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Wild: Serengeti (Kickstarter Edition)
45m - 120m
1 - 4 Players
Ages 14+
Card drafting games are games in which players pick cards from a limited subset, such as a common pool, to gain some advantage (immediate or longterm) or to assemble hands of cards that are used to meet objectives within the game.
Card Drafting
Pattern Building is a system where players place game components in specific patterns in order to gain specific or variable game results. For example: placing chips on 2, 4, 6, 8 on a board gets the player an action card they can use later in the game.
Pattern Building
The primary goal of a set collection mechanic is to encourage a player to collect a set of items.
Set Collection
Variable Player Powers is a mechanic that grants different abilities and/or paths to victory to the players.
Variable Player Powers
Animals
53.00
€
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Wild: Serengeti (Kickstarter Edition) quantity
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Kickstarter – Gamefound
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apatheticape
Prototype played on TTS (version last updated May 25, 2021) using rulebook 1.1. One of my friends was considering backing the game and asked us to try it out with him. Lots of issues at 4 players; There was a traffic jam of animals on the middle to right side of the board by end of round 1 and it was nearly futile trying to maneuver animals into place for many of the scene cards which can potentially require several moves to achieve. With a very low amount of coins per round, and only two possible actions with those coins, we were left with very few maneuvers and up to 6 possible chances for other players to screw up your plan by the time your turn came back around. Just one action from another player could throw off your target for a scene and turn 2 actions needed on your end into 5 actions for example, making it a constantly moving target that could go on forever. And you're likely to miss completing it for end of the round even if you managed to have no one mess with your configuration afterwards with the tight coin/action economy. You can sometimes achieve certain scene cards purely out of luck of what's on the board (someone picked up a few cards and achieved them immediately at one point) and I was able to strategize slightly by getting scene cards that required similar animal configurations and trying to go for one of the other ones instead if one didn't work out. But most scene cards were often dead cards requiring too many steps and the hope that someone wouldn't move something in your configuration. The way scoring works is frustrating too, with luck of the draw a big part. While having an offer row that you can wipe helps, the reality is, the tight coin economy makes it incredibly difficult to wipe multiple times and spend the money to get what you need (and there are a lot of scene cards). With some scene cards (ones with plant symbols) only scoring when you collect and fulfill enough sets AND THEN collect other scene cards that you fulfill that give you bonuses for those specific types - it’s just a clash of too many requirements combined with too much randomness in the game. Getting food and SFX scene cards seems to be key for flexibility that escalates in power if you have accomplished one at the beginning but if you don’t start out with one of those goals, they become quickly super difficult to achieve as the board gets crammed up. Some scene cards can be so difficult to accomplish, it felt penalizing every time you went after one of those cards and other plans would ruin it. It was just a constant tug of war where you couldn’t quite get what you needed and the only cards that could be fulfilled were cheap ones, unless randomness dealt you a lucky placement from other players. In Round 2, we were all dying for a “migration” to happen already with the crazy jam on the board. By the end of round 2, we were just frustrated and wanted to end the game. We flipped the migration card for round 4 over only to see that it would only have removed a single animal from our board. The migration cards seem like they were put in the game to solve the animal jams that occur - but with 4 players, they come way too late, and they also just add more randomness to a game that really doesn’t need more. You could be working towards something and then have the migration cards completely wipe out half your plan and have that happen every round in the last couple rounds. Or you could get lucky and it clears things up for you. Or nothing gets removed and you're all stuck with a frustrating round of nothing. The point is, they feel like a patch for a game problem except the patch itself comes with its own problems. I mean, why wouldn't you at least make the migration cards known maybe from the beginning, or in the previous round, etc? At the very least, that would allow people to plan for it without feeling cheated by the randomness that migration creates. We also felt the movement actions were just too underpowered for you to have much control over what happens in the game. Perhaps 1-3 movement actions for a single animal should be 1-3 movement actions for any combination of animals you want. I feel like there may be a workable 2 player game in here maybe. At 4 players, this game just leaves you out to dry if you want to plan for anything at all. It punishes you for your plans, time and time again. ALL OF THAT SAID, we all agreed that the most frustrating thing is that the core of the game, moving these animals around, strategizing around that, getting them into the right habitats, etc to fulfill these cards - there’s something really satisfying and fantastic about that loop. I think the designer is really onto something at the core of this. It’s fun placing and moving the animals, the game is gorgeous, and somewhere buried in the mess, there’s an elegant and fantastic design with a cleaner rules set that I'm convinced could be an accessible family weight hit with some meat on it. THAT version of the game we would definitely all consider buying. One of us joked that we needed to wait for the 2nd edition of the game which unfortunately is unlikely with a KS game. But as it is, the randomness is too much and there’s tons of AP not in a good way each turn, it’s simply because any plans you had previously are wrecked by the time it gets back to you and now you have to try to mitigate or go after another card, and then that happens again the next turn, and the next…it felt like the game kept trying to strangle our gameplay. It felt like we were constantly playing against the game and not playing against each other. This game really needs to fundamentally go back to the playtesting stage and fix the interlocking mechanisms between the board/animal placements, turn actions and coins, and scene cards extensively before the game launches. Scene cards could use less randomness in point scoring methods and less onerous requirements perhaps. Or perhaps the game requires a slightly larger, less tight grid. Or more leeway in movement points. Or more leeway in the action/coin economy per round. There's a lot that needs to be reworked and re-tested altogether to do the core of this game justice. I really hope we see the great game underneath at some point but seeing that it’s launching soon, it feels like it’s likely going to end up as another KS disappointment unfortunately with a great core, but far too rushed development process.
Emilianodanthomas
This is a long review and possibly most useful to parents looking for a great game to play with their kids. I found it to be very thematic with a sort of peaceful theme, however very deep in the strategy element of it, and would suit those parents and kids who like these kind of games. Hope the notes below help to any parent in a similar situation as we were. This is a game I backed last year as I was attracted on the look, the mechanics of the game and the fact that it can be played coop, versus and solo. We are a family of 4 (I am a dad of two boys of 8 and 10 years old each) and I "received" the game as a Xmas 2023 present. To my surprise, the game was of interest to everyone due to the look/presentation and in no time we were setting it up in the afternoon of Xmas day. The kids were initially very attracted to the building up of the Rock of Ages and also the setting up of board game in general, sorting the animals, etc, which by the way they're all produced in best quality/material components, very pretty meeple design and the look of the cards, all light colours chosen as well on the design, very pretty game and there's this sort of "happy" feel on the design and topic overall. We had our first go only with the standard cards and versus rules - no Specialist cards or Expansion cards. We had a great time with the kids playing the game and achieving the points under the various rules, again we think that due to the design and moving the meeples around to set strategies, the game really comes to life. In the process of playing the game I noticed that the kids were learning decision making concerning planning, resource management, and strategy setting, a great extra for a kid to learn at this age and very pleased as a dad with this surprise that were able to get them to be exposed to these topics in a fun, didactic way. On the downside, I would agree with other comments that it felt a bit long for four players, but as we were at home enjoying Xmas/New Year time off we didn't care much, we overcome this by just taking brakes. I would also say that the resources and points/stars actually gained felt a bit too little considering how many tokens there are available. On our second go I proposed including the Specialist cards. On this attempt we all enjoyed the additional strategies one can come up to using such cards and the fact that we all can set different goals as opposed to all focusing on achieving the same cards (hearts and food icons). My wife and I personally enjoyed seeing our kids setting more and sometimes better strategies than us parents, and also advising us on the best strategies for us, given our cards and resources! On the downside, we still felt that the game is by default long for 4 players if you follow the rules exactly as stated. We were also left with lots of cards with no value in points at the end of the game if you don't have a Specialist card to use them (flowers,plants, bananas mainly). On our third go (final go so far) we changed some rules a little. We decided that we could collect cards with the flowers, banana and plant icons and add them up for points at the end of the game just like the hearts. This would ensure that we can use those cards and there is an incentive to collect them across the game. We also changed the card rules with the "minus" and "divide" signs to be "plus" each time, which we felt would encourage everyone to collect them and to increase the count of points. You may want to give this a go. We found the game to be more balanced at the end, with much more objectives and strategies to choose from, a more balanced point count at the end. All in all we very much enjoyed this game across the Xmas season, had the kids involved and entertained and for the parents that do enjoy board games this is a great game to have quality time with the family and great learning for the kids too. Again, we found ourselves teaching our kids resource management, scenario planning, strategy setting and risk management through the use of cards and achievement of objectives. For me/us, worth every penny and our new favorite game.
Dorothi
Nagyon szép játék, remek a design, a játékmenet annyira nem extra, viszont picit genya darab, mert nagyon át lehet rendezni a térképet az állatokkal, szóval keresztbe tudsz tenni könnyedén bármilyen ellenfélnek. Könnyű a szabálya, könnyű tanítani. 2 és 4 fővel teszteltem, mindkét játékosszámmal szuper.