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Hat-wearing animal game Petiquette wins latest Golden Box Awards, voted on by members of Japan’s board game industry

30. März 2026 um 17:07

Petiquette, Thomas Sellner’s card game of picking out patterns among hat-wearing animals, has been named game of the year at this year’s Golden Box Awards.

The Oink Games-published design fought off competition from 2025 winner Isao Mukai, who was nominated for Banana Governance – a card-based drafting and bidding game which sees players attempt to satisfy the needs of hungry monkeys better than their opponents.

A comment from the selection committee about Petiquette called the title “a brilliant and sharp work typical of Oink”.

Cards from Banana Governance, designed and published by Isao Mukai

It said, “I’ll never forget the shock I felt the first time I played it. The rules are simple: just give the answer that fits in the single ‘?’ on the cards laid out.

“But… the eyes of those who give the same answer feel friendly. The mouths of those who give a different answer seem to twist. The loneliness of desperately trying to explain when you’re the only one who gives a different answer.

“A mix of various emotions. The unique experience of this game really stands out.”

The annual Golden Box contest was launched four years ago, modelled on the American film industry’s Academy Awards. More than 40 industry professionals from within the Japanese board game sphere voted on this year’s award.

In addition to ‘Best Picture’ for the overall game of the year, the awards also celebrate the best in game design, art, graphic design, production and rulebook work through individual awards.

Cover art for Sweet Lands

Eve Inc-designed Nusutto Cat – also known as Meow Heist – triumphed in this year’s Game Design Award, while best art went to Totsuca Chuo’s Sweet Lands, which was illustrated by Tatsuki Asano and Broni120.

Moyuki Adisawa’s animal jet ski racing game Tornado Splash picked up the Graphic Design Award thanks to the work of iD Creative Co, while the Production Award went to National Economy and Toshinori Iwai.

The selection committee said of the Production Award win: “It’s great when a great game is revived. It’s even better when a great game is revived in the best possible form.

“This new edition not only makes the seemingly impossible revival of this masterpiece a reality, but also reinterprets it in a more refined way.

“The ‘box within a box’ structure, combining the three parts, is exciting even before you start playing, and the ‘household budget’ mechanism that characterizes this game is implemented clearly and beautifully as a ‘safe’.

“This masterpiece hasn’t lost its appeal even after ten years, and this new edition will be loved for even longer.”

The Rulebook Award, meanwhile, was bestowed upon ForGames-published Down Down Dungeon – a reimplementation of Reiner Knizia’s Cucina Curiosa/Mysterious Dungeons.

Yoshihiko Koriyama worked on the rulebook for that title, with proofreading from Shota Okano and DTP work from Makoto Takami. The selection committee said, “The fact that you can essentially understand the game rules by reading just one page is excellent.” 

Bomb Busters designer Hishashi Hayashi collecting his Spiel des Jahres award

A special award was also presented this year to Hisashi Hayashi, after his co-operative bomb disposal game Bomb Busters won last year’s Spiel des Jahres – beating the much-fancied push-your-luck card game Flip 7 to the high-profile award.

The win marked the first Spiel des Jahres triumph for an Asian designer in the prize’s 46-year history, and underscored the huge rise in tabletop designs making their way across from Asia to Europe and North America in the past decade.

Each winner will receive a golden board game box as a trophy.

Last year’s Golden Box Award game of the year prize was won by Isao Mukai and Napopora’s design Umataka, a worker placement game centred around hunter-gatherers making traditional pottery in ancient Japan.

The 2025 Golden Box Board Game Awards in full:

Best Picture

Winner: Petiquette, designed by Thomas Sellner (Published by Oink Games)
Banana Governance, Mukai (Mukai)
The Match Girl Millionaire (Hey!)

Outstanding Game Design

Winner: Nusutto Cat, Eve Inc (Ibuink)
Storm in a Teacup, Kyashi/Ikumo Tasaka (Gomi Kokusai/Waste International)
Switch To: mor! (Yontousei)

Art Award

Winner: Sweet Lands, Totsuca Chuo (Uchibacoya) – art by Tatsuki Asano and Broni120
A Boar, Crab, Dung Beatle, Takuya Iwamura (Kyuhachi Dog) – art by Takuya Iwamura
Ghost Lift, Onegear (Engames) – art by Sai Beppu

Graphic Design Award

Winner: Tornado Splash, Moyuki Adisawa (ArcLight Games) – graphic design by iD Creative
Vidro, Keita Kasagi (Bamboo Games) – graphic design by Kakuzato
Shady Lady, Kaya Miyano (Mob+) – graphic design by Sai Beppu

Best Production

Winner: National Economy, Hiroshi Nishimura (Korokorodou)
Down Down Dungeon, Reiner Knizia (ForGames)
Pose Mania!, Suitashi (Avignon Games)

Best Rulebook

Winner: Down Down Dungeon, Reiner Knizia (ForGames)
Electra Select (The Society for Appreciating Swaying Buds)
Snowp, Eisuke Fujinawa, Kazunori Hori (SzpiLAB)

The post Hat-wearing animal game Petiquette wins latest Golden Box Awards, voted on by members of Japan’s board game industry first appeared on .

Little Tokyo

23. März 2026 um 02:33

Unsere erstes Date ist vielversprechend. Eine kompakte braune Spielbox aus bedruckter Pappe. Schlicht, nicht glänzend, nichts Aufgesetztes. Darin: Holzfiguren in einer Papiertüte, angenehm schwer, sauber verarbeitet. Eine Anleitung, gedruckt auf…

The post Little Tokyo appeared first on Reich der Spiele.

Ohanami

Von: ferengi
22. März 2026 um 10:31

Aliens und Bienen aufsteigend nach Gefährlichkeit sortieren?

Der Qwixx-Entwickler Steffen Benndorf hat neben einer Reihe Würfelspielen auch kleine Kartenspiele entwickelt. Ohanami ist hiervon sein bestbewertetes auf BGG.

Benannt wurde das Spiel nach dem japanischen Kirschblütenfest O-Hanami. Die Regeln sind so kurz und einfach, dass man sie in 5 Minuten durchlesen kann, auch wenn 10-minütige Regelvideos bequemer sind.

Das Spiel besteht aus 120 Karten in den Werten 1 bis 120 und vier Farben.
Wir legen über drei Runden Karten in drei Reihen ab. Zu Beginn einer Runde haben wir 10 Karten, von denen wir 2 aus-/anlegen und die übrigen 8 Karten an den Spieler links weiterreichen. Und so erhalten wir selber auch 8 Karten von einem Mitspieler, von denen wir wieder 2 anlegen, wobei wir immer nur kleinere oder größere Zahlen in unseren drei Reihen anlegen dürfen. Alternativ ist es auch möglich, 1 oder 2 Karten, die wir nicht anlegen möchten da die Lücke zu groß werden würde, abzulegen.

Diese 8 Karten habe ich von meinem Nachbarn erhalten. Die grau- und rosafarbenen bringen erst in Runde 3 Punkte, lege ich sie trotzdem schon an?

Und so geht es weiter, bis die 10 Karten angelegt wurden, damit die erste Runde beendet ist und dann gewertet wird. Hierbei erhält man für jede ausgespielte blaue Karte 3 Punkte, für die anderen Farben keine. Aber zum Abschluss der Runden 2 und 3 ändert sich dies und die anderen Farben werden wertvoller bzw. werden überhaupt gewertet. Die blauen bringen hingegen in allen drei Runden Punkte, wenn auch nur mit je drei Punkten.

Beginn Runde 2: Bislang habe ich erst in 2 der 3 Reihen Karten angelegt. Nach Runde 2 werden Blau und Grün gewertet.
Nach Runde 3 werden alle Karten gewertet und dann alles Summiert. Und hinterher üwird berprüft, ob dies auch richtig gemacht wurde.

Fazit:

Kurze Regeln, kurze Spielzeit. Und da die Kartenwerte gut balanciert sind ist der Ausgang auch immer knapp. „Und für das nächste Spiel habe ich eine neue Strategie und gewinne“, so denkt man …
Das Spielprinzip ist schon ganz gut, die Thematik zum Kirschblütenfest sichert dezente Bilder.

Hätte man das Konzept mit einem Szenario im Weltraum oder einfach mit Aliens kombiniert, wären Punktezählerkritiker sicher besser zu überzeugen. Denn es ist zum Abschluss des Spiels ein ganz schönes Punktesummieren …

Stubenscore: 7,3 / 10


OHANAMI
BoardGameGeek

Spieledatenbank Luding

Brettspiel (getestet)

Asmodee makes Asia expansion push by buying CMON’s Japon Brand, launching new studio Nekuma

20. März 2026 um 12:14

Asmodee has ramped up its reignited acquisition strategy by buying Japon Brand from CMON, anchoring the board game giant’s push into a “currently untapped market” for the company.

Japon Brand was instrumental in bringing Japanese designs such as Love Letter and Machi Koro to international markets, after being inspired by the surge in novel games from home-grown designers in the early 2000s.

The company will form the cornerstone of Asmodee’s new Japanese design studio, Nekuma, which will look to find games from local designers that it can release globally, as well as helping Asmodee bring its existing titles to Japanese players.

Asmodee CEO Thomas Koegler said, “Japan is one of the most creative and culturally influential markets in the world. With Nekuma and the integration of Japon Brand, we are building a long-term platform that connects Japanese creators with players globally.

Asmodee CEO Thomas Koegler

“True to Asmodee’s entrepreneurial and bold DNA, this capital-light and agile initiative allows us to invest where creativity is thriving while positioning Asmodee for sustainable growth in Asia.”

Asmodee has grown into a board game publishing and distribution giant thanks to the heavy expansion the business undertook after being bought by private equity firm Eurazeo in 2014.

But the vast bulk of the company’s revenue comes from its operations in Europe, which accounted for more than 76% of its €1.6bn net sales in 2025.

The United States contributed about 13.1% of 2025 net sales, while the company’s entire ‘rest of the world’ net sales – covering every country outside of Europe or the Americas – made up less than 5%.

Asmodee currently has offices in South Korea, China and Taiwan following an expansion to the continent in 2021, with those teams having developed and published localised titles including Splendor Pokémon, Love Letter Cookie Run, Pokémon Chips, and Love Letter Fox Spirit, as well as making use of crowdfunding platforms across the region.

The company said Nekuma would “integrate and expand” that activity under interim head of studio Frederic Nugeron, Asmodee’s current global senior vice president – route to market for the Asia Pacific region.

It said Nekuma would lead game sourcing “to identify and support the most promising Japanese and Asian tabletop game designers”, while Asia-focused publishing will be managed by the company’s existing Korea team.

Nugeron said, “Our ambition with Nekuma is very concrete: be present on the ground, listen to designers, understand cultural nuances, and build trusted relationships within the Japanese ecosystem.

“By combining local expertise with Asmodee’s global reach, we can support creators more closely and bring distinctive Asian games to a worldwide audience.”

Asmodee said Japon Brand would continue to operate with its existing expertise and relationships, with “no impact” on current partnerships or contracts.

CMON Divestments Continue

The buyout comes less than two years after board game crowdfunding major CMON acquired Japon Brand, with a plan to keep it as an independent division that would use CMON’s infrastructure and reach to help it introduce games to the global market.

That investment followed a strong 2023 for CMON, in which its net profit jumped more than 35% amid a hefty drop in its sales-associated costs.

But the company has faced a punishing financial situation since, posting losses of $3m across 2024 and nearly $7m for the first half of 2025 – figures which dwarf the overall $4.2m profit it had managed to make over the previous nine years combined.

As well as laying off staff and halting new game development and campaign launches, CMON has been attempting to recover by selling a string of its most lucrative IPs – including its most famous and profitable title, Zombicide, and Cthulhu: Death May Die, both of which were bought by Asmodee.

Asmodee continued its acquisitions of CMON games last month by picking up bluffing and set collection game Sheriff of Nottingham, which CMON had previously bought from Brazilian publisher Galapagos Jogos in 2016.

The 2nd edition of former CMON title Zombicide, which is now owned by Asmodee

The board game giant announced in November 2024 that it was preparing to “reignite” its strategy of buying up smaller board game publishers and distributors, saying at the time that it had a pipeline of more than 20 acquisition opportunities.

But the revived M&A process is yet to fully mirror Asmodee’s private equity-fuelled buying spree from the latter half of the 2010s, during which it acquired more than 40 companies and IPs.

That heavy expansion included the company adding more than 20 game studios, including Days of Wonder, Fantasy Flight Games, Lookout Games, Catan Studio and Z-Man Games.

Asmodee CEO Thomas Koegler was asked during the company’s quarterly results presentation last month whether the company was ready to make “more meaningful” acquisitions rather than small bolt-on deals.

He said in response, “Without being specific, the activity in the pipeline is in accordance with our plan. The smaller acquisitions are faster. IP acquisitions and asset deals are faster to execute. I’m satisfied.”

Other expansion activity since Asmodee announced its M&A plan has included the company launching a new party games studio, Moodbox Games, as part of a push into the US mass market.

It also recently launched a dedicated kids-focused brand, Asmodee Kids, in preparation for releasing a slate of re-worked, simpler and shorter versions of some of its most popular titles.

Asmodee posted record sales of €524m during the last quarter of 2025 despite a slump in its US performance, with trading card game earnings in Europe acting as a driving force for the business.

The board game giant’s overall net sales jumped 22.2% across October to December 2025 compared to the same period a year earlier, with the performance of products it distributes for other companies surging more than 50%.

Net sales for games published by Asmodee itself fell almost 13% year-on-year in the quarter, however, weighed down by US net sales slumping 23% to €70.4m.

That drop saw the US fall behind both France and the UK in Q3 in terms of the company’s highest-performing countries for net sales, with France surging 47% year-on-year to over €111m, and the UK growing 41% to €82.7m.

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The Sword of Kaigen. Eine theonitische Kriegsgeschichte (M. L. Wang) – Ein Familiendrama in Kriegszeiten – Rezension

25. Februar 2026 um 09:00

SoK - BannerEin Sohn, der seinem Vater Ehre bereiten will. Eine Ehefrau, die ihre kämpferische Vergangenheit zugunsten ihrer Familie aufgibt. Und ein Ehemann, der sich nicht traut, Traditionen zu hinterfragen. Können sie in The Sword of Kaigen über sich und ihre Rollen hinauswachsen, oder wird der Krieg sie verschlingen?

Dieser Beitrag wurde von Bianca Heilmann geschrieben

Ronin

17. Februar 2026 um 02:33

Im Spiel Ronin wandere ich durch Japan, um Missionen zu erfüllen, zu unterschiedlichen Clans des Landes zu reisen und beim Errichten von Burgen zu helfen. Als Ronin setze ich alles…

The post Ronin appeared first on Reich der Spiele.

Captain Tsubasa

Captain Tsubasa is a 2 player game based on the manga and anime of the same name. This Japanese manga and anime from the 1980’s is hugely popular not only in Japan but also around the world. It is about football (soccer). In the game you play a football match between two key teams in the story, Nankatsu and Toho. This is a card game, and you will see many characters from the series. If

Die weisse Burg – Das Duell – Spielkritik

Von: Paddy
12. Januar 2026 um 20:39
Die weisse Burg - Das Duell

Schon einmal haben wir uns in Japan durch Die weisse Burg bewegt und uns um Ruhm und Ehre am Hof gekümmert. Mit der etwas knackigeren Duell-Variante des Spiels gibt es mit Die weisse Burg – Das Duell nun eine eigene

Der Beitrag Die weisse Burg – Das Duell – Spielkritik erschien zuerst auf brettspielblog.ch.

Niwa – Spielkritik

Von: Paddy
30. Dezember 2025 um 07:25
Niwa

Die Karten sehen wunderschön aus. Wir bewegen uns bei Niwa durch japanische Gärten und verschönern sie mit den gewünschten Elementen. Das Kartenspiel bedient sich einer einfachen Spielmechanik. Das macht eine Partie aber sehr knackig und kompakt. In jeder Runde von

Der Beitrag Niwa – Spielkritik erschien zuerst auf brettspielblog.ch.

Ra - 2025 Japanese edition

Ra is one of Reiner Knizia's classics, first published in 1999. This is an important game in my boardgame journey, being one of the games I played a lot of when I first got into the hobby. At the time (2003) the game was out of print. I searched for images online and hand made a copy so that I could play it. Now that I think about the time and effort required to hand make a game with 180 tiles, I

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