Normale Ansicht

Everdell Duo

10. Januar 2026 um 23:22

This is the 2 player game from one of my favourite games, Everdell is such a fun game with so many enjoyable characters and such a lovely town that you can build and explore and enjoy to your hearts content. 


This is such a fun version of the game that takes so much less time to play yet doesn’t lack any of the fun of the original game If you are looking for a two player that will give you a lot of joy this is it and once you have played it , it can leave you so much more time to play again or play until another player turns up.


I was pleasantly surprised how much fun this game was and am very glad to have it in my collection. This is as much of a complex game to enjoy just a bit simpler to play. Using your critters to build your town to make the most points and win the game. In this case the critters are hares and tortoises, so   you must ask yourselves are you slow and steady or likely to end up in a hedge somewhere wandering what happened.


Have fun and Happy Gaming! You can order this at: https://www.bgextras.co.uk/everdell-game/everdell/everdell-duo

The post Everdell Duo first appeared on Board Game Extras.

All the President’s Gnomes – A Gnomic Parliament Review

06. Januar 2026 um 15:00
Fobs Games put Tiefe Taschen out in the world back in 2016. It’s one of my favorite designs, uniquely presenting a tense affair of dynamic negotiation. It’s worthy of the word “brilliant”. By this virtue alone, I was interested in Gnomic Parliament. It’s the German publisher’s second release, arriving at the end of 2025. I…

Read more →

Folge 353 – peak


Print and Play Bastelecke

Was habe ich gespielt?
boardgamearena.com: Würfelwurst (Hotseat)
boardgamearena.com: Auf den Spuren von Marco Polo
Res Arcana Duo
Dog Lover
Agent Avenue
Codenames
Die Werwölfe von Düsterwald
Krazy Wordz
Res Arcana
Ghostbumpers

boardgamearena.com: Würfelwurst (Hotseat)
boardgamearena.com: Auf den Spuren von Marco Polo
Res Arcana Duo
Dog Lover
Agent Avenue
Codenames
Die Werwölfe von Düsterwald
Krazy Wordz
Res Arcana
Ghostbumpers

Podcast Hinweis

Bluesky – @vintersphrost.bsky.social
Mastodon – @vintersphrost@brettspiel.space
Boardgamearena.com – vintersphrost
Yucata.de – vintersphrost
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/vintersphrost/
YouTube Hörspiel Einspieler – https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCER_eNjl0R-Rzev5IMG2uufJSbXt01Mp

💾

Entwicklung der Brettspiele-Youtube-Kanäle in 2025

Von: natokh
01. Januar 2026 um 23:00

Ich habe die Zahlen aus meiner Übersicht der deutschsprachigen und der großen internationalen englischsprachigen Brettspiel-Youtube-Kanäle mal wieder aktualisiert. Wer sich dafür interessiert, der findet sie hier: https://natokh.wordpress.com/youtube-kanale-zum-thema-brettspiele

NACHTRÄGE

Ich sammele hier Kanäle, die bis jetzt noch nicht in der Liste sind, die sich aber bei mir gemeldet haben, mir von Dritten mitgeteilt wurden oder auf die ich selbst noch aufmerksam wurde.

In die Liste kommt ihr dann im nächsten Jahr!

  • Brettkampf, 157 Abonnenten, 23 Videos, 9.706 Views (02.01.)
  • Brettspiele IQ, 105 Abonnenten, 147 Videos, 53.134 Views, seit 04.06.2020 inaktiv (03.01.)
  • Brettspielpinguin – Brettspiele, 55 Abonnenten, 12 Videos, 3.594 Views (03.01.)
  • Brettspielstammtisch, 44 Abonnenten, 23 Videos, 5904 Views (03.01.)
  • its_thms, 714 Abonnenten, 154 Videos, 376.201 Views (hat sich am 03.01. bei mir gemeldet)
  • Brettspielfieber, 593 Abonnenten, 82 Videos, 35.168 Views (04.01.)
    Kaum zu glauben, dass ich Sam bisher vergessen hatte, obwohl ich immer mal wieder Videos auf seinem Kanal schaue. Zuletzt erst House of Fado vor ein paar Tagen. Auf diese Versäumnis wurde ich netterweise auch hingewiesen.
  • Yourboardgamers, 198 Abonnenten, 136 Videos, 27.960 Views (04.01.)
  • Ultra Comix, 1040 Abonnenten, 530 Videos, 115.440 Views (Shop) (04.01.)
  • TiNi’s Spielerei, 174 Abonnenten, 54 Videos, 8.427 Views (04.01.)
  • Geekeriki, 1940 Abonnenten, 947 Videos, 342.770 Views (04.01.)
    Der Kanal macht noch sehr viel Anderes, außer Brettspiele.
  • Spiele-Offensive.de, 4.560 Abonnenten, 1.744 Videos, 4.926.841 Views (Shop) (04.01.)
  • Game on, 600 Abonennten, 53 Videos, 180.542 Views (04.01.)
  • Brettspiel Buben, 239 Abonennten, 112 Videos, 61.478 Views
    Hier hat sich Patrick alias Panatzu_Gaming am 04.01. bei mir gemeldet, der vorher einen eigenen Kanal hatte, dort aber nichts mehr macht.
  • Brettspielrunde, 53 Abonennten, 44 Videos, 1.874 Views (hat sich am 05.01. gemeldet)
  • BoardGameBros, 1.340 Abonennten, 609 Videos, 297.972 Views (haben sich am 08.01. gemeldet)

Auf die folgenden Kanäle wurde ich dankenswerterweise von Kronhorst (aus dem Unknowns-Forum) aufmerksam gemacht, da sie sich noch nicht in meiner Liste befanden:

Beim Kanal Boardgame-Maker konnte ich mittlerweile, danke eines Tipps von Geekpunkt, „herausfinden“, dass die ungewöhnlich vielen Views auf ein einziges Short zurückgehen, mit dem der Kanal die Crowdfunding-Kampagne zu seinem Spiel „Jurrasic Crisis“ auf Gamefound bewirbt (mehr als 140k Views). Die Videos des Kanals beschäftigen sich übrigens alle mit dem Spiel und der Entwicklung desselben. Offensichtlich ist in naher Zukunft hier eine Gamefound-Kampagne geplant. Durch die Vorschauseite dort sind dann wohl viele auf den Kanal aufmerksam geworden.

Entwicklung der Brettspiele-Youtube-Kanäle in 2025

Von: natokh
01. Januar 2026 um 23:00

Ich habe die Zahlen aus meiner Übersicht der deutschsprachigen und der großen internationalen englischsprachigen Brettspiel-Youtube-Kanäle mal wieder aktualisiert. Wer sich dafür interessiert, der findet sie hier: https://natokh.wordpress.com/youtube-kanale-zum-thema-brettspiele

NACHTRÄGE

Ich sammele hier Kanäle, die bis jetzt noch nicht in der Liste sind, die sich aber bei mir gemeldet haben, mir von Dritten mitgeteilt wurden oder auf die ich selbst noch aufmerksam wurde.

In die Liste kommt ihr dann im nächsten Jahr!

  • Brettkampf, 157 Abonnenten, 23 Videos, 9.706 Views (02.01.)
  • Brettspiele IQ, 105 Abonnenten, 147 Videos, 53.134 Views, seit 04.06.2020 inaktiv (03.01.)
  • Brettspielpinguin – Brettspiele, 55 Abonnenten, 12 Videos, 3.594 Views (03.01.)
  • Brettspielstammtisch, 44 Abonnenten, 23 Videos, 5904 Views (03.01.)
  • its_thms, 714 Abonnenten, 154 Videos, 376.201 Views (hat sich am 03.01. bei mir gemeldet)
  • Brettspielfieber, 593 Abonnenten, 82 Videos, 35.168 Views (04.01.)
    Kaum zu glauben, dass ich Sam bisher vergessen hatte, obwohl ich immer mal wieder Videos auf seinem Kanal schaue. Zuletzt erst House of Fado vor ein paar Tagen. Auf diese Versäumnis wurde ich netterweise auch hingewiesen.
  • Yourboardgamers, 198 Abonnenten, 136 Videos, 27.960 Views (04.01.)
  • Ultra Comix, 1040 Abonnenten, 530 Videos, 115.440 Views (Shop) (04.01.)
  • TiNi’s Spielerei, 174 Abonnenten, 54 Videos, 8.427 Views (04.01.)
  • Geekeriki, 1940 Abonnenten, 947 Videos, 342.770 Views (04.01.)
    Der Kanal macht noch sehr viel Anderes, außer Brettspiele.
  • Spiele-Offensive.de, 4.560 Abonnenten, 1.744 Videos, 4.926.841 Views (Shop) (04.01.)
  • Game on, 600 Abonennten, 53 Videos, 180.542 Views (04.01.)
  • Brettspiel Buben, 239 Abonennten, 112 Videos, 61.478 Views
    Hier hat sich Patrick alias Panatzu_Gaming am 04.01. bei mir gemeldet, der vorher einen eigenen Kanal hatte, dort aber nichts mehr macht.
  • Brettspielrunde, 53 Abonennten, 44 Videos, 1.874 Views (hat sich am 05.01. gemeldet)
  • BoardGameBros, 1.340 Abonennten, 609 Videos, 297.972 Views (haben sich am 08.01. gemeldet)

Auf die folgenden Kanäle wurde ich dankenswerterweise von Kronhorst (aus dem Unknowns-Forum) aufmerksam gemacht, da sie sich noch nicht in meiner Liste befanden:

Beim Kanal Boardgame-Maker konnte ich mittlerweile, danke eines Tipps von Geekpunkt, „herausfinden“, dass die ungewöhnlich vielen Views auf ein einziges Short zurückgehen, mit dem der Kanal die Crowdfunding-Kampagne zu seinem Spiel „Jurrasic Crisis“ auf Gamefound bewirbt (mehr als 140k Views). Die Videos des Kanals beschäftigen sich übrigens alle mit dem Spiel und der Entwicklung desselben. Offensichtlich ist in naher Zukunft hier eine Gamefound-Kampagne geplant. Durch die Vorschauseite dort sind dann wohl viele auf den Kanal aufmerksam geworden.

Spilling the Beans: The Full 2026 Stonemaier Games Lineup

01. Januar 2026 um 17:56

Typically I wait to announce new products until a few weeks before we’re ready to launch and ship them, but yesterday I tried something different: Taking inspiration from Nintendo Direct, Marvel Studios, and Garphill Games, I revealed our full 2026 product lineup on a YouTube and Facebook livecast, quarter by quarter.

There are a few reasons I did this:

  • I like to experiment with methods and approaches we haven’t tried before to see if they feel right to us and are useful/fun for our audience.
  • Based on the status of our 2026 products, I have high levels of certainty regarding the schedule. This isn’t always the case, even with our typical rough 3-year release roadmap.
  • Our 2026 is largely driven by expansions and new editions, so people already have a lot of context for the various reveals.
  • Previewing these products helps me learn how to talk about them clearly and succinctly while I gauge people’s responses to different information and phrasing.

The method I used for the reveals was a premiere video via Streamyard (livecast simultaneously on YouTube and Facebook), with the link posted around a day in advance and in a newsletter I sent 15 minutes before the livecast. I spent around 15 minutes per quarter, using tangible visuals (cards, boards, art, etc) from almost every product to convey the idea that these are real products that do/will exist.

During the reveals, I intentionally didn’t show the box covers or even the product names. This was just a preview; the full reveal for these products will come much closer to their respective launches, and I think it’s far too soon for them to appear on BoardGameGeek. I answered some questions about the products, but I didn’t get into the weeds of card quantities, sizes, pricing, etc.

At the end of the video, I asked people for feedback on the format, and people universally said they liked that it offered things to look forward to throughout the year and the ability to plan ahead (especially for expansions). Some said that the preview felt like the opposite of a FOMO tactic, which isn’t something I had thought about, but I was happy to hear that.

Here’s a quick recap of what I revealed in the video:

  • Q1: Wingspan expansion (based on the birds of Central and South America and the Caribbean; vision friendly cards are available as an add-on) and a Viticulture expansion (a new 4-season board with the original board on the back)
  • Q2: Euphoria Essential (combines the expansion with the core game and offers a new board layout with some rules tweaks; the board and rules will be available separately for those who already have Euphoria) and the first Finspan expansion (I previewed a shark card and a colorful fish)
  • Q3: Scythe vs Expeditions 2-player dueling game (this content expands Scythe and Expeditions, and all Scythe factions/player mats and Expeditions mechs/characters are compatible with the dueling game; there will be add-on packs containing metal versions of the mechs and a plastic airship [which isn’t used in the dueling game]), a small-box, lighter Wingspan bird experience playable in around 3o minutes, and a mini-expansion to Origin Story (many more superheroes)
  • Q4: The first Smoking Bones game from artist and worldbuilder Andrew Bosley and a debut designer (see some info about the world here) and our version of Namiji (combines the core game and the expansion in a normal box size with accessibility updates)
  • reprints for the Nesting Box and Rolling Realm promos (other reprints for out-of-stock products are dependent on demand as indicated by back-in-stock requests on our webstore)

There are visuals and details in the video, and I’m happy to answer some questions in the comments.

We send semi-monthly newsletters for many of our games that include future teasers and details, recent reviews and content, and more. Here is the most recent edition of each update; each includes a link to subscribe if you’d like to stay in touch.

Last, here is the full preview video. What did you think about this experiment?

***

If you gain value from the 100 articles Jamey publishes on this blog each year, please consider championing this content! You can also listen to posts like this in the audio version of the blog.

The Top 10 Board Games of 2025

29. Dezember 2025 um 15:00
This feels strange. I’m usually late with my yearly list, taking my sweet time until January or February to catch up on all of the noteworthy releases. This was a quieter year. Some would say weaker than most. There are still several standout titles, and it did prove a bit of a struggle to narrow…

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Folge 352 – monster slice frog


Print and Play Bastelecke

Was habe ich gespielt?
boardgamearena.com: Cities, Planet Unknown
Crystalla
Sweet Takes
Res Arcana
Würfelwurst
Sweet Takes

boardgamearena.com: Cities, Planet Unknown
boardgamearena.com: Cities, Planet Unknown
Crystalla
Sweet Takes
Res Arcana
Würfelwurst
Sweet Takes

Podcast Hinweis

Bluesky – @vintersphrost.bsky.social
Mastodon – @vintersphrost@brettspiel.space
Boardgamearena.com – vintersphrost
Yucata.de – vintersphrost
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/vintersphrost/
YouTube Hörspiel Einspieler – https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCER_eNjl0R-Rzev5IMG2uufJSbXt01Mp

💾

Our Most Important Articles of 2025

25. Dezember 2025 um 15:52

Whether this is the 1st or the 100th article you’ve read on the Stonemaier Games blog this year, I’m so thankful that you’ve decided to read along (and sometimes join the discussion in the comments). Today I’m going to share my most-read articles of 2025 and a key takeaway from each.

  1. How Can We Fix This Together? (Tariffs, Manufacturing, and a Solution): This isn’t technically the most-viewed article I wrote about the tariff tax situation, but it’s the most productive.
  2. Announcing: Wingspan Fan-Designed Bird Promo Packs: Here I revealed one of our final products of the year, 6 packs containing a total of 150 completely new birds (and new powers) for Wingspan.
  3. We Now Sponsor a Professional Athlete!: In a fun twist to something that started as an April Fools product, in 2025 we sponsored disc golfer and huge Wingspan fan Jeremy Koling (“Big Jerm”).
  4. Finspan’s Origin Story and What’s Different Compared to Wingspan: In January I revealed the final game of the -span trilogy, the aquatic-themed Finspan.
  5. Introducing the Third-Party Accessory Showcase: We now offer a way for creators who make Stonemaier-related products to feature their products on our website (they are the seller, not us).

The other substantial content I make is found on our YouTube channel. Other than Stonemaier-specific trailers and videos, the top 5 most popular videos from 2025 were as follows:

  1. My Top 10 Favorite Games of All Time (as of March)
  2. My Top 10 Favorite Heavy Games
  3. My Top 10 Favorite Games of All Time (as of September)
  4. 10 Steps to Design Your First Tabletop Game
  5. My Top 10 Favorite Games of 2025 (Mid-Year)

Is there an article/video–from anywhere–that provided good food for thought this year? If so, I invite you to share a link and your key takeaway in the comments.

If you gain value from the 100 articles Jamey publishes on this blog each year, please consider championing this content! You can also listen to posts like this in the audio version of the blog.

Meaningful Creations, Play, Elevation, and Connections (2025-2026)

22. Dezember 2025 um 16:22

Typically this is a joyful post, a celebration of the past year and hope for the future. But tragedy struck over the weekend: Gosia, aka wingspangirl on Instagram, passed away suddenly, leaving the community awash with grief. My heart especially goes out to her sister, Magda.

As you can tell by her screenname, Gosia loved Wingspan, and she often posted about the game. Her enthusiasm for it was contagious, even for me. She also talked about a bunch of other games–that was the level on which I knew her, and I always appreciated the endless bounds of her positivity.

However, as I’ve learned by reading many of the memorial posts about Gosia, her sense of community went so much deeper. Countless people have expressed how Gosia always took the time to talk to them privately about any topic ranging from games to family/friendships to personal struggles. To Gosia, the social media community wasn’t about views or likes–it was about meaningful connections with people around the world.

With that in mind, the focal point of this year’s post about actions for 2026 is on meaningful connections. In a way that is true to you, how would you like to connect with people in 2026? This could be in the tabletop gaming community or beyond.

For me, I’m looking forward to connecting deeper with my coworkers when we’re all together in the same place for a few days this winter. I also invited my mom to join me, Megan, and a few friends on an Iceland trip later in 2026, and I look forward to the connections that emerge from that trip.

Also, I’m trying to give myself the grace and permission to focus more on the people I connect strongly with, especially at gaming events. For years I’ve felt this inner obligation to try to connect with as many people as possible (at Geekway to the West, Design Day, the gaming cruise, etc), but sometimes I just really enjoy certain people and wish I could spend more time with them. I’m hoping to do better at that in 2026.

Here are the questions I asked last year, with the addition of the new question inspired by Gosia:

  1. What will you create in 2026 that is meaningful to you? This can be something completely new or something you’re continuing to create from the past year. What’s the first step you’ll take?
  2. What will you play in 2026 that is meaningful to you? This could focus on the game/sport itself, the location, the people, etc.
  3. Who or what will you elevate in 2026 that is meaningful to you? This could be anything you love or value that you want more people to know about.
  4. How will you connect with people and the community in 2026 in a way that is meaningful to you?

I’ve added a special mention of Gosia in a Wingspan product coming later next year. To everyone whom Gosia touched, I’m so sorry for your loss–for our loss–and I appreciate you sharing how she impacted you.

***

Also read:

Folge 351 – sick days


Print and Play Bastelecke

Was habe ich gespielt?
boardgamearena.com: Planet Unknown,
Botswana
Just One
Codenames
Würfelwurst

Botswana
Just One
Codenames
Würfelwurst

Podcast Hinweis

Bluesky – @vintersphrost.bsky.social
Mastodon – @vintersphrost@brettspiel.space
Boardgamearena.com – vintersphrost
Yucata.de – vintersphrost
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/vintersphrost/
YouTube Hörspiel Einspieler – https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCER_eNjl0R-Rzev5IMG2uufJSbXt01Mp

351 😀

💾

Is This Really the End of Reprints?

18. Dezember 2025 um 19:15

“In the past two weeks last copies of Imperial Settlers and Alien Artifacts sold out from our website. Games are gone. There is no reprint planned. Gone forever. It makes me sad on so many levels…. I am brutally honest – this is no longer an industry with possible reprints. Games come and die fast, you put a title on the market and a few months later it is considered old.”Ignacy Trzewiczek, Portal Games

I’ve read this message (click the link for the full version) several times on different forums. Before I dig into it from a publishing perspective, I just want to say that I feel for Ignacy. I can relate to putting love, time, effort, and resources into something that doesn’t last as long as I hoped. While Imperial Settlers has been around for over a decade, Ignacy also says that much newer Portal games like Thorgal and Eleven also won’t be reprinted.

So is this really the end of reprints for all game publishers? From my perspective, definitely not. Spanning from Charterstone all the way through Origin Story, 17 out of 19 Stonemaier games have been reprinted at least once, and most of them more than once.

That said, I think it is harder than ever to create an evergreen game–a game that sells consistently year after year–though there are a few things publishers can do to increase the odds of a game becoming evergreen:

  1. Reconsider which games you publish: Some types of games are much more likely to become evergreen than others based on price, theme, innovation, art, mechanisms, etc. While there isn’t a magic formula for these elements, there are some commonalities among evergreen games. If your game isn’t the type of game that’s likely to garner multiple reprints, that’s okay–it simply shift to a frontloaded marketing strategy.
  2. Reconsider crowdfunding (and how it impacts retailer relationships): Crowdfunding is great for single-run games (particularly fancy versions). However, I don’t think crowdfunding lays the best groundwork for working with retailers, the backbone of evergreen games. I truly am not suggesting that creators ignore crowdfunding as a launchpad for new games, but be aware of how a crowdfunding cycle impacts your relationship with retailers and customers. Are you just crowdfunding the first printing, or are you returning to crowdfunding for expansions, reprints, etc?
  3. Reconsider digital game strategies: It’s wonderful to have the option to play digital versions of tabletop games on Steam, BoardGame Arena, Tabletopia, etc. In some ways, I think these digital options have replaced reprints for some publishers and gamers, with very few analog sales resulting from digital plays. Perhaps this is just the future of most games’ longevity, but publishers have a choice as to how much of their games they offer digitally and when they’re available.
  4. Reconsider new editions and sequels: I think the industry has trained customers to expect that there will always be a new edition, special edition, or sequel to any game that sells well the first time around. I still hear from people saying that they’re waiting for an all-in version of Scythe even though it will never exist (just like all our products, you can always pick and choose which expansions, accessories, and promos you want). It’s neat that publishers can breathe life into older games or that designers can revisit older games with a more experienced vision, but doing this too often may hurt the longevity of the original game.
  5. Reconsider back catalog marketing: Customers get caught up in the cult of the new, but so do publishers. Imagine if you didn’t release or launch any new games in 2026. How would you market your existing games? If it’s different than how you currently market those older games, why? I regularly offer games to reviewers dating all the way back to Viticulture, I talk about older games on social media and YouTube, I foster online communities built around the game, and we’ve released a variety of expansions over the years.
  6. Reconsider how you gauge demand: The minimum order quantity for many manufacturers is 1500 units, so to reprint a product, you need a clear indication from at least 500 people (ideally more) that they’ll buy the product if you make more. What ongoing opportunities are you giving customers to share their interest in a reprint? Stonemaier uses back-in-stock requests on our webstore (we’re gearing up for a Rolling Realms promo reprint based on this data), along with occasional surveys, polls, and reminders on our monthly newsletter; GMT uses their P500 program; other publishers use Kickstarter.

With thousands of games released each year, most of them will not become evergreen games. Also, games that earned multiple reprints in the past may not have the same marketability today. It’s the bittersweet nature of this industry, and I think it’s okay to sunset a game, a brand, or even a company on your own terms.

Do you view this new era of gaming as the end of reprints? What’s the last game you bought that was released prior to 2025?

***

Also read:

If you gain value from the 100 articles Jamey publishes on this blog each year, please consider championing this content! You can also listen to posts like this in the audio version of the blog.

Why’d it Have to be Snakes? – A Snake Charmers Review

18. Dezember 2025 um 15:00
A crafty salesperson would push Snake Charmers as a cross between Cockroach Poker and The Resistance. This allusion is a strong sell, as it ties this new release to two of the best bluffing and deduction games ever designed. Fortunately, it is a reasonably accurate comparison, even if Snake Charmers can’t quite deliver the impact…

Read more →

5 Things I Learned at Universal Epic Universe About Immersive Customer Experiences

15. Dezember 2025 um 23:10

This past weekend I enjoyed a brief reprieve from the cold St. Louis weather, venturing to sunny Orlando to visit Universal Studios for the first time. We also saw some friends from the Stonemaier Games Design Day and spent a day on the beach in Tampa Bay.

We spent half a day at two of the older Universal parks, but the focal point of the trip was Universal Epic Universe, the newest park. It features 5 different worlds, including Super Nintendo World, Dark Universe (gothic monsters), and Isle of Berk (How to Train Your Dragon).

I found the whole experience fascinating from a customer service perspective, as these types of parks bet big on immersing you in an otherworldly experience. Here are the top 5 things I learned and observed during my 12 hours at Universal Epic Universe and how they might apply to the world of tabletop games.

1. Dramatic Entrances

One of the smartest decisions at Epic, in my opinion, is the installation of massive “portals” through which you enter each world. When I left the hub world and walked into the giant green tunnel for Super Nintendo World, I felt like I was transported to a new place. Even the music changes.

As big as they are, the portals are small compared to the worlds they transport you into, so there’s a dramatic moment when you take that first step out of the tunnel. You’re hit with a wave of sights and sounds that are completely absent on the other side of the portal.

The closest comparison to this I can think of in tabletop game is opening a game for the first time. Some games do a particularly great job of making a thematic, intuitive, and organizationally satisfying unboxing experience (see my video on this topic). Perhaps this is also why some people love unboxing videos.

2. Interactive Fake Storefronts

In each of the worlds there’s a mix of thematic displays and fake storefronts (like a movie set) mixed in with real stores, experiences, rides, and restaurants. This makes perfect sense: You don’t need to stock a dozen stores or have every type of craftsman actively working in Berk; instead, invest up front in a rock-solid display, and it’ll last years with minimal maintenance.

However, some of these parks take the set dressing to a new level by giving you a specific way to interact with them. For a few, they’re triggered by motion sensors or your voice, and there’s some combination of programming, animatronics, and live acting behind them. For others, they’re activated by a specific device, like the armbands you can buy in Super Nintendo World that you can bop against the oversized shell blocks.

This is exactly what I was aiming for in Vantage’s first-person perspective art. I wanted it to be more than just a pretty picture; instead, each illustration has information about difficulty and your surroundings, and most of what you see is interactive. If there’s house on a hill, you can probably enter that house and see how it looks inside. When you’re inside, there are a variety of objects you can pick up that result in you (the player) gaining a specific card.

My only wish in these theme parks is for more reasons to look closely and less reliance on phones. A few years ago I went to Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge, and I liked the scavenger hunt, but eventually I started ignoring it because I wanted to immerse myself in the world instead of being on my phone.

3. Immersive Line Management

A major feature at Epic are the rides and shows, with wait times ranging from 15 minutes to several hours. The Universal app helps to mitigate this to a certain extent, as it tells you the current wait times. I was also impressed by the facial scanning technology for the express lanes (which we didn’t use) and the lockers (which we did use for some of the more intense rides).

I was mostly impressed by the queue design. It looks like a maze with several big visual barriers–short lanes that cut back and forth–so you constantly feel like you’re moving forward and so you can’t tell how much longer you’ll wait. Along the way are water fountains and some thematic displays, along with plenty of shade from the Florida sun.

My one criticism is that there really isn’t much to do while in line. I’m not entirely sure what I want to do while I’m waiting, but it could be a crowd game, some form of entertainment, or something small to do along the way that adds up to something meaningful. For example, what if in a How to Train Your Dragon line you can make a few quick personality quiz choices along the way (using facial scanning) that results in your dragon selection at the lockers or when you sit down on the ride?

I often talk about wait times and anticipation gaps, and one example of this in the tabletop space are update emails and newsletters. When done well, I find that they increase my curiosity and excitement while making the wait feel like part of the experience instead of something to endure.

4. In-Character Interactions

My most memorable experience at Epic wasn’t the result of expensive sets, thrilling rides, or fancy technology. Rather, it was 10-minute chat I had with an actor (the “owner” of a shop, pictured here) who stayed completely in character the entire time. She wandered over while I was waiting for Megan, and she talked about her background and answered some questions.

It was a busy shop, and I was surprised at several times in the conversation that she didn’t move on to other customers, but she conveyed that she was in no rush. There was no sense of “move along, next person please”–everything about the interaction was welcoming, authentic, and playful. I hope Epic values what this incredible person gives them every day.

This is an area that I’ve found difficult to balance in scaling Stonemaier Games. I want to give genuine time and attention to everyone who contacts me, but in every private interaction is information that others might want to know too (if the question were instead asked publicly). Though, as I type this, it occurs to me that while the conversation at Epic felt custom for me, it wasn’t private at all. Megan’s mom was there, and Megan eventually joined us, and we were in the middle of the shop–anyone could have joined at any time.

5. The Nostalgia Factor

Sometimes I forget about the sheer power of nostalgia until it hits me full force in the form of the Super Mario theme or the voice of Hiccup. One of my favorite and most unexpected experiences from the weekend was a 20-minute water, light, drone, and instrumental evening show at Universal Studios. Even just 20 seconds of music and a brief projected image from ET, Jurassic Park, or Back to the Future made me want to revisit those movies.

I think games do a great job of using art and themes to evoke nostalgia. Nemesis takes us to the Alien movies, Boss Monster has pixel art for those of us who grew up in the 80s and 90s, and long-running games like Pokemon create their own nostalgia cycles. Nostalgia by itself isn’t enough to sell a game, but just like the movies I mentioned above, if the content itself is great, nostalgia can elevate it.

While I didn’t delve into the food because games aren’t edible, the food (and the thematic places at Epic where we ate, like the mead hall shown here) was also a big part of the immersion for me.

I’d love to hear your thoughts about effective immersive customer experiences at theme parks, and perhaps how you relate them to tabletop games. Let me know your thoughts in the comments!

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The Legacy of Robert Moses – A Cross Bronx Expressway Review

15. Dezember 2025 um 15:49
The opening sequence of Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver depicts a New York with enough grit that you can feel it on your teeth. It’s a feral hour of the night. DeNiro’s sedan is cruising down a street awash in the radiant soul of the city. There’s a shot of the vehicle’s quarter panel. Beads of…

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Wyrmspan Dragon Academy

14. Dezember 2025 um 21:10

This is another great expansion from Stonemaier Games, with  lot of extra bits to change the game, but not too drastically.
To start with and importantly for me is the fact that it all fits in the main box and you get a new card holder that is more like the one that you get with Wingspan, to replace the old smaller holder.

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You gain 5 new guilds and their cards. You also gain a whole load of Dragons that have some cool new powers which can make putting them in Caves easier if you reach the requirments. one of the new dragon types is called a fledgling, these will make your games that much more interesting. As with most expansions or games for that matter it is best to explore the game and see how you can make the most of them. If you do not like the game, then I am afraid but this wont fix that, but it will make the game more complex and fun.


I will highly recomend this expansion and you can order it at: https://www.bgextras.co.uk/wyrmspan/wyrmspan/wyrmspan-dragon-academy

The post Wyrmspan Dragon Academy first appeared on Board Game Extras.

Folge 350 – remember


Print and Play Bastelecke

Was habe ich gespielt?
boardgamearena.com: Tag Team, Am goldenen Fluss, Cities, Planet Unknown, Würfelwurst
Botswana
Würfelwurst
Boss Fighter QR
Botswana

boardgamearena.com: Tag Team, Am goldenen Fluss, Cities, Planet Unknown, Würfelwurst
boardgamearena.com: Tag Team, Am goldenen Fluss, Cities, Planet Unknown, Würfelwurst
boardgamearena.com: Tag Team, Am goldenen Fluss, Cities, Planet Unknown, Würfelwurst
boardgamearena.com: Tag Team, Am goldenen Fluss, Cities, Planet Unknown, Würfelwurst
boardgamearena.com: Tag Team, Am goldenen Fluss, Cities, Planet Unknown, Würfelwurst
Botswana
Würfelwurst
Boss Fighter QR
Boss Fighter QR
Botswana

Podcast Hinweis

Bluesky – @vintersphrost.bsky.social
Mastodon – @vintersphrost@brettspiel.space
Boardgamearena.com – vintersphrost
Yucata.de – vintersphrost
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/vintersphrost/
YouTube Hörspiel Einspieler – https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCER_eNjl0R-Rzev5IMG2uufJSbXt01Mp

💾

8 Crowdfunding Mistakes I Made that Wouldn’t Fly Today

04. Dezember 2025 um 15:56

I haven’t run a crowdfunding campaign in 10 years, but Stonemaier was built on the foundation of the 7 campaigns I ran from 2012-2015, raising around $3.2 million to fund games like Viticulture, Euphoria, Between Two Cities, and Scythe, among some expansion and accessory projects.

It was a very different time on Kickstarter, as the gaming category there was much less populated than it is now. While I was fortunate to have success on the crowdfunded games frontier, I made a bunch of mistakes that likely would sink a project in 2025 (especially if I were a first-time creator):

  1. I didn’t build enough of a crowd for the first game prior to launch. I actually put quite a bit of effort into this before the campaign, but I was still learning the tools and skills to spread the word effectively.
  2. I didn’t budget carefully enough. I got caught up in the excitement of Viticulture and added a stretch goal that likely would have sunk the campaign if we had reached it. It was a big wake-up call that I needed to budget much more carefully (and with a healthy buffer) and not make reckless decisions even when things are looking good.
  3. I didn’t have a production-ready game heading into Kickstarter. I got better at this over time, but Viticulture still needed several more months of playtesting, development, art, and graphic design after the campaign ended. Entering a campaign with an incomplete game puts the burden of uncertainty on backers, who I think are much more savvy to avoid such projects today.
  4. I offered exclusive content. This was such a standard practice in those early days that I didn’t think through the long-term implications. I was thinking about 3,000 customers, not the potential of 300,000 customers in the coming years. After Euphoria, I realized just how poorly I was serving the majority of customers through exclusive content, and I stopped offering it. Instead, I shifted to a model of offering free promos to backers that I could sell in the future to anyone.
  5. I got too fancy with stretch goals. Even after 6 campaigns, I was still making mistakes, as this happened on the Scythe campaign (my final Kickstarter). I was worried about blowing past all of the stretch goals on the first day, so I waited until after 24 hours had passed to announce the stretch goal levels, which greatly irritated backers. I heard their feedback and fixed it, but it was a good reminder to keep core elements like stretch goals clear and simple.
  6. I didn’t invest in great graphic design. I had a shoestring budget for Viticulture, so I hired a college student for the graphic design, and I used my rudimentary InDesign knowledge to construct the project page. It wasn’t terrible, but nothing about it conveyed that the final product would be polished and professional. That’s when I brought in Christine, who is still with us today.
  7. I offered early bird rewards. While this isn’t a huge dealbreaker–I still see plenty of projects offer a little reward for people who follow the pre-launch page or back within the first 24 hours–I wish I had instead used the method of, “If we reach X goal in the first 48 hours, everyone gets this special bonus.”
  8. I used crowdfunding universally instead of selectively. Not every game is a good fit for crowdfunding, but I couldn’t see through any other lens at the time. I think crowdfunding is best when you can truly tantalize backers with several major hooks (component, art, etc). I’m glad that Between Two Cities worked out on Kickstarter, but in hindsight it would have been a great way to start building strong relationships with retailers and distributors. The same goes for the Viticulture reprint in 2014, which I reprinted as part of the Tuscany campaign; I don’t think it’s bad to use an expansion campaign to reprint the game, but it was another lost opportunity to form stronger bonds with retailers.

Despite those mistakes, there are a few things I did right in those early, foundational campaigns: I invested in art (even taking money out of my meager 401k/IRA so I could pay the Euphoria artist up front), I tried to offer a great value for the reward pricing (which even included shipping fees, which was standard at the time), and I focused on the people by inviting conversation, replying to every message within a few minutes, and thanking each backer individually during my first campaign within a few hours of their pledge.

What do you think about these mistakes? Are there other common mistakes you see crowdfunders making that deter you from backing their projects?

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If you gain value from the 100 articles Jamey publishes on this blog each year, please consider championing this content! You can also listen to posts like this in the audio version of the blog.

Philosophy and Board Games: Existentialism and Meaning

04. Dezember 2025 um 15:00
There’s this thing that people say which rips my skin like 60 grit sandpaper. “That was fun, but it’s not much of a game.” Games require decisions. Meaningful ones. At least, that’s what a portion of the hobby community believes. Candy Land isn’t a game they say, it’s an activity. There’s an obvious implication that…

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