this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2024
30 points (96.9% liked)

GameDeals

4091 readers
12 users here now

Rules

  1. Be kind to others
  2. Post only appropriate deals
  3. Use our title format
  4. Avoid unauthorized resellers
  5. Do not use affiliate links
  6. No buying, selling, trading, or begging
  7. Giveaways have conditions
  8. Always use direct links
  9. Developer and publisher-specific rules
  10. Storefront-specific rules
  11. No bot zone

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Get the following for $7

  • Root
  • Sagrada
  • Scythe
  • Coupon for 50% off Root: The Riverfolk Expansion DLC

Get the following and above for $10

  • Wingspan
  • Munchkin Digital
  • Coupon for 30% off Munchkin Digital: The Unnatural Axe DLC

Get the following and above for $15

  • Terraforming Mars
  • Terraforming Mars: Prelude DLC
  • Terraforming Mars: Hellas & Elysium DLC
  • Everdell

Get the following and above for $18

  • Dune: Imperium
  • Quilts and Cats of Calico
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (4 children)

My take:

Bottom line: if you like board games at all, this is well worth the $18 for the whole set.

I’ll give mini-reviews of the ones I know, with a weight rating (complexity, on a scale of 1=“I always bring Apples to Apples to parties” to 5=“I have strong opinions about deckbuilders and area control mechanics”) and an overall rating.

Root: interesting, hugely asymmetrical game where it’s basically like learning to play a new board game for each faction. As such, a bit unwieldy, but interesting at least.

Weight: 4/5

Overall: 3/5

Scythe: complex, deep, and satisfying strategic military industrial war game that can be won without a single battle but may take 2-3 games to really grasp how to succeed. Great steampunk alternate history style, excellent adaptation with asynchronous netplay (play your turn whenever you want and get a notification when it’s your turn again).

Weight: 4.5/5

Overall: 4.5/5

Wingspan: relaxing, fun, and pretty. A great gateway board game if you have a modicum of patience to play until the mechanics “click” for you.

Weight: 3/5

Overall: 4/5

Terraforming Mars: a classic that’s less complicated than it looks and every game is different. Beautiful implementation but the netplay has been buggy forever and I don’t know if they’ve fixed it. You can play asynchronously but back 2020/2021 I had several games go into a broken state that lost our progress.

Weight: 3.5/5

Overall: 4/5 (would be a 5 if the netplay was rock solid)

Everdell: a charming worker placement game that also takes about half a game or so before it clicks. Quite fun once it does, and a great art style.

Weight: 3.5/5

Overall: 4/5

Dune Imperium: brutally complex game that blends deckbuilding and worker placement in an impressively thematic structure with a fantastic digital implementation and async netplay. The game is almost a little TOO intricate though, and it can be easy to lose because you overlooked one of several facets of the strategy. Could be worth playing with a group that are all unfamiliar with it so you can all be terrible together.

Weight: 5/5

Overall: 3.5/5

EDIT: a useful note, I think all of the above games have mobile apps that are cross-compatible, so you can play on the go. Combined with async netplay and a couple friends, this is a great way to get a trickle feed of board gaming in your life.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Thanks for this! Do you know if many of these are viable as single player experiences?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I think most or all of them have AI, so in general, yes, at least a few are. The only ones I can vouch for having played solo are Terraforming Mars (it has a race-the-turn-clock mode I think, along with AI players) and Dune Imperium, if you like getting your ass kicked by robots.

I think the social aspect is one of the best parts of board gaming, so playing solo can feel kind of lonely to me, but it’s definitely a common feature. Async is my favorite though, because you can wrangle a group of friends to play a game over the course of a few days during everyone’s free time. Sometimes everyone ends up online at the same time and you’ll knock out half a dozen turns, other times you’ll do a turn or two in a day.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Thanks! I wasn't aware of the async option, but it sounds useful. I'm a weirdo who likes playing boardgames against AI, so maybe I'll read some reviews.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

Playing the AI in Dune Imperium was humbling but by the time I got a game going with friends after a few rounds against the computer, I crushed them.

load more comments (2 replies)