What Games These Days?

post by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2022-08-18T14:30:05.355Z · LW · GW · 6 comments

While I used to play a lot of board games, this is something I've had less time for since having kids. Last week my extended family got together for a vacation, however, which meant a lot more time for gaming! Thinking back, here's what I played over the week, in roughly descending order of time spent:

This was a good range of games, ranging from ones for people who are really into complex German-style games (Brass, Power Grid, Wingspan, etc) to more varied options (Boggle, Set, Spoons, Werewolf).

Games I saw others play included Scrabble, Quacks of Quedlinburg, and Azul. Scrabble isn't for me (not good for thinking on other people's turns and so too much waiting) and I haven't learned the other two yet.

Games have been a big part of vacations for a long time:


Summer at my grandparents' in Tennessee, 2009

Looking back five years, the biggest change was no Dominion. Looking ten, no Carcassone. Fifteen, no Catan. I don't think anyone brought copies of any of them; they're a bit played out for us. (Probably least sick of Carcassone.)

I also realized something about how people's gaming experiences differ. I've always seen learning new games as an unavoidable problem: it's not especially fun, but it's worth it occasionally as a way to pull new games into rotation and get some variety. This turned out to be the most common view among my relatives, but two of them are actually pretty excited about learning new games, seeing it as something fun in itself. This time I agreed to learn one new game, which was Wingspan (last time was Brass).

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comment by dkirmani · 2022-08-18T16:21:57.843Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Strongly recommend Coup.

comment by Dagon · 2022-08-18T15:58:49.577Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thanks for this - my group isn't getting together as often, but I'm looking forward to spending a good few hours in the Pax Prime boardgames room(s) again this year.

Wingspan is interesting - it's beautiful, fairly easy to learn, takes the right amount of time, and it got played a lot last year and early this year.  And kind of dropped off - it's not exactly shallow, but it's very dependent on your draws and availability when your turn comes.  It's also not very interactive among players.

A few games that have held our attention that aren't on your list:

  • Terraforming Mars.  Not my favorite, but beloved of some of my friends - a bit long and a bit ... twiddly with the variety of cards and resources.  But pretty good pacing throughout, and the right mix of strategy and luck that you can think about things but don't feel bad when it doesn't work out.
  • Burgle Bros.  Coop (players against game, all win or all lose together), and surprisingly difficult, we lose far more than we win.  More tactical than strategic - you need a general approach, but most decisions are looking only a few turns ahead.  
  • Takenoko.  Cute, lightweight, and pretty easily understood, good for kids and more casual gamer friends.  
  • Pandemic.  Another co-op game, the expansions keep it interesting, but the basic gameplay is pretty repeatable.  Likewise the Forbidden {Desert,Island,Sky} games.

On your list, I've played the majority, and Ticket to Ride and Power Grid are in our rotation pretty often.  I should take another shot at getting a few more of them into Bridge - I played Duplicate a bit long ago (which got eclipsed by Poker, which has kind of dropped off my activities, even before COVID).

comment by MondSemmel · 2022-08-18T15:23:58.957Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Board games are always great! I also used to be part of the group that wanted to play games with long play times, but nowadays prefer shorter games.

Anyway, if anyone is looking for more game recommendations, there was a recent LW discussion here [LW · GW].

comment by ShardPhoenix · 2022-08-18T23:27:24.022Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Sounds like you might enjoy The Crew: Mission Deep Sea. It's a co-operative trick-taking game, so each hand you draft a few challenges like "I will win exactly 5 tricks", or "I will win the blue 7 and the green 4" and you have to complete those as a team with minimal communication. Each hand plays independently so it can be as long or as short as you want.

 

My personal favourite board game recently is Dune: Imperium, a midweight Euro mixing worker placement, deckbuilding, and simple combat. The interaction between the cards, worker placement and resource management is tight and fun, and I appreciate the theme (visually it's based on the recent Dune movie). Can be a little long with unexperienced players though.

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comment by Oliver Brooks (oliver-brooks) · 2022-08-19T21:41:38.592Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

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comment by Gunnar_Zarncke · 2022-08-18T17:44:02.276Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

About Boggle: The game is great for kids (if they are interested), even small ones. Our kids learned reading with it partly. The difficulty can be scaled easily either like Jeff wrote or by requiring minimum word length or by allowing any phonetic spelling for small kids or allowing all languages or just counting words or letters . Can make the game less frustrating for beginners too. These days I have difficulty beating my 11 and 13 year-olds. The latter finding lots of latin words