Brain Burners at DRAGON

Posted on February 26th, 2007 in Geeky Stuff, Table-top, Gaming by geek

Friday- Gaming at DRAGON: Dragon is a gaming community/group/thing that games every Friday. This Friday, it was a series of brain busters: 2 games of Puerto Rico, and 1 huge game of Power Grid.

The first game of Power Grid was a bust for me. 4 player game, 2 newer players, followed by Loren, followed by me. Loren ended up getting the hookups from the newer players, plus I made a major gaff when I tried to set up a major indigo trade, only to realize that indigo was already traded. Just didn’t see it. Loren won by a huge margin of over 30 points.

The second game was much faster and tighter, with 3 experienced players. Didn’t win that one either.

Power Grid with 5 players was interesting. The resources become far tighter as the number of players increases, and competition for just enough resources to fire a plant is fierce. I ended up winning, mostly because I think I was able to stockpile money using clean power, and then I jumped ahead with the cash influx, purchased a ridiculous amount of capacity, and rode out the wave. I ended up powering 17 of 17 cities, though I could have also won the turn before if I had counted closer and powered 15 when no one else had the cities to do it.

We also got in a couple of lighter games, like Bang!

Board Game List Updated!

Posted on February 13th, 2007 in Table-top, Gaming by geek

I went ahead and updated my list of board games.  I’m sure that I actually am missing some.

Board Game List - OMGIMAGEEK 

Gaming Bohnanza!

Posted on February 11th, 2007 in Table-top, Gaming by geek

I was planning on exercising fiscal responsibility this year, so what do I do? I go buy 200 bucks worth of board games.

I got the whole shebang on Friday, so I schlepped all my new found lewt into my car and head over to a friend’s place.

Railroad Tycoon and the new Magical cards set.

Posted on May 8th, 2006 in Table-top, Gaming by geek

Got some gaming in this weekend.  Went down to my friend John’s house, hoping to meet up with a mutual friend whose leaving for NYC, and hoping to catch Quyen for some gaming.  Well… according to an email I got later, Quyen is in… well… you guessed it.  NYC.  Jan couldn’t come because he was going to some party at night.

John and I got some games in with the new card set, Dissension.  It’s fairly interesting.  Both of us are fairly blown away with this current cycle of cards (Rav,Pact,Diss)  Most of the cards are fairly interesting, yet deep, yet powerful.  Lot of fun really.  If I was a couple of years younger, and had a more money, and wasn’t already addicted to World of Warcraft… I might be persuaded to play seriously again.

Anyway… I finally got a chance to play a game of Railroad Tycoon, the board game.  Let’s just say… the game is freeking humongous.  Bigger board than WoW:TBG by another 50 percent.  It comes with all these little cool track hexes and little trains.  Anyway… we got a 5 player game going.  The rules are very simple.  Only took me 15 mins or so to explain everything.  Strategy was harder.  I made sure to read the little strategy blurb in the manual to everyone before continuing.

So I go on to try to do exactly what the manual tells me to watch out for… dominating the northeast.  I go into some serious early game debt trying to fight for it, leading me to be the first to get to 5 shares, and end up unable to ship anything for several turns.  Then suddenly, I upgrade my engine to level 3, then level 4, and start chewin it up… leaving everyone else in the dust.

I end up taking by far the most shares… (13) by the end of the game, with the next being like 5 shares, and then the lowest being 2 shares.  A lot of players were very conservative, making 2-4 link deliveries, where as I went straight for 5 to 7 link deliveries between the northwest.  It looked like I had a huge commanding lead, but in the end, after we tabulated the points… I was ahead by 8 points, 5 of which were gimmee points that were given to me because I got lucky with a railroad operation card that came up.

All in all, I think everyone had fun.  Most people put it in the light heavy kind of category (both in weight and time investment), but the rules weren’t nearly as stupid as wowtbg was.  I’m hoping I get more people to play.  I’m hoping other people pipe in and give me their input.

Easter Bunny and his friend the Doge visit old France

Posted on April 17th, 2006 in Table-top, Gaming by John

The Easter Bunny dropped by yesterday and left about 20lbs of goodies.  Mmmm..  fun shaped cholocate!  Also the Game Posse got together and played some San Marco and Caylus.

San Marco is moderately interesting and pretty fast — it’s what you would call a Solomon choice game.  One player divides things into piles, and they the other players get first choice.  Piles have good things in bad things, so the game takes some familiarity to make good decisions.

Caylus is as Caylus does.  Having played it several times now, and having watched it a bunch, I am starting to think the game doesn’t live up to the hype.  The more players you add, the more instability there is the game, reducing the minimal strategy to begin with (but still keeping the huge tactical component).  I am going to say the big problem with the game is the setup and bookkeeping — there is way too much going on, and it’s easy to goof something up.

Right now, I think the best way to play Caylus is 2-player, and on BSW online.  BSW has a huge negative in that you don’t get to do a takeback, but it has the huge positive of being 100% accurate on the bookkeeping, which lets you concentrate more on the game.

Games, Round 2

Posted on April 9th, 2006 in Table-top, Gaming by John

Tim crushed us at Alhambra again. Wall wall wall. Did I say wall?

We finally got in our game of Caylus. Kat and Chris duked it out for first, with Kat winning. Five player is harsh, especially if you are the last to go first round. In a very weird coincidence, we all placed in initial turn order, with about 5-10 points between each player.

We snuck in a game of Titan: the Arena with a new player, Ken, squeaking in a tie-break win (without a secret bet).

Then we busted out Amun-Re, with me sitting out to be game adjutator. It was the first time for the majority of players, and they were getting the basics down. Kat realized being pharoah was good, and slapped everyone around, but, iirc, Chris got in the win based on Temple points.

What is a game day without a quick Apples to Apples game, that Chris was able to get to 5 points first. This had the notable play of Barney beating out Romeo & Juliet in the category Melodramatic… never try to outsmart the mother of a two-year old!

We ended the game with seven player Shadows over Camelot, with good King Brian as our leader. We more or less kicked ass at the start, winning the Grail in record time, and piling on Excalibur for an easy win. Chris decided to reveal himself (through a special card) as the traitor and taunted us mercilessly. We came close to defeat by Seige Engines a couple of times, but were basically able to stem the tide until we had lost enough quests to get 12 swords total on the board for a lose-to-win win.

Games Galore!

Posted on April 4th, 2006 in Table-top, Gaming by John

On Saturday, throughout the day, we had 8 various people playing games on my living room table. Our goal was to get in at least two games of Caylus to get down some strategy. Here’s a role of what we played:

Alhambra (Tim for the sneaky wall-win)
Antike (Kat for the sneaky oh, I don’t attack people win),
BANG! (Brian the Sherrif guns down Quyen the Renegade for the sneaky win)
Shadows over Camelot (players sneak in a win with no traitor)
Ticket to Ride (Kat for the sneaky Euro-express win)
Citadels (Brian with a sneaky sneak win)
Apples to Apples 3 games!!! (Quyen for 2 sneaky wins, and Brian sneaking away the 3rd game from Quyen)
Shadows of Camelot round 2 (King Arthur (aka Quyen) sneaks a win by tricking his loyal knights into making false accusations).

A fun time was had by all and we are looking to try and do another game day before KublaCon. You may have noticed that we got in zero games of Caylus, so it must have been Quyen’s fault…

Antike!

Posted on March 28th, 2006 in Table-top, Gaming by John

Antike

It’s here — I was able to find an online store in the good ol’ US of A and snag their last copy. Hopefully we will be playing it this weekend (along with Caylus)

Recieved Caylus and Lost Cities and Loving it

Posted on March 25th, 2006 in Table-top, Gaming by geek

Wow… Go go Saturday delivery. All about recieving Caylus before my friend John has a copy of it, and he’s been on the pre-order list for months now. I payed a tiny bit more for it, but oh well.

I picked up the Scandanavian version fo Lost Cities because the English version is out of print. The Scandinavian verison is basically the same game, cept the rule book is in Scandinavian. But since the rules are available online in English, might as well save a couple of bucks.

Lost Cities is kind of a rummy game for two players.

Humongous Games Order

Posted on March 23rd, 2006 in Table-top, Gaming by geek

Just put in an order for:

Products
——————————————————
1 x Ticket To Ride Europe (DOW 7202) = $25.97
1 x Railroad Tycoon (EGL 070) = $40.19
1 x Lord of the Rings: The Confrontation: Deluxe Edition (FFG LTR-08) = $29.96
1 x Traders of Genoa, The (RGG 181) = $25.97
1 x Samurai (Reiner Knizia) (RGG 116) = $25.97
1 x Alhambra (RGG 040) = $22.72
1 x Citadels (FFG MA-04) = $12.97
1 x Deluxe Illuminati (SJG 1305) = $22.72
——————————————————
and
============================
Order Summary:
============================

Order Placed: Mar 23, 2006 12:40 PM

Qty. Item name Each Total
—————————————————————————–
1 Lost Cities $13.50 $13.50
1 Caylus $39.95 $39.95
—————————————————————————–
SUBTOTAL $53.45
—————————————————————————–
SHIPPING $10.27
—————————————————————————–
ORDER TOTAL $63.72

I went to funagain even though they were more expensive because they had copies of Lost Cities and Caylus.

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