Tag Archives: boardgame

Xia: Drifting into legend

by Mike Clarke

It’s not often you come across a game that’s such a joy to play — that takes you back to the days where you and your friends faced off across a board with a game you all knew well for a wild contest of one-upmanship with no quarter asked and none given.

Xia box shot

Xia: Legends of a Drift System is a go-anywhere, do-anything, sandbox-style adventure that brings back those heady days of oh-so-playable games where you didn’t think about rules. You just played the game.

That’s Xia. It’s  easy to learn. Its game play is intuitive. After a few sessions, you don’t need to keep looking things up.

In Xia , you’re the lowly captain of a bargain basement space scow with “brown nylon interior, low-muck, brown flooring and Humkar leather crew seats.”

Unless, of course, instead of the Swamp Rat, you pulled the Numerator, a former lifeboat for the Queen Mary XVIII with the nice white vinyl interior and metal grating on the floors.

swamp rat and numerator
The Swamp Rat (left) and the Numerator. One’s a fancy lifeboat, the other – not so much. Both are small and vulnerable.

Ignoring the faint smell of urine and cheap wine, you take the controls and power up the FTL drives.  You grin as you prepare to leave behind your old life as an accountant in one of Kemplar II’s minor principalities for a new life of danger and adventure in the largely unexplored and unpredictable post apocalyptic drift system known as Xia — the only drift system in the galaxy stable enough to support the civilizations that nearly blew it to hell more than 400 years ago.

Now I made up that narrative.  But it was inspired by the back of a couple of the ship cards and some of the history contained in the rule book. Not bad for a game that one reviewer described as dry as toast and wondered whether it needed an event deck to spice it up.

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Android: A belated apology to Kevin Wilson for killing his baby

by Mike Clarke

This review was originally published to BoardGameGeek in January, 2011.

Much has been said about Android and what a confusing game it is. After having played it a few times since purchasing it last week, I can safely say the only thing confusing about Android to me are the criticisms that have nearly killed it and with it the hope of future expansions or additions.

What a shame.

Those who don’t get the game see Android as a collection of confusing mechanics with less than adequate game play. Many of the reviews I’ve read sum up Android with an air of authority based on, in many cases, only one play.

On one hand, they complain about how complex the game is, but are unwilling to invest the time to discover it. Many of those who had a hand in killing it crowed about its unique theme, and original mechanics, but couldn’t be bothered to devote much effort to exploring them.

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Merchants and Marauders: Why I sailed over galleons of water for a frigate rumour

by Mike Clarke

This review was originally published to BoardGameGeek in January 2011.

Merchants and Marauders is an epic tale of plunder and trade in the Age of Piracy. You start as a slovenly pirate with grand ambitions in a lowly sloop or a small-potatoes merchant with dreams of wealth and adventure in a bucket-of-bolts flute.

During the course of the game, you’ll ply thousands of miles of open ocean through the seas of the Carribean and along the coast of South America.

Along the way you’ll plunder and trade your way to ‘Glory’ acquiring better vessels in the form of frigates and galleons and living a story told through the ‘Events’ that shape your world, the ‘Rumours’ you find in port and the ‘Missions’ that the less adventurous denizens of the land pay you to undertake.

In so doing, you’ll be living your own personal story, which due to the rumours and missions, the different captains you get to command, their different starting ports and the random nature of the goods in demand, will be different each time you play it.

Continue reading Merchants and Marauders: Why I sailed over galleons of water for a frigate rumour

Mice and Mystics: Is it more than a kid’s Game?

Boardgame Empire | Where board gaming, astronomy, science fiction and fantasy meet.

by Mike Clarke

This review was originally published to BoardGameGeek in November, 2012.

Like many of you I was wondering whether Mice and Mystics would work for gamers without kids. I even opened up a forum post on the subject and got mixed reviews so I went ahead and bought the damn thing.

Last weekend, my now grown kids, former role-players both came over to try it out. Here’s our story:

We settled in around the table with some snacks and after spending a little time catching up and setting up the game, I read them the intro and off we went. Now the intro could have been a little shorter.

It’s hard to sustain an audience for a new game with a long read. However, I kept them interested by telling them they should pay attention to the characters beause they were going to be choosing which of them they wanted to play. That helped them focus on the story a little better.

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Dominant Species — or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bits

by Mike Clarke 

This, my very first game review, was published to BoardGameGeek in December 2010. 

Since its release, Dominant Species has been coming under criticism for a number of perceived shortcomings that nearly caused me to pass on the game.

So this is a review addressing some of the criticisms which might make you reluctant (like I was) to pick it up. I’m not going to review the game play. That’s been done several times already.

People have complained the components aren’t thematic, that the board is too plain, the tiles are too thin and their artwork too simplistic and that the cards and the element tokens make the game play too random.

I was intrigued by the game, but these criticisms made me postpone buying it until there was only one copy left in my area. However, faced with the prospect of waiting until March 2013, I took the plunge and bought the last copy.

Continue reading Dominant Species — or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bits