Normale Ansicht
Diplomacy: The Golden Blade Game Review
Diplomacy.
That's a word with power. The art of diplomacy has shaped the course of human history more than any army ever could. Wars have been avoided and empires preserved or dismantled entirely through the right conversation at the right moment. It is the oldest game humanity has ever played, so it makes sense that someone turned it into a board game.
Turning back to 1959, a certain Allan Calhamer designed Diplomacy. A game that spotlights the messy, treacherous, and deeply human act of negotiation. Dice were not welcome here. Players wrote down their orders in secret after tense talks with their opponents, and the table rarely survived intact. It resonated with many people, including John F. Kennedy, which tells you everything you need to know about what kind of game this is.
Despite its importance, Diplomacy was never destined to be a household name. People are aware of it the way they are aware of chess, with a vague sense that it is serious and probably not for them. It sits in a niche within an already niche industry, respected by the people who know it and largely ignored by everyone else.
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JFK Would Need to Relearn This One
Then Renegade Game Studios announced a card game spinoff.…
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First Tracks (Saturday Review)
Snow drifted from the pine branches as the last chairlift carried us slowly, but steadily, towards the summit. As we looked back, the mountain below was being draped in silver moonlight and covered in fresh powder snow. We couldn't see it, but we knew that, back in the village, steam curled from bowls of ramen waiting for our return. Yet, nobody was ready to leave the silence of the peaks just yet. We all wanted to hit the slopes one more time before calling it a night. At the same time, we already knew what we would do tomorrow. Tomorrow, we would return to the peak and lay the First Tracks by Blake Erickson and Megan Ryan from Sayonara Ski Co.
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Play for Keeps Revives the Past
Mexica, Gheos, El Caballero, and The Bridges of Shangri-La are returning in new editions
