Aliens: Another Glorious Day In The Corps
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Aliens: Another Glorious Day in the Corps! is a co‑operative survival board game in which you and your team of specialist Colonial Marines will gear up with serious firepower and head into Hadley’s Hope to find survivors and answers. But you’re not alone. To survive, you’ll need to work together, keep your cool, and stay frosty to fight off relentless Xenomorph ambushes and get out of there alive.
Players can play up to six different missions, taking them into different areas from the Hadley’s Hope terraforming facility to the deep, dark recesses of an xenomorph nest. Aliens also offers an exciting campaign mode to play four of the missions linked together, so players will need to fight relentless xenomorph attacks and keep each other alive all the way to the end of the campaign. The remaining two missions are purely about survival, it’s kill or be killed. The players are dropped into the game with nothing more than a pistol. They will need to scavenge weapons and gear while hordes of Xenomorph aliens are trying to get at them. How long can you survive against the odds?
—description from the publisher
Ages | 14+ |
---|---|
Players | Solo, 2 Players, 3 Players, 4 Players, 5 Players, 6 Players |
Play Time | 60m – 120m |
Designer | Andrew Haught |
Mechanics | Cooperative Game |
Theme | Miniatures, Science Fiction, Movies / TV / Radio theme |
Publisher | Gale Force Nine, LLC |
Davigozavr
+ Very thematic. On multiple angles (movie quotes galore, characters, weapons/equipment, tools, environment, objectives, etc.) + Exciting combat. Losing aim. Killing tons of xenomorphs. But slowly overwhelmed by constant spawns. + Solid tools for luck mitigation. - Very fragile Xenomorphs miniatures (especially the tails). - Replayability of the Campaign is very limited, since A). You follow the movie so your characters positioning (and their equipment choice) is kinda set in stone (deviations would be very sub-optimal) and most importantly B). the campaign missions have set optimal pathing and barely room for viable altering to make another playthrough different enough. - Cumbersome gameplay. Not complex, but tiresome with all the blips counting and moving, and token stacking under miniatures and removing them one by one on every attack. And multiple actions on a single attack (exhaust a card, roll a die, remove a token, dial down aim, etc.) And especially with all the card manipulation and drawing, and exhausting and discarding and moving around. Even if it's smart and interesting design, it's just taxing (a chore really), despite the game being light on the complexity. - The Balance is all over the place. - The rulebook have a lot of shortcomings. Too many questions raised. Massive additional F.A.Q. was compiled to clear tons of irregularities. Absolute mess.
Callomac
You play through the story of the Aliens movie, which can be fun if you know the movie. But I find the game a bit of a mess. The novel card mechanic (exhausting and discarding cards), which is integral to the game, is more tedious than fun, especially if you have a lot of cards that require you to reveal cards for symbols, or hazard cards that require you to reveal/exhaust tons of cards. You can spend as much of your turn revealing, exhausting and recovering cards as you do at all other tasks in the game. I know card management is supposed to be one of the novel tactical mechanics, but I didn't like it. The scenarios also vary from very hard to really easy, often depending on how lucky you get with spawns. The alien minis look awesome, but the tails, and the need to stack minis on tokens, makes them hard to manage on the map - they don't well, get tangled, are hard to move, etc. I am glad I played the scenarios I played, but I tired of the game quickly. If you love the movie you may like the game, but I found it one of the least well designed of the dungeon crawlers I own (and I play a lot of them).
Bockyralls
Edit: After a bunch of plays this is my favorite dungeon crawler of all time. As a bonus it also captures the setting of Aliens the movie perfectly in the theme and campaign missions. It fixes a lot of the problems with dungeon crawlers; by having a built in timer, multitude of options on what to do, no need to chase down “treasures”, freedom to customize your teams, skills, and equipment before every mission, a good, solid campaign, mitigating dice rolls and luck somewhat by employing risk management and tactical placement (which is crucial), player elimination during game doesn’t exist (unless you loose all your grunts), eliminating the classic move/hit or hit/move drag that Descent JITD and many others seems to suffer from, it isn’t super heavy and with a few plays the rules will all flow good. It gets some extra kudos for being easy to set up (unless you have two pounds of extra resin terrain like me) and an awesome mechanic for playing co op. Like it a lot. My scoring is for base game plus all the expansions.