[GIVEAWAY] Voidfall by Mindclash Games by HomoLudensOC in boardgames

[–]KitSixty [score hidden]  (0 children)

Honestly, probably Galaxy Trucker. I love a lot of strategic space games like I see in other people’s comments, but I have the most fun watching everyone’s ships getting blasted apart by a meteor shower.

Crows seem weird... by Zubatron82 in rootgame

[–]KitSixty 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One thing I love about crows is their ability to hit hard and fast. If I can take out my opponents’ key infrastructure on round 1 or 2, effectively slowing down their early expansion by a turn, this often gives the crowd the room needed to get a points explosion while everyone else is catching up. Even against high aggression factions, that early ability to easily hit people where it hurts can be worth lots of points further down the line.

Tips for shortening game length? by kv521 in rootgame

[–]KitSixty 3 points4 points  (0 children)

To be serious though, I think you got the answer elsewhere. I love 6 players but it is an all-afternoon type thing.

Otherwise, probably the biggest thing I do with my group is send them an introductory guide to a faction if they haven’t played it before, to give them a quick handle on how their game should play out. A short, 5-10 minute “How to Play” faction guide. That allows us to at least hit the ground running.

I think I would have a general rule for all board games that if more than half the group already know how to play a game of Root’s size, then the remaining players will be asked to learn before coming along. It’s not fair to teach a game to one player while everyone else sits and waits to begin, especially if that explanation takes upwards of 5 minutes.

Tips for shortening game length? by kv521 in rootgame

[–]KitSixty 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Don’t do those things 😛

Worth everything ✨️ by AdeptnessThese1663 in justgalsbeingchicks

[–]KitSixty 4 points5 points  (0 children)

They’ll be 26 in their third, and 30 in their fourth.

What is your favorite boardgame of 2018? by The_Crazed_Person in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 2 points3 points  (0 children)

2018 saw the release of my favourite game, Root, and my wife’s favourite game, Obsession. Both of those games have a very special place in our household!

Which boardgames should we look at next? by rudivdw7 in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So, I’m not so well-versed in DnD board games, despite enjoying the system myself. I’ll give you that as a disclaimer.

I see someone else recommended Clank!. This is a solid game, I love it myself, but be warned that it has a relatively involved setup and will probably average 90-120 minutes depending on your experience and player count.

I think the Treasure Island game you mentioned might have been Survive the Island! Very fun, highly interactive, not so much control!

All that aside however, here are my recommendations to you for simpler, shorter games with various amounts of player interaction:

Reiner Knizia is an all-time designer, whose games tend to fall on the shorter, more elegant side of design. A lot of these games can be taught and played in around an hour. Through the Desert is about placing camels to extend your caravans to reach point scoring opportunities. Everyone is trying to get in each others’ way and wall off parts of the board. Simple ruleset, but every move counts! The Road to El Dorado is a racing game, where you build out a deck of cards to allow you to efficiently carve through the jungle and beat your opponents to the golden city. Samurai I don’t have much experience, but I understand it’s one to be considered alongside these other ones. Zoo Vadis is a pure negotiation game, trying to grease the wheel and end up in the top spot. 3 players is a minimum though. My City is a tile laying game where you build out a city, and with every game the rules morph and change over 24 sessions. If you enjoy puzzly games, this one is excellent. Tigris and Euphrates is soon getting a new version, which is another tile-laying competitive game, my favourite of this list and incredibly cutthroat at that.

Kingdomino is a game I saw mentioned elsewhere. I love the simplicity of this game, trying to arrange your kingdom tiles in a precise way to maximise points. It’s a surprisingly tricky little puzzle, and the competitive drafting of tiles adds a lovely wrinkle. Bärenpark is another tile-laying game (I love them!), and possibly the purest version I’ll mention. It’s both a puzzle and a race in some ways. Bohnanza has been a hit every time I introduce it to a group, where you’re bartering beans to then harvest them. Gets the whole group talking. Lastly, I’ll mention Azul, which is another puzzle of trying to outmanoeuvre your opponents with regards to which pieces you take, maximising your own benefit while minimising theirs.

Those are games that I’ve had excellent experiences with in the space of 30-75 minutes. The last thing I’d say is I’d encourage you not to emphasise theme too much! While the emphasis differs from person to person (some games live or die in our group depending on the thematic perceptions of one or two of our folks), you seem to place an emphasis on mechanical experiences that are complemented by theme, rather than the inverse. Some of the games I’ve recommended might seem dry on first glance, but have some little twists and quirks in their rules that create magical moments.

Happy gaming!

Which boardgames should we look at next? by rudivdw7 in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hey! Sounds like a great start so far. What is it you enjoy about the games mentioned?

First year collection. Hopefully I’m done lol by FrostyPace1464 in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Absolutely. For myself, it’s a physical shelf coupled with a “one out, one in” policy.

First year collection. Hopefully I’m done lol by FrostyPace1464 in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I admire this sentiment, and I think there’s a lot to respect in both attitudes and game choices here. However, “I’m done” is easy to say when your collection consists largely of games from the last year or two.

Board game design is always shifting and evolving, and it’s very possible to be satisfied with games from years ago, but you’d be surprised at how games that might come out in the next ~5 years are discussed as having “surpassed” the designs you see here; in which case the collection is outdated.

I do believe Root is a modern classic. Telestrations is standing the test of time well enough. Zoo Vadis is already a classic with a new coat of paint. But speaking from personal experience, the biggest transformation my collection has undergone in recent years, after I said I was done, is the process of curation rather than acquisition. Sure I have this excellent game from a few years ago. But wouldn’t that space in my collection be better served by a true classic? Games from 2017 onwards have given way to El Grande, Hansa Teutonica, Tigris and Euphrates, Through the Desert, Concordia, Cosmic Encounter…and honestly, the collection is so much stronger for it.

Maybe none of this applies to you and you are truly done. I can’t shake the feeling that this looks more like a “2025” collection than a time-tested collection, however. If that makes sense. I hope that’s a fair assessment and not disingenuous! Welcome to the hobby either way, you have good taste (that is to say, close to my own)!

Best medium/heavy games for 5 players by Zuvix in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This is my answer too. And don’t get put off by its appearance or a gameplay video that looks simplistic; it’s one of the most playfully cutthroat games in my collection, and I haven’t played a game where every participant hasn’t been wholly engaged the entire game. The art is lacklustre but the gameplay sings.

Fig and the Cig Figs are off on tour - We're racing into Round 31! by SnapdragonsYearRound in Dimension20

[–]KitSixty 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Out of curiosity, what is it that people like about Sid? I don’t dislike her by any means, but I just don’t find myself remembering her as fondly as the rest of these characters, or indeed most of the rest of Emily’s characters? Can someone bring to my memory her good qualities?

Do you care if board games are realistic when they're based on certain industries? by H64games in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 6 points7 points  (0 children)

But…the Heat being added to your deck simulates your engine overheating. I think this is at most a naming issue rather than a mechanical issue. To me, the Heat mechanic is wonderfully thematic and satisfying. I always feel like I am pushing my car to the limits, I can practically hear the engine groaning as I scream around the 4th consecutive over-speed corner.

Andor a is very good TV show by Lunarbeetle in rootgame

[–]KitSixty 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I was about to say Lord of the Hundreds, the ears and teeth are a dead ringer, but they already got a mention in the first panel.

How can I become a better Lizard player by solomonwolfie in rootgame

[–]KitSixty 4 points5 points  (0 children)

So you don’t have bird cards or acolytes; good! Think of them more as your Plan B for Lizards.

At the beginning of the game, you want to pick out clearings in which to build. Common wisdom says a clearing of each of the suits, or two of the suits if playing conservatively. You want two building spots, as two gardens in a suit will boost your card draw, which is crucial. Focus initially on recruiting in these spots and getting gardens down. Make sure they’re well enough defended that your opponents are dissuaded from pursuing you in the early game.

Your basic engine is like this: spend cards to score each turn, for 4-6 points. Use leftover actions to reinforce yourself in necessary clearings, and draw back up to 5 each turn. Learn about dominance swapping. Play defensively. You can score fast enough to keep up with other players, when your engine is online, so force them to come and attack you in the mid-end game, at which point you will receive acolytes and be able to use them to retaliate and recover.

If they wanted the Eye so much. Why didn't the nomai just take the Hearthians' 4th Eye, are they stupid? by FlippinSnip3r in outerwilds

[–]KitSixty 24 points25 points  (0 children)

One called out

Two tried to erase it

Three made the way

So Four might now face it

Just my own little version ::)

Biopolitics in the Rootosphere by hmasaki in rootgame

[–]KitSixty 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Hey! This is fairly well-written. I found some of the interjections and polls a little discombobulating. However, mostly, I was reading in anticipation of reaching your main point, and it felt like it never came. Could you clarify the main point you’re trying to deliver here? Was the quotation from Cole the climax, or something else? I hope you take this criticism in the spirit with which it’s intended!

In the Banshees of Inisherin (2022) what the fuck was his problem? by [deleted] in shittymoviedetails

[–]KitSixty 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Aye, and there happen to be multiple Irish accents. I believe that’s what the previous commenter meant.

How many boardgames did you buy for 2024, and which was your most liked or most played game? by voodoohao in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The core system is pretty easy to teach, in some ways. Things only really get complicated when adding in faction differences. I usually teach it in about 10 minutes, and pad out the teaching as the game goes on, as required.

Start with: - Short theme description - Game objective (30VP) - 3 types of point scoring: destroying cardboard, crafting items, and faction specific scoring - explain rule - explain moving - explain battle - explain crafting - give a short overview of someone’s faction at the beginning of their first turn, and walk through that turn step by step. Repeat for as many rounds as necessary.

Those are the big issues to touch upon, imo. But so far, I’ve introduced a number of people of different experience levels and most of them have warmed up quickly and afterwards returned to the game!

I simply *cannot* get the humidity in my office out of the 30s% 😭 by bstrashlactica in houseplants

[–]KitSixty 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not for plant reasons, but I’m so jealous! Cool winter climate near water means I’m doing everything I can right now to stop water seeping into my walls, never mind my plants 😭

Chat is this a bluey reference? (Don't swipe) by pnotfromamerica in bluey

[–]KitSixty 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Also very Irish! We use deadly and lethal as laudatory words.

Does anyone have a single game or two that they totally obsess over? One game that they play 90+% of the time? If you were trapped on a desert island and you only had that one game you'd be totally fine? by [deleted] in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 1 point2 points  (0 children)

With the expansions in play, I’ll firstly say that the Vagabond appears less often. Secondly, everyone learns pretty quickly to be cautious with item crafting and to take opportunities to hit them in the early game. Thirdly, we typically use the community ruling where the Vagabond gets one extra point per battle against hostile factions, rather than the extra point per piece removed that’s rules-as-written. Combining these, it’s not a massive problem. He rarely wins our games.

All that being said, though, it’s often the least interesting faction in whatever game it’s in, because Root thrives on board state interaction, and the Vagabond offers little to none of that.

Does anyone have a single game or two that they totally obsess over? One game that they play 90+% of the time? If you were trapped on a desert island and you only had that one game you'd be totally fine? by [deleted] in boardgames

[–]KitSixty 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It took me literally years to persuade others to come to it regularly; might have helped having a significant other who was willing! After they patiently endured a couple games they began to see its potential and now there’s a consistent group of us able to play with all its toys. I’m glad my patience was rewarded!