Dale Yu: Review of Compounded – the Peer Reviewed edition

Compounded – The Peer reviewed edition

  • Designer: Darrell Louder
  • Publisher: Greater Than Games
  • Players: 2-5
  • Age:14+
  • Time: 45-60 minutes
  • Played with review copy provided by Flat River Games (distributor)
  • Amazon affiliate link: https://amzn.to/3UcgVlH

Compounded is a game about building chemical compounds through careful management of elements, a fair bit of social play and trading, and just a bit of luck. In Compounded, players take on the roles of lab managers, hastily competing to complete the most compounds before they are completed by others – or destroyed in an explosion. Some compounds are flammable and will grow more and more volatile over time; take too long to gather the necessary elements for those compounds and a lot of hard work will soon be scattered across the lab.

Although Compounded does involve a fair share of press-your-luck tension and certainly some strategic planning, the most successful scientists will often be those who strike a good trade with their fellow lab mates. Players are able to freely trade elements, laboratory tools, and even favors – if there is truly honor among chemists!

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Winners of 2024 As d’Or Awards Announced

On February 22, the winners of the 2024 As d’Or, which is France’s national game award, were announced.  Here they are, in the award’s four different categories, together with each game’s designer and publisher:

General Games
Trio (Kaya Miyano) – Cocktail Games

Games for Children
My Puzzle Adventure: Dragon (Antonin Boccara, Romaric Galonnier) – Game Flow

Games for Initiates
Faraway (Johannes Goupy, Corentin Lebrat) – Catch Up Games

Games for Experts
La Famiglia (Maximilian Thiel) – Feuerland Spiele

Trio, which, coincidentally, Dale just reviewed on this site, is a remake of “nana”, which was first released in Japan in 2021.

Congratulations to the winning designers and publishers!

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Rick Thornquist: Review of MLEM: Space Agency

 MLEM: Space Agency

  • Designer: Reiner Knizia
  • Artist: Joanna Rzepecka
  • Graphic Designers: Joanna Rzepecka and Bartłomiej Kordowski
  • Publisher: Rebel Studio
  • Players: 2-5
  • Playing Time 30-60 minutes
  • Played three times, with three players each, on Board Game Arena

Do you like cats? Do you like space? Do you like Can’t Stop? Well, Reiner Knizia has put them all together in his new game, MLEM: Space Agency.

 

First off, let’s address the elephant in the room – what the heck is MLEM? I had no idea and had to Google it. Apparently, and sources differ on this, it’s the action or sound an animal makes when it sticks out its tongue. Yeah, really. Apparently it’s something that’s often associated with cats and since the game is about cats, well, there ya go.

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Matt Carlson: Review of Numbsters

Button Shy Games has made a name for itself by publishing minimalistic games, featuring a deck of 18 cards that fit within a plastic wallet-size holder. They now have a considerable number of these games (you can even subscribe to releases) available for purchase or as print-and-play files. They were kind enough to send a few games my way and my favorite of the bunch was a solitaire-like game called Numbsters. Players attempt to winnow down a numbered deck of 18 cards to exactly two cards. The game gives off a strong solitaire-like vibe and can be without a table, holding the cards in one hand. The print-and-play version of the game is on sale at the moment for $1 while a Kickstarter is underway for a reprint of the physical version. 

Numbsters
Designer:  Milan Zivkovic
Publisher: Button Shy Games
Players: 1
Ages: 8+
Time: 10 min
(review copy provided by publisher)

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Dale Yu: Review of Unboxed

Unboxed

  • Designer: Jordan Sorenson
  • Publisher: Wizkids
  • Players: 1+
  • Age:12+
  • Time: about 10 minutes per dig, 10 digs in the box
  • Played with review copy provided by publisher
  • Affiliate link: https://amzn.to/429F8uJ

In Unboxed, you and your friends take on the role of archeology interns under the direction of Dr. Ramos. At the dig site, the team has uncovered ten caches of ancient board games and they need your help to figure out how they were played. The centuries have not been kind to the rulebooks, so you’ll have to infer the rules based on each game’s symbology, components, and your own experience and intuition. Hopefully you’ve been attending board game night regularly…

EXAMINE
Each of the ten dig-sites will grant you a specific set of components and a few questions to help guide your “research”.

EVALUATE
Figure out how the components work together.

PLAY
Once you’ve successfully recreated the rules, you’ll have a fully functional game!

Unboxed brings board game lovers and aspiring game designers a unique puzzle experience, which features a playful spin on the one-box mystery and many satisfying surprises! Dr. Ramos will be there to provide hints as you theorize and test your designs for all ten of the provided scenarios. So, what are you waiting for? Put your sleuthing skills to the test and get these ancient games UNBOXED!

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Dale Yu: Review of Trio

Trio

  • Designer: Kaya Miyano
  • Players: 3-6 
  • Age: 8+
  • Time: 15 minutes
  • Played with review copy provided by Happy Camper Games (5+ times), played purchased copy of Nana (>30 times)
  • Amazon affiliate link: https://amzn.to/4b6TX5G

Trio is a card game in which players are looking for three of a kind. The deck consists of 36 cards, numbered 1-12 three times. Players receive some cards in hand, which they are required to sort from low to high, and the remaining cards are placed face down on the table.

On your turn, choose any single card to reveal, either the low or high card from a player’s hand (including your own) or any face-down card from the table. Then, do this again. If the two cards show the same number, continue your turn; if they do not, return the cards to where they came from and end your turn.

If you reveal three cards showing the same number, take these cards as a set in front of you. If you are the first player to collect three sets, you win — except that a player wins immediately if they collect the set of 7s or two sets that add or subtract to 7, e.g., 4s and 11s.

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