Dale Yu:  Essen Preview of Inis

Inis

  • Designer: Christian Martinez
  • Publisher: Matagot
  • Players: 2-4
  • Ages: 14+
  • Time: 60 mins
  • Times played: 3, with review copy provided by Matagot/Asmodee

inis

In Inis, players try to become the high king of the ancient Celts by settling unknown lands and controlling them with their troops.  New territories are jagged triangular-ish shaped pieces that nestle together nicely.  Each territory comes with an Advantage card which is given to any player which has sole control of the matching territory.  The game starts with a number of territories (randomly selected) as the number of players.  The matching Advantage cards are also placed on the table.  Each player will get to place two of their twelve army tokens on the board.  One of the territories is noted to be the capital territory and marked with the a capital token.

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Posted in Essen 2016, Reviews | 6 Comments

Dale Yu: Essen Preview of The Perfumer

The Perfumer

  • Designer: Chu-Lan Kao
  • Publisher: BigFun
  • Players: 2-5
  • Ages: 10+
  • Time: 60-90 minutes
  • Times played: 2, with preview copy provided by BigFun

perfumer

In The Perfumer, players are novice perfumers traveling around the globe trying to learn how to make perfumes.  You will be collecting ingredients as you travel in order to make perfumes.  You will also try to uncover a secret recipe using only your sense of smell by the end of the game!

 

The board is a circular affair with seven wedges that surround the central area.  Each represents an area of the world, and each has a supply of its indigenous ingredient.  There are smelling strips – three for each of the seven scents – in the box.  One is placed face up on the area that matches it.  Another set is shuffled and then secretly placed into seven colored holders.  (The third strip of each type is held in reserve – to ensure that the strips aren’t overused or to replace one in case of loss). Continue reading

Posted in Essen 2016, First Impressions | 1 Comment

Dale Yu: Essen Preview – Kraftwagen (V6 Edition)

Kraftwagen (V6 Edition)

  • Designer: Matthias Cramer
  • Publisher: Stronghold Games
  • Players: 2-4
  • Ages: 10+
  • Time: 75-120 minutes
  • Times played: 2, with preview copy provided by Stronghold Games

kraftwagen

In Kraftwagen, players take on the role of car company owners, trying to build the most successful car company in Germany.  Over the three turns in the game, players will develop their cars, improve them on the racetrack (as well as earning money for this) and then work on selling their new cards to buyers.

 

The gameboard is split into a few large areas: an action track, a race track, a buyer area, and places for research and awards.  The Action track is probably the most important area for the game.  There are ten action tiles which are set up on the track, and then the player markers are randomized behind this line of tiles.  Each player gets his own player mat where he can keep his workers as well as track the development of his cars.

kraftwagen-board

At the start of each of the three rounds, a set of price markers is set out in the market; there is a specific different colored set for each round.  Players will then take actions until either six cars have been placed in the market or there are no more buyers.  Unlike most games, players do not take turns around the table.  Turn order is instead kept on the action track.  Whichever player is at the back of the line on the action track takes the next turn; even if this means he takes multiple actions in a row!  In general, when it is a player’s turn (because his marker is in the back of the line) – he moves his marker forward onto any action tile.  The player takes the action(s) shown on the tile and then that tile is moved all the way to the front of the line.  The active player then gets the chance to play a car into the market, but this is optional.  Now, you look to see which player is at the back of the line (which could be the same player), and then that player gets to take a turn…

kraftwagen-action-track

The actions are:

 

  • Hire workers – add a worker from the supply to your game board
  • Research – there are always 2 face up research cards on the board, choose one of them and add to your area; discard the other.  Deal two new face up research cards to the board
  • Car Body – Take a car body piece equal to the number of body research points you have. This goes into one of your three car workshops on your player mat, displacing a previously placed piece if needed
  • Engine – Take an engine piece equal to the number of engine research points you have. This goes into one of your three car workshops on your player mat, displacing a previously placed piece if needed. Alternatively, you can place the engine in your Grand Prix car
  • Buyer – Take one of the available buyers and add it to the lowest numbered empty buyer slot (there are 4 available). If all the buyer slots are filled, move the buyer  pawn on step closer to the end of the track.
  • Grand Prix – Race your Grand Prix car on the track. Your car moves forward on the track a number of spaces equal to the level of the engine in your Grand Prix car on your player mat.  Spaces occupied by other players are not counted.

 

Again, you take any/all of the actions depicted on your action tile.  You then get a chance to move a car to the market.  To do so, you must have a car body in one of your workshops as well as an engine in another workshop.  To this pair, you must add at least one worker (but can add as many as you like).  Remember that there were a set of price markers laid out at the start of the round.  You choose any available price marker that you want and combine all pieces on one of the six spaces in the market.  If you have an applicable Engineer card (obtained thru the Research action), you may modify your car with a single Engineer card.

 

If after this placement, there are six cars in the market OR if pawn is at the bottom of the buyer track; the round ends immediately and there is a scoring round.  There are two parts to the scoring.  First, you evaluate the Grand Prix race.  7/4/2 VPs are given to the cards in 1st/2nd/3rd place on the track.  Additionally, all cars score VPs based on the number of laps they have completed.  Then, the four (or five) buyers are evaluated from top to bottom in order.  Each of the four colors of buyers has a different preference (car body points, engine points, low cost, or number of workers).  The first buyer uses his desired criteria and buys the car which best meets his preference. If there is a tie, the buyer will go for the lower priced car.  The owner of the sold car takes the price marker as VPs and puts it in front of him.  Then the next buyer buys from the remaining cars.  Any car sold to the lowest price buyer gets double the value of the price marker (i.e. that player takes an extra matching chit from the supply).

kraftwagen-buyers-card

There is one other way to score points.  At the start of the game, you lay out a bunch of bonus tiles on the board with things such as first to complete a lap on the track or first to have an engine of level 7.  If you are the first person to achieve the feat, you grab the tile and will score these points at the end of the game.

kraftwagen-race-track

At the end of three rounds, the player with the most points wins.  There is no tiebreaker rule.

 

The additional tiles in this box are the V6 expansion.  I have only played with them once as I am still fairly new to the game.  The rules recommend that you do not use the expansion V6 tiles until you have played the basic game a number of times.    The expansion gives you three sets of four action tiles, one for each of the three rounds in the game.  In each round, the corresponding set of 4 expansion tiles for that round are shuffled, and one is drawn randomly to be the eleventh action tile in setup.  When this tile is chosen, the next tile from the expansion stack is the one placed on the front of the line.  In this way, you will constantly get a new action tile in every set of eleven, and the actions on the expansion tiles are slightly more powerful (or at least different)

 

My thoughts on the game

 

Kraftwagen is a tightly designed game that hits a lot of my sweet spots. It is the sort of game where you always want to do more than one thing when it’s your turn, and you have to figure out which of the options is the best to do.  All of the information is in the open here, so you can see what everyone else is doing on their player board – and hopefully, you can use this information to try to figure out what other people are planning to do themselves.

 

The action track throws another level of computation into figuring out what to do on your turn.  You are constantly having to weigh the options (as well as the relative scarcity of some of the actions) when deciding what to do next.  If there is an action that you feel you MUST do, you can jump far ahead and take it – but then that means you may be waiting a long time for your turn to come around again.  Some of the action tiles give you two different actions, and thus they are more valuable.  There is also a single tile which grants three actions – that one is definitely worth a further jump ahead on the track… but only if you can benefit from all the actions! Alternatively, you could choose to simply take the first available action to maximize the number of actions that you get.  However, if those actions don’t work with your plans, it might not matter how many of them that you get to take!  Thus, you have to plan accordingly – deciding when it’s worth it to jump ahead and lose initiative and when the close-by actions are good enough to take and allow you to be ready to take another action sooner.

 

Like most of Cramer’s other games, the mechanisms intertwine such that you can’t choose to specialize in only one aspect of the game.  It does you no good to only go for car bodies – as you cannot guarantee what the buyers will want.  It also doesn’t allow you to have competitive cars for virtually any other buyer.  Likewise, you can’t ignore things.  If you chose to never race on the Grand Prix, you would probably be so far behind in points that even the best possible cars would leave you short in the final reckoning.  Balance again is the key – surely there are some things that you will end up doing better in, but you will have to participate in all portions of the game if you are to be competitive.

 

Timing is also key.  The first and most obvious part of timing is in the action track.  Again, figuring out how to maximize the actual actions vs number of actions is a big deal.  However, there are also other more subtle areas where timing is important such as choosing buyers and sending cars to market.  Once you send a car to market, you can’t change its attributes anymore, and then all other players can use it as a benchmark to know what they have to compete with.  However, if you wait too long, you may not have the chance to get your car into the market at all!  And, by waiting, you keep your three workshop spaces full, and this slows down your production line.  It is also important to look at the order that the buyers will snap up cars because you can sometimes sneak a lesser car in at the end of a round and score big once you can foresee how the cars will be bought – this can be especially devastating if you sell a car to the lowest price guy – as you get double the price markers for that seller.

 

The expansion seems to be a nice addition, and it adds slightly to the complexity of the game.  The additional tiles feel like an organic extension of the base game.  Most of the V6 tiles have at least two actions on them, and many of them have actions which are unique to the tile set.  Thus, they can be in high demand when they come out.  Of course, if someone has to jump far ahead to take a particular tile, they lose a lot of action potential as they wait for their turn to come around again.  Unfortunately, I have only played one game with the new tiles, so I really don’t feel like I can comment on them much.

 

Overall, this is the type of game that I really like. Lots of hard decisions to be made, especially with choosing the actions.  In addition, I like having my own player board to do my own thing on, with indirect interactions on the Grand Prix track, the buyer market and the action track. But I love the fact that my opponents can’t sabotage my own progress; I’m solely responsible for that.  The game packs a lot of punch in its 1.5 hours, and it’s well worth the time invested.

 

Ratings from the Opinionated Gamers

  • I love it! Dale Y
  • I like it.
  • Neutral.
  • Not for me…

 

 

 

 

Posted in Essen 2016, Reviews | 5 Comments

X nimmt! (Game Review by Chris Wray)

  • Designers:  Wolfgang Kramer & Reinhard Staupe
  • Publisher:  AMIGO
  • Players:  2 – 4
  • Ages:  8 and Up
  • Time:  25 Minutes
  • Times Played:   > 5

x-nimmt

6 nimmt! is Wolfgang Kramer’s bestselling game, with more than 2.4 million copies sold.  Originally released in 1994, the game went on to win the Deutscher Spiele Preis in 1994, the 1994 À la Carte award, and a Spiel des Jahres recommendation.  In English, it is commonly called “Category 5” or “Take 6”.  If you’ve never played 6 nimmt!, you can find it online at Board Game Arena.

6 nimmt! has spawned several spinoffs over the years, some of which resemble the original game more than others: 1998’s Hornochsen! (a.k.a. Take 5!), 2004’s Tanz der Hornochsen!, 2005’s 6 nimmt! Plus, 2009’s 6 nimmt! Junior, 2010’s 11 nimmt!, and 2012’s Bullenparty, among others.  

The latest version is X nimmt!, which is being released at Essen 2016, although you can already buy it from some European shops.   Continue reading

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Dale Yu: Preview of ABACUS games at SPIEL 2016

 

 

Tichu Booster –

tichu-booster

This a is an “expansion” for the 25th anniversary of this great partnership card game.  The game consists of 60 cards, 3 of which are devoted to rules.  The remaining 57 cards are shuffled up and four of them are laid out in a display on the table.  These Booster cards all have special abilities; and the color of the card’s border helps remind you when the card can be played and what the general action is.

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Posted in Essen 2016, Preview | 2 Comments

Potion Explosion is the Italian Game of the Year

pic2630294_mdOn Sunday 17th September the jury of the Gioco dell’Anno (Game of the Year) chose Potions Explosions as game of the year 2016. The game was devised by Stefano Castelli,
Andrea Crespi and Lorenzo Silva and published by Horrible Games.

Potions Explosions is a game for 2 to 4 apprentice magicians. The focus of the game is the holder for picking up and storing the marbles which represent the ingredients of the potions.

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