Nile and Tzaar

by Mikko on July 28, 2010

in Session reports

Nile coverI met my brother yesterday for some games. We started with Nile, the new set-collecting game from Minion Games. It’s actually pretty good! At least as a two-player filler, that is. The game is about farming. There are five crops to plant and harvest. Each turn starts with a new flood card, which displays the crop that is harvested. If somebody has that crop planted, they take one card from the field to the storage.

Then one can trade. Two cards from hand or storage can be traded for one card from the deck or a new flood card, causing another harvest. After trading comes planting. You can start a new field, if nobody else has the same crop or you can play more cards than is in the current field. If you do that, the earlier field gets discarded, so there’s always at most one field per crop. You can also add cards to an old field. Instead of planting, you can speculate, that is play a Speculation card which lists two crops. If the next flood card shows one of them, you get three cards.

That’s it, pretty much. Repeat until you’ve gone through the deck as many times as there are players. On each cycle there’s one Plague of Locusts which destroys the largest field in play. In the end, the cards in storage determine the winner in Knizia style, so your weakest crop counts.

It’s fairly simple and plays fast, we took 15 minutes to play the first game and 10 minutes for the second. There was some nice take that effect when we stole fields from each other and some tactical decisions, too. Nile’s still fairly light-weight.

The art is fine, but the card quality is quite worthless. Some of the cards were damaged in the first shuffle, before we even started. I need to sleeve the cards, as this game’s going to see some more play. I want to see how the game works with more players. Three should be fine, maybe four as well, but I guess five will be a bit too much — I’m not sure I want to spend more than 20 minutes with Nile.

Tzaar coverTzaar almost counts as a new game — I’ve played it once in Helcon 2008 — now we played five games. I won the first two quickly, but then my brother caught on and beat me twice. The final game was very exciting and looked like a defeat to me, but in the end I was able to win the game when my brother made a small mistake. Mistakes can be costly in this game of choices and balancing…

Tzaar is fun, and definitely amongst my favourites in the Gipf series. It’s elegant and simple, looks beautiful and offers some interesting challenges, without being too heavy. Excellent work from Kris Burm.

We also played some San Juan — I’ve now played the game 99 times, and still love it. The expansion buildings make the game even better.

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Card games from Minion Games

by Mikko on July 26, 2010

in More about games

Sturgeon coverMinion Games sent me some demo copies of their card games. Sturgeon is a fish-themed game, where players try to collect two sturgeons. To play sturgeons, you need to eat at least bass cards and to play bass cards, you need to eat two minnows. Minnows can be played straight to the table. You can only play one fish per turn, so it takes some preparation to get a sturgeon on the table. However, you can let your fellow players help you by eating their fish. Simple!

Sturgeon sounds like a simple card game, with few bells and whistles. Might be fun, if the game just plays quick enough. The art is a bit muddy, it’s all blue and looks very similar, and the game seems maybe a tad too simple to retain interest… Well, I’ll just have to try it.

Nile cover

Nile has an Egyptian theme. It’s a set-collecting game, where players plant fields to harvest cards. There’s some trading with the game and offerings to god Hapi to get good flooding. It sounds interesting — more interesting than Sturgeon — and looks really good. However, I can’t really get a good idea of how it works based on the rules — so I suppose I must give it a go. But the game looks pretty good, much better than Sturgeon.

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Casual games at Finncon

July 18, 2010

Finncon was in Jyväskylä this year. It’s a major Finnish science fiction con (biggest free SF con in Europe or something like that), but it also had some games, as local board gamers organized a game room. I was in Jyväskylä at my mother’s with the kids and was able to leave for the Saturday [...]

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Arvuutin and Toscana

July 17, 2010

Arvuutin is a new Finnish trivia game from Onni Games, the makers of Politix and Aether. This is a Finnish-only release, so I’ll keep this short: it’s a rather clever game, where everybody answers the questions simultaneously by playing number cards (all answers are numbers 1-100). Closest answer wins. Winner gets the question cards and [...]

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Dominion: Alchemy first impressions

July 12, 2010

I played few games of Dominion: Alchemy with my brother today, using couple of the suggested sets. I’m in the camp where more cards means more diversity means more fun, and from that point of view Alchemy is pretty cool. The set has several interesting cards.
The new economy with the Potions is fairly elegant. It [...]

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1846 quick notes

July 8, 2010

We played 1846 yesterday, but unfortunately had to abort the game. We had played about 3.5 hours and had plenty of game left, when the time ran out — I was expecting we’d finish in three hours or so. Well, two total newbies and so on, my bad.
Here’s some thoughts about the game:

Basically I like [...]

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RftG, San Juan, Blue Moon

June 28, 2010

I met Olli for a small session of card games. We played Race for the Galaxy, San Juan and Blue Moon.
I dropped my Race for the Galaxy rating from 9 to 8 (as the Geek rating guidelines go, it’s certainly a very good game — but only in certain circumstances, and that’s one thing that [...]

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Lessons in bankruptcy

June 23, 2010

We played Age of Steam today on Ted Alspach’s Oklahoma Land Rush map. It was a pretty rough match. Bankruptcies are pretty rare in Age of Steam, despite the reputation of the game. After today’s game, the amount of bankruptcies I’ve seen so far probably multiplied, as three out of four players went down.
Let’s start [...]

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Shopping news

June 20, 2010

With more information, I’ve been able to drop both Age of Industry and Workshop of the World off my shopping list. Always nice when that happens before I buy the game… Age of Industry is locally available and the local folks played it, clocking in at three and half hours. No thanks. Even pushed to [...]

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Steam Barons and Die Aufsteiger

June 17, 2010

It was about time to try Steam Barons. I bought it when it was released, but haven’t tried it for some reason. Yesterday we finally got it on the table with three players on the UK side of the board.
In short this Steam expansion always puts six companies in play, owned by different players. The [...]

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