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Robinson Crusoe: Adventures on the Cursed Island
60m - 120m
1 - 4 Players
Ages 14+
In programming, every player must secretly choose and commit their moves for the next 'n' turns. Then each player plays their turns out according to the choices made. The key to Action / Movement Programming is that all players choose and lock in their actions, prior to anyone executing any of their actions.
Action / Movement Programming
Co-operative play encourages or requires players to work together to beat the game.
Cooperative Play
Deck building/Pool building refers to a collection of related mechanisms. Players have a personal pool, or collection, of cards or tokens, that provide different actions and/or resources. A subset of those cards/tokens are randomly drawn each turn.
Deck / Pool Building
Dice rolling in a game can be used for many things, randomness being the most obvious. Dice can also be used as counters. The dice themselves can be unique and different sizes, shapes and colors to represent different things.
Dice Rolling
Tile Placement games feature placing a piece to score VPs, with the amount often based on adjacent pieces or pieces in the same group/cluster, and keying off non-spatial properties like color, "feature completion", cluster size etc.
Tile Placement
Variable Player Powers is a mechanic that grants different abilities and/or paths to victory to the players.
Variable Player Powers
This mechanism requires players to select individual actions from a set of actions available to all players. Players generally select actions one-at-a-time and in turn order. There is usually(*) a limit on the number of times a single action may be taken. Actions are commonly selected by the placement of game pieces or tokens on the selected actions. Each player usually has a limited number of pieces with which to participate in the process.
Worker Placement
60.00
€
Original price was: 60.00€.
48.00
€
Current price is: 48.00€.
30 day low:
Out of stock
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Kickstarter – Gamefound
Board Games
Strategy
Family and Children
Party
Adult
Thematic
Ελληνικα Παιχνιδια
LCG
Arkham Horror: The Card Game
Marvel Champions: The Card Game
The Lord of The Rings: The Card Game
RPGs
D & D
Pathfinder
Gamebooks
Others
Accessories
Game Mats
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Dice
Sleeves
Sapphire Sleeves
Paladin Sleeves
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Plunder boxes
Marvel: Crisis Protocol
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adamtuck
This is probably the most thematic game I own. It so perfectly captures being stranded on a desert island, the thrill of discovering something that'll save you, the crushing dread of a giant wild animal attacking you and then the deflation of defeat when he comes back several turns later to eat your food too. The rules are written terribly but I ignore this so readily because the different parts work together so well and we just get lost in the theme.
abraham_linkedin
Could be decent solo as a hard optimization puzzle, but I played 3p and it was bad time all the way. There's not enough meaningful decisions here to justify multiple players - you are basically placing differently colored workers, but since all information is open, the action space is pretty limited, and the different characters don't really have any presence on the board or any defining character apart from a handful of abilities, a single player could play all characters just as easily. It's also way too random (not necessarily bad) with often no way to counter or mitigate the randomness (bad).
adi_venturer
This is a great game! I somehow ended up enjoying it more co-op than solo, which is contrary to how most people play it. This game is brutal, but that's the point. It's a game about survival that you are most likely going to lose. The game is highly, highly thematic. It tells a great and amusing story with the event deck and the gameplay is the very definition of "when it rains, it pours". Stay away from this game if you prefer deterministic puzzles. This game prefers mimicking the randomness of life (which makes it so punishing, brutal and unfair) than a balanced gameplay that rewards strategic planning. The best way to enjoy this game is to let go of control, sit back in this rollercoaster of a game, and let it take you on a wild ride. (Plays: 5+)