Wildlands
Dash through the ruins to grab the crystals you so desperately desire or focus your efforts on taking out the opposition – but take care, danger may be lurking in the darkness.
30m - 60m
2 - 4 Players
Ages 14+
Dash through the ruins to grab the crystals you so desperately desire or focus your efforts on taking out the opposition – but take care, danger may be lurking in the darkness.
Bobagabe
This game is just crazy fun. I enjoy it at all player counts. 2 & 3 player is my favorite. 4 player is also great but there is more chaos. The interrupt action keeps everyone evolved. Another BGG user described it as multiplayer Memoir 44. that isn't a perfect comparison but the games are both very accessible and have some hidden depth. This is my current favorite piece of cardboard. (rating will probably settle around 9, due to the production problems)
anorak
Mixed feelings about this one. I won't sell, because it fills a weird niche of a simple skirmish game, but it's too similar to Wiz-War to stand on its own. It's going to see a lot of play when my daughter is 9 year olds. Which is going to happen in 8 years...
bigmac33070
For our Friday night game extravaganza, Dave, Mike and I played 3 games, 2 of which were new to all of us. First up was Wildlands. Wildlands is a card driven miniature based skirmish style game from Martin Wallace. Not normally Mr. Wallace's style of design, but this one works ohh so well. Your team of 5 characters has to get 5 points first. Points are gotten by collecting your teams gems or by killing an enemy character. What makes this really stand out is that the game is completely card driven. Each team has a very different deck. My team (I won, barely) had a lot of Ranged Attacks and Defense. The card play really is fascinating. Cards can do certain actions for certain characters on your team if that character's icon is on the rows. Or, many of the cards have an action at the bottom that can be done by any character on the team. On top of this, there is also wild cards. These can be used to Draw 2 cards, to move any 1 of your characters, or to Interrupt another players action. Yes, Interrupting is a key strategy in the game. You can Interrupt after the active players finishes one of their actions. The Interrupt can be of any action that you have the cards for. Usually these are Attacks. I was able to Interrupt to do an Area Attack spell in my own square which also did the last point of damage to one of Dave's minis, giving me the game. Fun stuff. Attacks and Defense are all done elegantly. There is Normal and Heavy Melee and Ranged Attacks. These can all be blocked with the correct icon. There is also the previously mentioned Area Effect (1 damage to everyone in your space or an adjacent space). Line of Sight, unlike many miniature games, is wonderfully easy to figure out. The initial draft is also very fun. You get 10 cards, which correspond to 10 spaces (out of 42) on the board. You pick 5 of these for your characters to start on, then pass the other 5 cards to your left. The cards you receive is where you put your gems. So, you can set up some neat ambushes. I really enjoyed Wildlands and see myself keeping this for a while. I think this has cemented the fact that Martin Wallace is my favorite game designer at this point. I also have the Unquiet Dead expansion and can't wait to give that a run through.