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Farewell 2025 – Non-Historical Games!

25. Dezember 2025 um 16:59

On to the next category – non-historical games! This year, we see a mix of the new(-to-me) and a very old favorite.

You can read all of the Farewell 2025 posts here:

©Nerdlab Games.

Agent Avenue (Christian Kudahl/Laura Kudahl, Nerdlab Games)

One of my more recent discoveries… and it is all about discovery itself: You want to discover the other player’s secret identity, which you do by catching up to them on the circular track. Of course, your opponent wants the same, and so both of you try to go as fast as they can by enlisting the most helpful of your suburban neighbors (all of which are anthropomorphic animals) to your cause. Yet you must always select two cards from your hand for recruiting, place one of them face-up and the other face-down – and then your opponent gets to select one of them (and discover if they made the right choice).

The numbers on the cards signify how many steps you take according to how many copies of the card you have – the Sentinel (Aufpasser) starts slow, but is great with 3+ copies, for the Double Agent (Doppelagentin), 2 copies is the sweet spot, and while the Daredevil (Draufgänger) might be helpful initially, enlisting the third of them will lose you the game.

Can you bait them with the great face-up card and take the even better face-down card for yourself? Or can you trick them into thinking that this is just what you want them to do, so they select the face-down card which turns out to be utter trash? Such are the thoughts of retired agents.

Let’s not even get into the intricacies of the instant victory (by enlisting enough codebreakers) or instant defeat (by enlisting too many daredevils), or the special equipment you can buy from the black market in the advanced version. Agent Avenue has you outwit, outbluff, and sometimes outluck your opponent in 10 to 20 breezy minutes.

©Days of Wonder.

Heat: Pedal to the Metal (Asger Harding Granerud/Daniel Skjold Pedersen, Days of Wonder)

I have sung Heat’s praises in general in the farewell post on new-to-me games. Here, let me expand on the Schwerpunkt of its mechanics – heat management. Heat represents the strain on your car. In game terms, that’s heat cards clogging up your hand. They cannot be played (ugh) and not even discarded (double ugh), thus costing you both raw power and flexibility. The only way to get rid of them is to shift down and let your machine recover in low speeds… while watching everybody else get ahead of you.

While you can crash your car (from stress rather than heat), the upturned yellow car was the doing of a player with the flair for the dramatic.

So, should you avoid heat at any cost? – No! You will to take a certain amount of it to win. Sometimes you need to crank up your speed quickly, sometimes you want to boost a movement to put yourself in a position where you can slipstream past opponents. If you have a low-gear stretch soon after taking on the heat, you might be able to shed the heat before it did any damage. The intriguing gamble of how much heat you can incur and how to get rid of it without sacrificing speed is the heart of Heat.

And my favorite non-historical game of the year was…

I refuse to use the ugly cover of the English edition. ©KOSMOS.

Catan Card Game (Klaus Teuber, KOSMOS)

The Catan Card Game has a special place in my heart. It was the first board game I ever played with my friend F., and after F.s death left only M. and me as two sides of our original Magical Triangle, the Catan Card Game turned into a mainstay of our meetings. We used to play the Expanded Basic Game but tried the Tournament Game this year – which means instead of having all the cards from the base game and potential expansions at your (aleatory) disposal, players use a pre-constructed deck of 33 cards.

My university deck could not pick up steam quickly enough against the raw productive and commercial power of my opponent’s deck.

That provides plenty of personalization. We used a university-based deck and one which aims for fast city construction and trade dominance – two very different approaches which both worked well (one victory per deck). And the joy of playing is complemented with the joy of deck construction. I already have some ideas on my mind for a future deck.

And what were your favorite non-historical games this year? Let me know in the comments!

Farewell 2025 – Non-Historical Games!

25. Dezember 2025 um 16:59

On to the next category – non-historical games! This year, we see a mix of the new(-to-me) and a very old favorite.

You can read all of the Farewell 2025 posts here:

©Nerdlab Games.

Agent Avenue (Christian Kudahl/Laura Kudahl, Nerdlab Games)

One of my more recent discoveries… and it is all about discovery itself: You want to discover the other player’s secret identity, which you do by catching up to them on the circular track. Of course, your opponent wants the same, and so both of you try to go as fast as they can by enlisting the most helpful of your suburban neighbors (all of which are anthropomorphic animals) to your cause. Yet you must always select two cards from your hand for recruiting, place one of them face-up and the other face-down – and then your opponent gets to select one of them (and discover if they made the right choice).

The numbers on the cards signify how many steps you take according to how many copies of the card you have – the Sentinel (Aufpasser) starts slow, but is great with 3+ copies, for the Double Agent (Doppelagentin), 2 copies is the sweet spot, and while the Daredevil (Draufgänger) might be helpful initially, enlisting the third of them will lose you the game.

Can you bait them with the great face-up card and take the even better face-down card for yourself? Or can you trick them into thinking that this is just what you want them to do, so they select the face-down card which turns out to be utter trash? Such are the thoughts of retired agents.

Let’s not even get into the intricacies of the instant victory (by enlisting enough codebreakers) or instant defeat (by enlisting too many daredevils), or the special equipment you can buy from the black market in the advanced version. Agent Avenue has you outwit, outbluff, and sometimes outluck your opponent in 10 to 20 breezy minutes.

©Days of Wonder.

Heat: Pedal to the Metal (Asger Harding Granerud/Daniel Skjold Pedersen, Days of Wonder)

I have sung Heat’s praises in general in the farewell post on new-to-me games. Here, let me expand on the Schwerpunkt of its mechanics – heat management. Heat represents the strain on your car. In game terms, that’s heat cards clogging up your hand. They cannot be played (ugh) and not even discarded (double ugh), thus costing you both raw power and flexibility. The only way to get rid of them is to shift down and let your machine recover in low speeds… while watching everybody else get ahead of you.

While you can crash your car (from stress rather than heat), the upturned yellow car was the doing of a player with the flair for the dramatic.

So, should you avoid heat at any cost? – No! You will to take a certain amount of it to win. Sometimes you need to crank up your speed quickly, sometimes you want to boost a movement to put yourself in a position where you can slipstream past opponents. If you have a low-gear stretch soon after taking on the heat, you might be able to shed the heat before it did any damage. The intriguing gamble of how much heat you can incur and how to get rid of it without sacrificing speed is the heart of Heat.

And my favorite non-historical game of the year was…

I refuse to use the ugly cover of the English edition. ©KOSMOS.

Catan Card Game (Klaus Teuber, KOSMOS)

The Catan Card Game has a special place in my heart. It was the first board game I ever played with my friend F., and after F.s death left only M. and me as two sides of our original Magical Triangle, the Catan Card Game turned into a mainstay of our meetings. We used to play the Expanded Basic Game but tried the Tournament Game this year – which means instead of having all the cards from the base game and potential expansions at your (aleatory) disposal, players use a pre-constructed deck of 33 cards.

My university deck could not pick up steam quickly enough against the raw productive and commercial power of my opponent’s deck.

That provides plenty of personalization. We used a university-based deck and one which aims for fast city construction and trade dominance – two very different approaches which both worked well (one victory per deck). And the joy of playing is complemented with the joy of deck construction. I already have some ideas on my mind for a future deck.

And what were your favorite non-historical games this year? Let me know in the comments!

Farewell 2025 – New-to-Me Games!

21. Dezember 2025 um 18:42

As the year comes to a close, I’ll do my usual end-of-year posts: My personal top three in a range of categories. As tradition commands, we’ll begin with the games that I played for the first time this year. Here are the best three.

You can read all of the Farewell 2025 posts here:

On the box: A close finish! ©Days of Wonder.

Heat: Pedal to the Metal (Asger Harding Granerud/Daniel Skjold Pedersen, Days of Wonder)

I’m not much of a Formula 1 fan – from my point of view, nothing much happens during the races (after the start, that is), and in many years, even the championship as such is a bore because one driver/car combo is just too dominant. (This year has been excitingly different in that regard.)

In the box: Another close finish!

Heat, however, takes just the exciting parts of racing and puts them together in an enthralling package of evocative mechanisms – downshifting before corners (and upshifting afterward), and the delicate balance of how to deal with the psychological stress on the driver and the physical stress on the car (the eponymous heat). And as the main planning phase is done simultaneously, there’s minimal downtime even with the full six players.

I love the warm yellow which is so evocative of southern India. ©GMT Games.

Vijayanagara (Cory Graham/Mathieu Johnson/Aman Matthews/Saverio Spagnolie, GMT Games)

I’m excited to learn new things from and with games. One topic I knew next to nothing about is the 14th century in India. That, however, has changed a bit now due to Vijayanagara, a COIN-lite treatment of the collapse of the Delhi Sultanate’s hegemony under the challenge of invasion from the north (Timur’s Mongols) and centrifugal forces in the south (the nascent Bahmani Kingdom and Vijayanagara Empire). Every game of Vijayanagara tells a variation of that story.

The Delhi Sultanate (black) is under heavy pressure from the Vijayanagara Empire (yellow) and the Bahmani Kingdom (turquoise). From the implementation on Rally the Troops!

I was happy to play several games of this intriguing debut design with my fellow board game bloggers Dave from Dude! Take Your Turn and Michal from The Boardgames Chronicle.

And my favorite new-to-me game of the year is…

A classic Rodger B. MacGowan cover. ©Rodger B. MacGowan.

Time of Crisis (Wray Ferrell/Brad Johnson, GMT Games)

Chaos – some games hate it, others, like Time of Crisis, embrace it. Whoever wants to be Roman emperor in the tumultuous third century must be prepared to deal with a whole whirlwind of challenges: Angry mobs want to drag your governors into the gutter, Barbarian tribes stand ready to cross the border into your provinces, and, worst of all, the rest of the Roman elite wants to be emperor, too, and will gleefully take whatever you possess.

Red has declared himself emperor! Yet Yellow runs a compact dominion in the east, ready to move into Italy or break away from the empire. From the implementation on Rally the Troops!

I have been thwarted in my imperial aspirations by my fellow bloggers Alexander and Grant from The Players’ Aid as well as Dave and Michal, and have been loving every minute of it. Time of Crisis has been my most-played game overall this year (with 14 individual plays of it), and rightly takes the crown in this category.

What were your favorite new-to-me games this year? Let me know in the comments!

Farewell 2025 – New-to-Me Games!

21. Dezember 2025 um 18:42

As the year comes to a close, I’ll do my usual end-of-year posts: My personal top three in a range of categories. As tradition commands, we’ll begin with the games that I played for the first time this year. Here are the best three.

You can read all of the Farewell 2025 posts here:

On the box: A close finish! ©Days of Wonder.

Heat: Pedal to the Metal (Asger Harding Granerud/Daniel Skjold Pedersen, Days of Wonder)

I’m not much of a Formula 1 fan – from my point of view, nothing much happens during the races (after the start, that is), and in many years, even the championship as such is a bore because one driver/car combo is just too dominant. (This year has been excitingly different in that regard.)

In the box: Another close finish!

Heat, however, takes just the exciting parts of racing and puts them together in an enthralling package of evocative mechanisms – downshifting before corners (and upshifting afterward), and the delicate balance of how to deal with the psychological stress on the driver and the physical stress on the car (the eponymous heat). And as the main planning phase is done simultaneously, there’s minimal downtime even with the full six players.

I love the warm yellow which is so evocative of southern India. ©GMT Games.

Vijayanagara (Cory Graham/Mathieu Johnson/Aman Matthews/Saverio Spagnolie, GMT Games)

I’m excited to learn new things from and with games. One topic I knew next to nothing about is the 14th century in India. That, however, has changed a bit now due to Vijayanagara, a COIN-lite treatment of the collapse of the Delhi Sultanate’s hegemony under the challenge of invasion from the north (Timur’s Mongols) and centrifugal forces in the south (the nascent Bahmani Kingdom and Vijayanagara Empire). Every game of Vijayanagara tells a variation of that story.

The Delhi Sultanate (black) is under heavy pressure from the Vijayanagara Empire (yellow) and the Bahmani Kingdom (turquoise). From the implementation on Rally the Troops!

I was happy to play several games of this intriguing debut design with my fellow board game bloggers Dave from Dude! Take Your Turn and Michal from The Boardgames Chronicle.

And my favorite new-to-me game of the year is…

A classic Rodger B. MacGowan cover. ©Rodger B. MacGowan.

Time of Crisis (Wray Ferrell/Brad Johnson, GMT Games)

Chaos – some games hate it, others, like Time of Crisis, embrace it. Whoever wants to be Roman emperor in the tumultuous third century must be prepared to deal with a whole whirlwind of challenges: Angry mobs want to drag your governors into the gutter, Barbarian tribes stand ready to cross the border into your provinces, and, worst of all, the rest of the Roman elite wants to be emperor, too, and will gleefully take whatever you possess.

Red has declared himself emperor! Yet Yellow runs a compact dominion in the east, ready to move into Italy or break away from the empire. From the implementation on Rally the Troops!

I have been thwarted in my imperial aspirations by my fellow bloggers Alexander and Grant from The Players’ Aid as well as Dave and Michal, and have been loving every minute of it. Time of Crisis has been my most-played game overall this year (with 14 individual plays of it), and rightly takes the crown in this category.

What were your favorite new-to-me games this year? Let me know in the comments!

Half-Year Gaming Report, 2025

29. Juni 2025 um 16:38

2025 is in the distant future, right? …nope, that’s right now. Actually, it’s halfway over already. So here are some snapshots from my board gaming in the first six months of this year.

The Raw Numbers

Let’s start with a statistical overview (as of June 29):

  • I’ve played 23 different games (slightly up compared to last year at this point).
  • 9 of them were new to me (also slightly up).
  • These 23 games resulted in a total of 52 plays (lower than last year, but higher than 2023)
  • The month in which I played most games was January (with 17 plays), the months with the fewest plays March and April (4 each).
  • Of the 23 different games, 17 are historical. These account for 43 of the plays (twice the games, three times the plays compared to last year).
  • Just one of the plays was solo (utterly collapsing from last year’s 17).
  • 32 of the 52 plays were digital, which makes for a digital majority for the first time since getting out of the pandemic in 2022.

The overall trend this year for me has been more digital and more historical gaming – or, from the other side, less on-the-table casual gaming. There are a few reasons for that, including me being mostly homebound for several months taking care of our cat which requires medication twice daily.

Most importantly: She continues to live a happy cat life (except for the few minutes in the morning when she has to take a pill that tastes very bitter)!

Besides that, I’m happy for the gaming I got so far this year. Here are some highlights.

BochumCon

Very early this year, I did in fact go to a convention – and what a convention it was! BochumCon is a small invite-only convention focusing on longer, more complex games (often with a historical theme) organized by designer Matthias Cramer. I got to play (among other things) two games of Weimar (Matthias Cramer, Capstone Games/Skellig Games/Spielworxx), one of Here I Stand (Ed Beach, GMT Games), and the very clever Heat (Asger Harding Granerud/Daniel Skjold Pedersen, Days of Wonder)… and I got to chat, connect, and laugh with a lot of nice people!

Ottomans at Vienna!
Monarchists in Essen!
Cars on the race track!

Rally the Troops!

I play more digitally these days because I lack some face-to-face opportunities, but I also play more digitally because the offers have gotten very good. My main platform is the admirable Rally the Troops! which allows you to play a variety of historical board games (especially block and card-driven games) in a visually appealing, rules-enforcing manner in your browser for free. I’ve used it to get back to old favorites like 1989 (Jason Matthews/Ted Torgerson, GMT Games) or Maria (Richard Sivél, Histogame) as well as to try out games about which I’ve heard my friends rave for years… for example, the game which I’ve played most often this year so far.

Austria (white) has recovered and is pressing Prussia (blue) hard in Silesia (east) as well as in the western reaches of Prussia proper. From the Maria implementation on Rally the Troops!

Julius Caesar (Grant Dalgliesh/Justin Thompson, Columbia Games)

One of my discoveries of last year – so much strategy and bluffing with so little rules overhead!

Pompeius (gold) holds Spain, Africa, and Sicily; but Caesar’s (red) march through the east all the way to Egypt proved decisive. From the implementation on Rally the Troops!

The struggle between Caesar and Pompeius for mastery of the Roman Republic requires sharp wits, calm nerves, and a little bit of luck when you cast the die crossing the Rubicon. The games are dynamic and play out in a variety of ways – sometimes, your armies stalk each other in the east, sometimes, you slug it out in bloody battles in Spain, and sometimes, amphibious landings turn erstwhile quiet regions into sudden flashpoints. May the gods favor you… but not too much.

I’ve played Julius Caesar around a dozen times since December last year, and it hasn’t lost its charm.

And, to finish this post, here are two new discoveries of mine on Rally the Troops!:

Vijayanagara (Cory Graham/Mathieu Johnson/Aman Matthews/Saverio Spagnolie, GMT Games)

I’m excited to learn new things from and with games. One topic I knew next to nothing about is the 14th century in India. That, however, has changed a bit now due to Vijayanagara, a COIN-lite treatment of the collapse of the Delhi Sultanate’s hegemony under the challenge of invasion from the north (Timur’s Mongols) and centrifugal forces in the south (the nascent Bahmani Kingdom and Vijayanagara Empire).

My yellow Vijayanagara Empire has a few strongholds in the south, and, with the Delhi Sultanate (black) currently busy fending off the Mongols (red) in the north, will have some breathing space… yet the Bahmani Kingdom (turquoise) might fill the power vacuum. From the implementation on Rally the Troops!

Time of Crisis (Wray Ferrell/Brad Johnson, GMT Games)

Chaos – some games hate it, others, like Time of Crisis, embrace it. Whoever wants to be Roman emperor in the tumultuous third century must be prepared to deal with a whole whirlwind of challenges: Angry mobs want to drag your governors into the gutter, Barbarian tribes stand ready to cross the border into your provinces, and, worst of all, the rest of the Roman elite wants to be emperor, too, and will gleefully take whatever you possess. I have been thwarted in my imperial aspirations by my fellow bloggers Dave, Grant, and Michal, and have been loving every minute of it.

My (red) emperor sits in Italia, yet the yellow pretender empire seems to be the most dynamic faction right now. From the implementation on Rally the Troops!

What have the first six months of 2025 brought to you in gaming? – Let me know in the comments!

Games Referenced

Weimar (Matthias Cramer, Capstone Games/Skellig Games/Spielworxx)

Here I Stand (Ed Beach, GMT Games)

Heat (Asger Harding Granerud/Daniel Skjold Pedersen, Days of Wonder)

1989 (Jason Matthews/Ted Torgerson, GMT Games)

Maria (Richard Sivél, Histogame)

Julius Caesar (Grant Dalgliesh/Justin Thompson, Columbia Games)

Vijayanagara (Cory Graham/Mathieu Johnson/Aman Matthews/Saverio Spagnolie, GMT Games)

Time of Crisis (Wray Ferrell/Brad Johnson, GMT Games)

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