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In Memory of Penelope

22. März 2026 um 17:14

Our dear cat Penelope has died. Thus, the history today is personal.

Penelope’s early life is shrouded in mystery. She lived on the streets, but we do not know for how long and if she had been in a human household before. In 2016, she was found and taken to an animal shelter. For the next three years, nobody wanted to adopt her… until we came there and found her to be a somewhat reserved, but very sweet middle-aged lady.

She integrated into the family immediately: One day after her adoption, she already strategized how to blunt the Prussian invasion of Bohemia.

From then on, she was our constant companion. She read with us…

…celebrated Halloween…

and Christmas with us…

…rid our place of provocative ribbons…

…tested all boxes for their sitting qualities…

…and had secret admirers who sent her bouquets.

She even found the time to adopt a secret second identity as quirky nanny Purry Poppins.

Her love for board games remained undiminished. Sometimes we suspected that she considered herself to be a board game.

The only thing she could not abide was me going for business trips. Big-eyed protests were staged on my suitcase.

Yet when I came back and played a game with her, everything was forgiven.

While she certainly enjoyed the games…

…the most important part to her was spending quality time with her family – for example, sitting on my lap while I sorted counters into trays.

Penelope was with us during tumultuous years. No matter if Covid forced us to stay at home or Putin threatened to cut off our energy supply, it was always a comfort to have a furry, affectionate companion with us.

As Penelope aged, her health deteriorated. She succumbed to a lung edema on March 11. She will be greatly missed.

Essen SPIEL 2025: Most Anticipated Board Games

19. Oktober 2025 um 18:28

You say „board game fair“, I say “SPIEL” at Essen. It’s the Mecca for the tabletop gaming faithful. Four days of playing, trying, and buying. 200,000+ visitors. I’ve been there a few times over the last years for two days each and found it an intensive board game experience. I’m looking forward to going again this year!

As always, this is not meant as a „must buy“ list or whatever other consumptionist term some people use. It is likely that I will buy only one or two of these games. Why? Because I have quite some good games already, and I like to make them count before I plunge into new adventures. Generally, there are no musts in buying. And there are no musts in attending board game fairs or conventions – obviously those can come as pretty big expenses for travel and accommodation. Bottom line: No musts. You do you.

One note beforehand: Board gaming is getting ever more international, and this list shows it: The six designers come from six different countries, and, for the first time in the nine years I’ve been making this list, none of them is from Germany or the United States.

Without further ado, on to the games! They are sorted by location on the fairgrounds.

Hall 2, booth E121: Limit (Alexandre Poyé, Ludonaute)

1-6 players, 60-150 minutes, for sale, MSRP: 50.00 €

Many games have great nations compete on the global stage. Yet Limit is different. Few games of this kind have a robust section of domestic affairs beyond the usual political-economic-military competition. Fewer dare to zoom out so much that the game spans not years, but generations over two centuries. And barely any are based on a model that neither promises eternal improvement for everyone nor zero-sum competition between the powers, but rather the limits of industrial development. If you think you have heard of the latter before: Yes, this game is based on the World3 model of the Club of Rome’s The Limits to Growth. All of these uncommon features combine into a game which I expect to feel unique.

Designer Alexandre Poyé will be at the booth to teach the game (not all around the clock, but you have a reasonable chance to meet him there).

Hall 2, booth E450: Marajoara (Daniel de Lucca, Giant Roc)

1-4 players, 60 minutes, for sale, MSRP: 40.00 €

Archaeology is a popular setting for board games, and I’m here for it. While I love the civilizations of the ancient Mediterranean as much as the next person, I’m happy to see games shedding light on less-known cultures – like the Marajoara from the Amazonian island of Marajó (in modern-day Brazil), famous for their distinctive style of pottery. You will excavate, restore, and display vases while maintaining the finances of your museum. Mechanically, the game combines inspiration from (peg) solitaire with dice movement. I would have loved the game to lean a bit harder on the unique visual style of the Marajoara pottery (mostly limited to the cover art and the large vases), but I’ll take what I can get!

Hall 3, booth A400: Habemus Papam (Pako Gradaille, Salt & Pepper Games)

3-6 players, 45-60 minutes, for sale, MSRP: 35.00 €

If your main takeaway from watching Conclave was how exciting it would be to elect a pope, Pako Gradaille has you covered. Habemus Papam puts you in the Roman curia at the time of a papal election which you aim to influence according to your public (an old pope! An innovator! Someone from the New World!) and private (finish the election early! Have a pope who is exactly like yourself!) goals. You will expend your curial influence to advance the cause of candidates whom you like (or hamper those you don’t), but conserving influence is also valuable in its own right. Whoever balances their competing interests best takes the victory. Sacramental wine and vapes are not included in the box.

Hall 3, booth K120-M120: Bohemians (Jasper de Lange, Pegasus)

1-4 players, 45-60 minutes, for sale, MSRP: 35.00 €

We turn from the wealth and austerity of the Catholic Church to the poverty and indulgence of fin de siècle Parisian artists! You chase the inspiration for artistic achievements by living life to the fullest, crafting exquisite days by skillfully combining activities as varied as wandering aimlessly through the city, discussing philosophy, meeting a muse, or losing yourself in your work. Speaking of work: You’ll have to do some of that, too – mean labor to support yourself lest you avoid the hardships which come with the life of a free spirit (which range from poor hygiene over abject poverty to syphilis). Bohemians is a mechanically light, but thematically rich deck-builder, and, as befits a game about artists, is strictly gorgeous.

Hall 3, booth L500: 1920: Nest of Eagles (Jarosław Flis, Phalanx Games)

2 players, 90-150 minutes, for sale, MSRP: 69.00 €

In 1920, the old world of European empires had been shattered. What the new world would look like was still up for contention, as in this struggle of two nascent states: On the one hand, new nation-states came into being – like the (Second) Polish Republic, the first independent and united Polish state in over a century. On the other hand, ideology transcended nations, and the Soviet Republics (of which the Soviet Union would spring soon after) were emboldened by their success in the Russian Civil War against the old monarchist forces. As Poland reached for the east, the World Revolution got ready to spring to the industrial centers of western Europe. The two sides were to clash in one of the most mobile conflicts in history.

1920: Nest of Eagles is a re-implementation of Rok 1920 (published in 1995 by Encore) which has received the typical Phalanx treatment of pairing wargame mechanics with euro production quality.

Hall 5, booth A725: Faust vs Mephisto (Geonil, Mandoo Games)

2 players, 10-25 minutes, for sale, MSRP: 20.00 €

I’m a sucker for a Faustian bargain… literarily speaking, I mean. My soul is still mine. Why would you even ask me that? – Anyway, Faust vs Mephisto takes the man and his devil and puts them on even ground (maybe like in the Study II scene of Goethe’s Faust): Mephisto tries to dominate by winning all tricks in a given round – or tempt Faust by winning none of them. Anything in between is a success for Faust. If Mephisto manages to pull it off twice in four rounds, he wins, otherwise Faust has proven that “A good man, through obscurest aspirations // Has still an instinct of the one true way.” Faust vs Mephisto seems like a snappy little card game to play before or after a more involved game – or whenever you have a little bit of spare time with a fellow gamer.

What are the games you are anticipating most eagerly? Let me know in the comments!

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