The festive period usually results in
a few boardgame sessions, and this year we went to my sister Gill’s house for
Christmas. I packed a few games to play and we started with Five Tribes. I
thought this game would appeal to my niece, Erin, both in terms of mechanic and
strategy. I was right, she quickly got the point of the game and rapidly saw
the best move options, and turn bidding strategy for each round. My wife,
Elaine, won the game primarily by focussing on ‘merchants’ but Erin was second
through her clever use of Elders and Djinns. The final result was Elaine (49),
Erin (39, myself (26) and Gill (18). I have not played this game recently and
had forgotten how good it is. The main danger is that of analysis paralysis
(AP) but none of our group of gamers suffer from this condition, we tend to
make decisive (possibly incorrect) decisions and plunge ahead come-what-may. I
am considering getting the expansion for this game in the New Year,
Whilst lunch was being prepared, Elaine and I played a few games of Hive. It always takes Elaine a few games to get into the ‘zone’ with this strategy game, so I won the first 3 games using the basic tile set. We then added the ‘Pillbug’ extension and played a couple more games, both of which Elaine won. I decided to quit whilst I was still ahead!
On Christmas morning I was pleased to see that Santa
recognised my love of games because I opened the United Kingdom/Pennsylvania
extension for Ticket To Ride; a Go board and counters; The Game of Thrones
boardgame, and my own copy of Bohnanza (up until now only Erin had a copy and I
was jealous). In the afternoon we decided to try out the Pennsylvania version
of Ticket to Ride. This is an add-on to the basic game rules,
introducing ‘railroad stocks’ as an additional scoring mechanism (we assumed
that railroad lengths were scored as normal, but the rulebook did not make this
clear; and how much is a 7 railroad worth? We arbitrarily scored it as 18).
There is also the new map to play on! Anyway, the game played well and we all
liked the added dimension given by the Railroad Stocks. Elaine won easily
because she kept on drawing new tickets which often overlapped routes she had
already completed – sometimes the luck is just with you, ride it! The final
scores were: Elaine (200), Paul (157), Gill (150), myself (149) and Erin (127).
We have yet to play the UK game, but from reading the rules this is a very
different gaming experience with many new rules and changes.
We finish our stay with a quick game of Sopio, a
simple card game Elaine picked up at the UK Games Expo
last spring, and which we gave to Erin as a present. I think this is a nice,
fast, simple, treacherous card game with goofy artwork. We used the ‘basic’
deck (there are numerous additional decks available) and had great fun. Erin
eventually won the game after roughly 20 minutes of play. Unfortunately we ran
out of time to have a rematch, but I can certainly see us playing this many
times (we have a booster deck at home).
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