Dale Yu: Review of Farm Hand

Farm Hand

  • Designer:  Craig Somerton
  • Publisher: Grail Games
  • Players: 2-5
  • Age: 10+
  • Time: 20 minutes
  • Amazon affiliate link: 
  • Played with review copy provided by publisher

The animals on your farm are having a contest to see which one is the loudest! Who do you think will win? Cover your ears, as sometimes the animals will be so loud they will even scare each other away! Farm Hand is a unique trick-taking game of prediction and detection! Players will know what suits the cards in their opponents’ hands are, but not their values. Do your best to predict how many tricks you will win, while preventing your opponents from doing the same!

Farm Hand is a fun and engaging 21-card micro game for 1-5 players in 15-20 mins. A game that neatly fits in your pocket or purse and can be played almost anywhere. Gameplay includes trick-taking, publicly visible suits, and simultaneous bidding.

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Gen Con 2025 – Dead Alive, Thunderworks

Thunderworks Games and Dead Alive Games both had several more light to medium-weight games to show off. Most of them were card-based in some way.

Thunderworks has Fliptoons which is a sort of deckbuilder but players flip up cards in a 2×3 grid to see their results. Citizens of the Spark is a bit deeper. Players claim cards from the center, place them in their own area, and can then use the card abilities which are more powerful if a player has more of that type of card. Emerald Skulls is a push your luck die-rolling game as you place rolled dice on a skull from teeth up to forehead. Finally, there will be two expansions for Tenpenny Parks launching this fall. One entitled Innovation with more “stuff” and the other expansion a two-in-one, Winter Lights and Spooky Nights. Each of those have a bit of a holiday theme. Other news includes a big-box Cartographers Adventures game and a smallish box that’s kind of a mashup of roll player and a Call to Adventure-style game.

Meanwhile, the Dead Alive Games booth had the tick-taking game Lunar Skyline. It’s trick, as it were, is that all cards have two suits, you just have to follow either one. Kittens in Space is a shedding uno-like game where players can manipulate which of four piles their opponent can use on any given turn. Cat Rescue, a game of cat tile placement with “tile pushing” is back in a second edition which now includes rules for competitive play. Finally, an expansion for Lunar Rush, Innovations, adds in a fifth player and five asymmetric factions to your Lunar Rush game.

Thunderworks Games

Fliptoons

Fliptoons is a sort of mini-deckbuilding game for 1 to 4 players, coming out September 16th. The cards in the game are cartoon actors and they are played out on the table as part of some sort of production, attempting to earn fame (VPs) for the studio (player.) To start their turn, a player will shuffle their deck and then deal it out into a 2×3 grid.

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Dale Yu: Review of Meister Makatsu (Essen SPIEL 2025)

Meister Makatsu  

  • Designer: Reiner Knizia
  • Publisher: AMIGO
  • Players: 2-6
  • Age: 8+
  • Time: 20-30 min
  • Played with review copy provided by publisher

In Meister Makatsu, players compete with their ninjas for the favor of the renowned master by demonstrating their mastery of perfect timing and strategic moves. Meister Makatsu is the most famous ninja mentor in the land. To be trained by him is considered a great honor. Every year, different schools, so-called dojos, present their best ninjas. Over three days, these ninjas take a number of tests to impress Meister Makatsu with their talent. However, he’s on the lookout for even the slightest mishap!

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Gen Con 2025 – Dire Wolf and Devir

Two publishers getting their fair share of buzz were Dire Wolf with their Lightning Train and Devir’s Ace of Spades. Dire Wolf was showing off the Clank! Catacombs: Underworld expansion where players can climb (or fall) down into a new area of particularly juicy loot and danger. Dire Wolf’s Lightning Train is a bag-building pick-up-and-deliver train game where chips are drawn to provide ways to lay track, delivering goods, and other special powers. Dire Wolf is also getting into the role-playing business with the Tales of Xadia RPG, based on The Dragon Prince animated series. Meanwhile, Devir had players using their actual phones to take photos of VIPs in Red Carpet after having maneuvered the VIPs and their entourage into advantageous positions. Transgalactica was a big space/building/exploration worker-placement game with lots of bells and whistles using two types of workers – captains and crew. Finally, Devir’s Ace of Spades is a small 1 or 2 player game of defeating a deck of monsters – doing damage depending on how good of a poker hand a player can create.

Dire Wolf

Clank! Catacombs: Underworld

A new expansion to Clank! Catacombs, Underworld adds a new area to explore. Chutes (and ladders) are added to the standard Catacombs tiles, providing a way down into the Underworld (and possibly back up.) Note, there is a toll for those entering the Underworld. Players will want to collect Undercoins, a new resource. Players must pay a toll of 1 coin every turn they spend in the Underworld. Don’t have a coin? That’s +2 Clank! at the start of each of your turns. Coins are also required for some special tunnels on the tiles.

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Dale Yu: Review of Kabuto Sumo

Kabuto Sumo

  • Designer: Tony Miller
  • Publisher: allplay
  • Players: 2-4 
  • Age: 6+
  • Time: 20 mins
  • Amazon affiliate link: https://amzn.to/43eIwa4
  • Played with review copy provided by publisher

Spring time in Japan means the return of the rhinoceros beetles — “Kabutomushi”, which is Japanese for “helmet bug” — and their athletic contests of dominance. Out in the wild, you can find them butting heads trying to show off their strength and impress their insect friends with their wrestling skills. This is the origin of the phenomenal World Insect Wrestling Championship.

In Kabuto Sumo, you are one of the contending beetles that is battling for supremacy in the ring and your place in the pantheon of legendary wrestlers. The gameplay of Kabuto Sumo resembles the coin-pusher arcade games in which you strategically drop quarters and anxiously anticipate coins cascading off the platform. This game features a similar experience, with you trying to strategically slide pieces onto the board and push the other players out of the ring. It’s an exciting combination of dexterity, strategy, and luck.

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Alison Brennan: Game Snapshots – 2025 (Part 21)

On my penultimate day I was working my way back from Yellowstone to Salt Lake City for the flights home the next day. It’s 7 hrs of driving, add on break times. One of my google searches for the 10 best things to see in Idaho mentioned the Idaho Potato Museum in Blackfoot, which turns out to be not exactly the most picturesque town on my trip. But still, it’s approaching lunch time as I’m getting closer to Blackfoot so … right, let’s do it, you’re only here once. But only after I’ve braced myself with a burrito bowl because I kind of suspect what I’m getting myself into. Especially as one of the other items in the ‘10 best things to see in Idaho’ was the Japanese Garden in Idaho Falls which turned out to be a smattering of bushes and paths on a 50 metre strip wedged between a 6 lane main thoroughfare through the city and a rusting metal rail bridge. Now I’ve been to Japan and seen some amazing gardens, and I’ve seen arguably the best two in Australia (Toowoomba of all places and Cowra, which I understand, both being sister cities to Japanese cities) and I’ll have to admit that the Idaho Falls version may have struggled to provide the serenity and beauty one may have hoped for. Anyway, having this as a measure of the best 10 things to see in Idaho, I was prepared and expectations were set.

In a nutshell, the museum masterfully reproduced Wikipedia text and pictures on the walls so I did not lack for reading matter. I’m now familiar with the Maine man’s collection of 500+ potato peelers which he had spent a lifetime collecting, a portion of which was graciously donated to the museum. And I’ve been on a virtual reality tour of a potato harvester in action. Sadly I didn’t get to sample any of the 20 different potato-focused items on the café menu given the burrito bowl was still fueling my journey.

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