after turn by yourself and trying to discover how all the mechanisms of the game work.    You don’t operate another Captain or anything like that.  There are enough systems in the game where you “affect” the other Captain, so when you would do that, it’s just a faceless, nameless opponent who has “one of everything”.   For example, how many landing parties does the faceless, nameless opponent have on the planets above?  One each!

This solo mode flows pretty well.  You don’t feel the glaring stare of your opponent as you learn the game; you just try stuff out to see how everything works.

My first solo game scored 69, so apparently I didn’t know how to play just yet.

 My second solo game was much better as I got a 121.  

This solo mode is the way to learn the systems of the game without the immediacy of an overwhelming opponent.  Recall, we suggested that Kinfire Council + Winds of Change sorta has an easy solo mode and a complex solo mode!

The rulebook even suggests this is a great way to learn the deck of a new Captain!  Recall that each Captain has a VERY different play-style, so this is a great way to take the new deck through its paces!

As you can see from my two scores (69 then 121), after my second game on Cadet Training Mode, it was getting too easy.  This  solo mode is a great way to learn the game, but it wouldn’t be much of a challenge now that I know the deck.  I need a new challenge.

Starfleet Command Training Program

The Hard solo mode has its own rulebook!  See above!  This rulebook, called the Starfleet Command Training Program, outlines how to play Star Trek: The Captain’s Chair in a truly complex and challenging solo mode!  This rulebook is also very daunting (at 20 pages), but it’s really not that bad (the second half talks about different modes and a 5-year mission).

One major change is that you have a different set of Starfleet cards to control the pulse of the game. See above.  

The real difference is that you are fighting a real Captain!  See above as Koloth and Picard battle!

You operate one Captain “normally” like you did previously; see as Picard gets set-up normally.

The Captain you are battling has a  very different set-up!  You still use the deck of the other Captain, but now an AI will control how that Captain operates!

There are two Control cards for each AI Captain; these are the AI cards that control what the Captain does on his turn!  Depending on what card you draw, the directions on these AI cards tell you what to do!  (Things at the top of the card take precedence over things lower on the card if there’s any question).

Basically, play alternates between the two captains; the solo player will take his turn normally, but then the solo players uses the AI to operate the other Captain!

See that big number 2 on the Starfleet card above?  That tells you how many cards the AI Captain will get to draw and resolve on his turn!

So, Koloth above draws two cards from his deck and consults the AI cards to see what those cards do!

As the game goes on, it gets pretty complicated!  Koloth is all about getting ships out, and you can see that his AI respects that .. and (see above) as he has so many ships and worlds under control in the later game!

Solo Captain and AI Captain alternate until the game end is triggered by the Star Fleet cards! Whosoever has the most victory points, wins! (If you want to be funny: I Captain goes, then AI Captain goes!)

Just like before, you count the Victory Points to see who wins.

To be clear, this is a pretty complicated AI.   There’s lots of things you have to look up as you play! Where do you send ships? Landing parties?  There’s also a notion of most valuable to me and most valuable to you that controls preferences of cards.  Sometimes determining which cards the AI prefers is pretty exhausting.  I found that it feels like the solo rules do a pretty good job of covering all bases and preferences, but it can feel hairy the first few times you try it.

This is NOT a quick one hour solo game.  This is probably at least a 2 hour game, especially your first few times.    You will find your head buried in the solo rulebook as you try to remember/discover/rank what actions/cards the AI prefers.  It gets easier as you play, but it is very daunting.

I want to be clear that I like this solo mode, but it is not easy.  

Legalese

These rulebooks are very very very good, but I kind of feel like a lawyer when I am playing.  What do I mean by that?  I have to study the rulebook to make sure I have a handle on everything; I want to say I spent a good hour (or more!) reading the rulebook the first time!!!  There are very specific rules to handle just about every exceptional case, but you have to understand how to apply the rules like a lawyer might have to understand how to apply the law.

This might sound like a negative, and for some people it will absolutely be a negative; those people will hate this game: “it’s too complicated, it’s too much, there are too many rules”.  You know if that is true for you.

But if you like a system where things are very well-specified and you don’t mind burying your head in the rulebook a lot, then this is a great game.

Theme

This game feels very thematic.  If you like Star Trek, you will see and feel the theme in this game.  We’ve said that this is a deck-building game, but all the other supporting systems of this game make it feel like Star Trek: duty officers, warping ships, developing cards, acquiring Allies, Cargo, Ships, sending out landing parties, taking control of planets … it feels very Star Trek.   This is arguably the most thematic Star Trek game I have played?

Conclusion

Star Trek: The Captain’s Chair is a daunting beast of a game.  The rulebook feels like legal document, there are many complex systems within the game, and the rules are complicated.  Yet, this is probably the most thematic Star Trek game I have played!  Each Captain’s deck matches their play-style, making them different and interesting to play!  The actions and cards feel like they are right out of Star Trek!  This feels like a love letter to Star Trek.

As a solo gamer, I love that there are two solo modes built in!  The easy solo mode provides an onramp to learn a new Captain’s deck (because they are all so different)!  The complex solo mode provides challenges for the future!  There are 30 different ways to permute the Captains in the complex solo mode (6*5=30 because order matters; which is the AI and which is the player). This gives plenty of ways to try different permutations for quite a bit of variety!  I also happen to know that at least 2 more expansions are planned, so there’s more content coming!

Sure, there’s a 2-Player head-to-head mode … which I may never play.  As a solo gamer, I am very happy with what this is. 

Be aware that this is big complex game with lots of rules and a legal document for  rulebook.  If that doesn’t scare you away and you love Star Trek, I think you will love this game.  I do. 9/10.  I think this would be a 10/10 if it had a good cooperative mode; I really want to be Picard and Sisko fighting the Borg! Or the Dominion!  So, the Appendix below …

Appendix

There is an unofficial cooperative mode: see link here.

   

Wandering Galaxy Review: Who’s Wandering Here?

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To be clear: you are wandering the Galaxy, but it turns out the Galaxy itself is wandering (if you believe the intro text)! Wandering Galaxy is a cooperative adventure game for 1-6+ players and it is set in spaaaaaaaaaace!  This is a silly cooperative game that kind of feels like Firefly if it were a comedy (with just a little bit of Star Trek thrown in). (I mean, Firefly is already kind-of a comedy, but I digress). (But this may be too many parenthesis).

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Wandering Galaxy was on Kickstarter back in July 2024, and promised delivery in December 2024.  And you know what?  They made it! My copy arrived about December 20th, 2024!  With some qualifiers … see below …

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See above: So, the game wasn’t QUITE done, but the only thing left unfinished was the App. My physical copy arrived but the app still needed some work.  To be fair, I was able to play some of the game before the end of December, so it’s enough to say “Eh, close enough”.  I’ll call it on time.

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Let’s be clear!  Wandering Galaxy requires an App (or the Entry Book … more discussion later if you are violently opposed to an App).

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They say “App”, but it’s really more of a web portal situation: point your web browser at WanderingGalaxy.com and go!  It reads the text to you!!

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So, what is this?  Wandering Galaxy is a cooperative campaign game with many different mechanisms: story-telling, worker placement, bag-building, deck-building, pickup-and-deliver, and even a little bit of a real-time!   It is both paradoxically a lighter game and a heavier game!  The gameplay is light and fluffy and moves along quickly, but there’s a lot of stuff underneath the hood that keeps this from being “just” a dumb little game!

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What do I mean by this? Let’s take a look below!

Unboxing

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So, this is a pretty standard sized game box, about Ticket To Ride sized. See above with Coke can for perspective.

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There’s a decent amount of stuff in here! See above!  Lots to punch out!

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There’s a lot of tokens to punch out! Whew! Luckily the game includes some bags!

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There’s also a fair number of cards in the game: remember how I said this was a deck-building game? There are the cards for your decks!

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I got the sleeves for this: 9 times out of 10, if a game says it’s a deck-building game, you should probably sleeve it.  (This might be the 10th game).

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I spent WAY TOO Much time sleeving all the cards. See above!!!  This card-sleeving was one of the first things I did when I got the game.  I will say, after a few plays, I am not entirely convinced that this game needs sleeves.  If you didn’t get the sleeves, meh, don’t stress: I don’t think you needed them.  (I am addressing this to my friend Kurt who didn’t get the sleeves).

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But there is a nice box for holding all the cards, with little dividers that clearly mark sections.  And it looks like it would fit WITH or WITHOUT sleeves just fine.  Little tip: it may look like some cards are missing (because of missing numbers), but probably not!  Some are missing for “future expansion”:  Check this BoardGameGeek thread for more details: Anyone missing cards?

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There’s a lot of other punch outs for the stations … see below.

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There’s a lot here, but it is very cool looking!

Rulebook

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This rulebook … isn’t great.

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It flops over on the edges, probably get it a D on the Chair Test.

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In the end, I had to use the standard workaround of putting out two chairs with the spine in the middle.

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There’s a lot of stuff in here, but I also found there was a lot of stuff missing.  For example: The travel section discussions were unclear: Do you spend 3 power on each section? Do you have to stop in each section on your way to your destination?  The answer to both questions, according to this BoardGameGeek thread, is yes!!!  I think you will find yourself on BoardGameGeek a lot when you have questions!  Apparently the designer is very responsive on BoardGameGeek if you have questions, he answers quickly … so that’s good.  There is also a Discord channel (mentioned when you bring up the app).

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What I found is that the App is very good at helping you set everything up!  I tended to use the App for all my set-ups and only use the rulebook to look up a few rules.  In general, the App taught “most” stuff.  A lot of things were in the rulebook (and there’s even an index)!  But there was still a lot of stuff missing that you will have to look at BoardGameGeek for … Another example: What does a damage token do?  It’s unclear unless you read this BoardGameGeek thread!!

So, quick summary: use the App when you can, use the rulebook with the index if you have to, then use BoardGameGeek if things are still unclear.  You might go to BoardGameGeek more than you like. 

Story-Telling

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Everyone gets to play a different character in this game!  The art and style of the minis sets the tone for the game: see above!!  It’s very nice art, but with just a hint of silliness.

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Each player chooses a character to play: there are quite a number of characters, and they each have their own special sheet.  See Muze above … that was my first character!!! I ended up making a copy of the character sheets (using my crappy home copier; it was good enough) so I didn’t mess up the original sheets that came with the game.  (There are a number of these sheets included with the game, but you can either print them yourself or just order more sheets from the web site if you don’t want to sully the sheets).

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These character sheets are two-sided; the back has your “back-story” (no pun intended).  You fill out the little questionnaire on the left, and that informs your Story So Far… (on right side of the sheet).  This gives you some items and sets the tone for your hero!  This is part of the Story Telling aspect of the game.

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There’s also a sheet for the spaceship (I also made a copy as to not mess that up either).

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Of course, the App itself has most of the story!  It’s pretty cool; it’s narrated with different voices and is pretty funny.

I would say, first and foremost, this is a Story-Telling game.  All the other mechanisms in the game support that central tenet.  You are all characters being swept up in this space opera!

Worker Placement

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I’d say the next mechanism that you feel is the Worker Placement part of the game.  The Location book (above) has the location on the left and the Worker Placement spots on the right.

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Players look closely at the Icons on the worker placements places and place their dudes there.  This is cooperative worker placement, as you are all trying to work together to get certain things done.  To avoid too much “analysis paralysis” or “Alpha Playering” here, the players have 45 seconds to place their dudes!  (That’s the extent of the “real-time” part of this game.  if you were worried about me saying real-time, relax!  You can almost even ignore the real-time part … it’s really just to keep people from taking TOO LONG to play their dudes …)

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Once the dudes are placed, the right hand side of the page shows in detail what each action does.

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Sometimes your action triggers some text in the App; it gives a number (like 133, see below) and you lookup that entry in the App!

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You spend a decent amount of time here on the Worker Placement pages. It wasn’t until my third game that I realized that the Combat also happens using the Worker Placement system …. what? Yep! You head to a special page where you are in “Combat!” Your actions move the ship (so enemies are in view), fire guns (port, starboard, ahead), or even work the ship to repair damage!

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This Worker Placement system seemed to work pretty well, and it’s cooperative.

Deck-Building

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A lot of the game revolves around Skill checks … using your deck!  (I told you there was deck-building in here!)  When you need to make a Skill check (say Muze needs to SNEAK), you draw cards and add up the symbols that match that check!  SNEAK needs blue stars and red hands, so Muse has 3 above.   To be clear, the more symbols, the better!  (You can also use PERK tokens, the little Saturn token, for extra plusses, but you do have to discard those)

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There’s also Items you can “hold” between hands, which you can choose to “help” in your Skill check.  That’s kind of a neat gizmo in the deck-building mechanism.

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At certain times during the game, you have a chance to add cards (or cull) you deck based on the actions you take!  There’s a nice set of 4 improvement card (above the the book, see above and below) that you can choose from!  I mean, it’s deck-building: you have to be able to improve your deck!

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Campaign

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This is a campaign that can last … as long as you want it to!  There is also deck-advancement, as your deck build survives between games of the campaign (luckily, you lose things like Injuries that can clog your deck).

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So, when you finish your current game, you can just be done, or save off the game to play again later!  Nominally, your first full adventure (spanning many games) will be paying off the loan for your ship!

Bag-Building

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Even though there is deck-building in here (a deck for each character), there is also a bag-building portion! See the bag in the bottom right corner above!

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When you travel through space, you typically pull tokens from the bag to see “what happened” as you travel through space!!! (See the tokens you can pull above). Generally, travelling through space is tough on your ship as you take little bits of damage as you travel.

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You can take time at Space Ports and other places to “Work the Ship” to help fix it back up (putting tokens back in the bag).  It’s not a huge mechanism in the game, but it is important to be aware of what’s in the “travel bag” and try to keep it cleanish so that you don’t take too much damage as you travel.  The bag also controls threat, which is how the game can end … poorly.

Star Trek

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I said there was some Star Trek vibe in here as well … there is!  There are 6 “positions” of the ship that must be manned by the characters!   One player is the Engineer, one player handle Logistics, … Operations, Science, Navigation and Security!  In a game with fewer players, some players will have to man multiple stations!

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This reminds me of the characters sitting around the bridge of the Enterprise, with Spock manning the Science station, Worf manning the Security station, and Paris manning the Navigation station! (Look, I didn’t say WHICH Star Trek …)

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Cardboard!

We’ve already seen this “station” idea in Forgotten Waters (see our review here) and Freelancers (see our review here)! Thematically, it worked great in Forgotten Waters (as pirates worked together to man the “stations” of a ship), and less so in Freelancers.

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Thematically, it works really well here too.  Basically, the stations help keep everyone involved in running the ship and contribute to the theme: we are flying a space ship together!

Pickup And Deliver

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One of the main activities in this game is pickup-and-deliver: you are a space-faring crew wandering the stars, looking for adventure, but usually you are delivering stuff to make ends meet!

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The Jobs you get (above) inform where you go on the star map (see below) by marking them with little waypoint markers.

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The yellow waypoint marker is the yellow job (Escort Shipping Barge).  This pickup-and-deliver mechanism sort of guides were you go in the game.  If you don’t like pickup-and-deliver, you might still like this game, as there are so many other mechanisms in the game.  If you do like pickup-and-deliver, then you will be happy.

Solo Play

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So, Wandering Galaxy embraces the solo player!  (Congratulations on following Saunders’ Law!).  I am surprised a little because the previous games in this series (Forgotten Waters and Freelancers) supported solo mode, but they were bastard step-children solo modes that were only supported by consulting the some arcane rules on the web site!  Okay, maybe I am exaggerating a little when I say that, but Wandering Galaxy really does embrace solo play.

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The rules and the App support solo play as a first-class mechanism!  The app asks you how many people are playing and helps you set-up the solo game in the normal flow! 

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The solo player still operates one the main characters: see above as I operate Muze … (notice I made a copy of the sheet…)

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…. but the solo player gets to control two Sidekicks (see Bugs and Tress above).  These Sidekicks aren’t “full characters”, but they are much much easier to operate.  Normally, I don’t like solo rules that go too much outside the normal flow (I usually prefer to play multi-handed solo), but the app was so helpful in setting this up and getting to solo play that I didn’t mind!

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So, when the solo players does Worker Placement actions, the solo player plays his player, and the two Sidekicks as well.

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This means the solo player is also controlling all six stations!  Interestingly, you still have to assign one station for each of Bugs and Tress.  See above as Bugs and Tress each have a station (to their left).

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See above as I have the 6 stations, my character Muze, Bugs and Tress, the Worker Placement book, the map of the Galaxy and the App open!  Whew!

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And then the solo player still has to manage the cards (see chair on the left with the card box) and the ship (see the table on the right with the ship)!  And, occasionally the solo player must still consult the rulebook!  See as the Rulebook sprawls across two chairs …Whew! 

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… and it’s actually not that bad.  Sure, there’s a lot of stuff to manage, but the App takes you through the game pretty darn well.   I played my first few games solo, and I had a good time.  I never felt like the ongoing maintenance (to keep the game moving forward) was too much work. 

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Setting up is a bit of work, as is tearing down (see above), but again, the App helps guide you through it.  I’ll be honest, the Rulebook for this game looks daunting (with set-up and rules), but let the App guide you and just use the rulebook when you “have to”!

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I thought the solo game worked well, even better than Forgottten Waters or Freelancers. I jumped right on and had a grand time. I would definitely play this again solo.  I honestly think the App made the solo play that much better.   

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What about the Sidekicks Bugs and Tress in the solo game?  They really are easy to operate: you just use your deck but get slightly different bonuses (depending on which character: Bugs is good at Piloting for example).  They kind of remind me of characters on Star Trek you see in the background all the time, but don’t get much development.  They aren’t full “main” characters who get their own story arcs … like “unnamed Corporal 2”.  For example, when Bugs or Tress would get REPUTATION (a fun way to move a character story forward), they just get a PERK token instead. Poor Bugs and Tress.  Maybe they’ll get higher billing in the next Star Trek show.  (We only have 13 shows, we need a 14th Star Trek show starring Bugs and Tress!!!) (And yes, I added extra exclamation points there, because that’s how strongly I feel about poor undeveloped Bugs and Tress!!!!)

Cooperative Game

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My crew showed up, ready to take the Galaxy by storm!  The crew was originally supposed to be a full complement of six, but space sickness and space madness and space baby-sitting caused us to winnow down to just three.  But what a great crew they were!!  Too bad the spaceship exploded on the pad.  But I digress … 

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Cooperative play worked really well.  Luckily, I had played the game solo enough to smooth out some of the rules (even still, there were ambiguities as we played which were frustrating).  Part of why this game works very well for a cooperative game is that each player owns their own station, which keeps them in involved as they play! And each player has their own character with their own worker placement token!  So, players are always involved (via the station and worker placement) as well as connecting (as they “bond”) with their character, and making shared decisions about the fate of the ship and crew!!! (More exclamation mark for you!!!)

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My friend Teresa liked her character so much that she took it home as a souvenir!

We ended up playing a one-off, but once my group regroups, I suspect we will settle in for a fuller campaign.  It is nice that you can play this as a full campaign or just a one off.

Sense Of Humor

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Just so you know: this game is kind of silly.  The story is silly, the voices are kind of silly, and even the first player token (I chose the Christmas Tree) is silly.    If you were looking for a grim-dark Star Trek game, that’s not this.

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The game has a sense of humor, but it’s not just ALL silliness.  You still have to build your deck, make smart decisions, deal with damage on your ship, pickup and deliver stuff, place workers, and generally make a lot of decisions.  But the undercurrents of the game … are a little silly.

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Even though Wandering Galaxy is silly, it’s still not quite as silly as Freelancers or Forgotten Waters: those games just seem to have sillier stories and sillier resolutions.  So, if you were just slightly annoyed by the silliness of Freelancers or Forgotten Waters, maybe Wandering Galaxy is a better choice for you … but it’s still silly.  Just not as silly.

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You know a game is silly when it brings out the silliness in you!  When we performed the Skill checks, we started singing the Lucky Charms cereal theme songs!  “Blue Stars, Yellow Eyes, Purple Brains!  Frosted Lucky Charms, they are magically delicious!”

Entry Book

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Some of you might have been very non-plussed by the necessity of the App in this game.  Well, if you like reading text from books, there are Entry Books available!   The Entry Book isn’t QUITE done at the time I received my copy, but it will be.  In the meantime, I did pickup the the Forgotten Waters and Freelancers Entry Books (those were part of the Kickstarter).

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Basically, all the reading and entries that the App does  is encapsulated in the Entry Book.  There’s something kind of nice about having a “backup” for this: I have had some games where the App goes dark (Rising 5, I am looking at you); with this Entry book, you can always still play the game if the App goes dark.

My friend Joe actually prefers the Entry Books: he uses these games for his English classes, as it encourages reading out loud!

What I Liked

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Supports Multiple Players Well: the game really works well with many player counts.  The station system helps keep everyone involved, even at higher player counts.   I am glad to see the Solo mode as a first class object.

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Story:  Really, this game is all about the story.  How do you want your adventure in space to proceed?  Life is what happens when you are making plans, especially in space!  Every player is involved as they explore, but generally the story just unfolds and everyone is along for the ride.  If you want to play a space opera rather than watch one, this is a good choice.

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The App:  Despite the app not being quite done (some of entries didn’t have full voice acting, and some entries were incomplete), the App worked quite well.  I think it’s really evolved and easy to use, especially for set-up and first play!  (I mean, they have had 2 iterations to get this right). It’s also good to know there is a backup Entry book in case the App ever goes dark …

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Sense of Humor:  I really like the silliness in this game.  It’s not quite as funny as Freelancers (which was much sillier) or Forgotten Waters, but it was funny.  Caveat Emptor: you may not like the silliness.

What I Didn’t Like

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Ambiguity: By far the biggest complaint is the ambiguity in the Rulebook.  There’s just too many places where things are NOT well specified. We’ve mentioned at least three things in this article alone where we had to go to BoardGameGeek to find the resolution!  The game still works, but it’s very unsettling to have just a few too many places where the rules are poorly specified.  Some of this is because maybe the game came out early; the App still needs some work, and maybe they will fix-up the ambiguity in the App. Unfortunately, the Rulebook can’t be amended (unless they put up a version 2.0).  Just prepare yourself to look stuff up on BoardGameGeek.

Conclusion

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I liked Wandering Galaxy and so did my friends!  It’s the next great game in the Crossroads games series (after Forgotten Waters and Freelancers).  It’s probably the most complicated of the three games, but it’s possibly the most thematic of the three.   Be aware that that there are a lot of mechanisms: deck-building, campaign, bag-building, pickup-and-deliver!  … but the game feels paradoxically both heavy and light!  The game glides along as you enjoy the story, with some heavier mechanisms behind the scenes.

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An App is required to play … unless you have the Entry book (at the time of this writing, the Entry Book for Wandering Galaxy is not out, but should be soon (the Forgotten Waters and Freelancers books are already out).  Despite the App not “quite” done at the time of this writing, it did a marvelous job bringing us into this world. It even embraced the solo player well!

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This is a great light-hearted cooperative adventure for you and your friends! It’s not “quite” as silly as Forgotten Waters and Freelancers, but it’s still pretty silly.

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This is probably an 8/10. The only real problem with the game was the ambiguities that kept coming up: If you are pick-up in this game, I suspect you will be looking up a lot of stuff on BoardGameGeek. But, since the App is a dynamic entity, hopefully they can address a lot of those issues within the App itself. Hopefully, by the time you read this, the App will have fixed all those problems and this will rise to a 8.5/10. It’s a really fun game.