Board Games

Kitsune • Jul 10, 2009 12:15 pm
I will assume I am in the minority on this belief, but the delights of digital gaming and interactivity as manipulated by keyboard, buttons, motion controller, or touchscreen still can't quite fully emulate some of the enjoyment provided by an old fashioned board game. Choco and I really enjoy the battles we wage against each other in Carcassone - this game of simple plays often evolves into interesting strategies and hilarious, never-ending fights over land control. We've wasted away countless hours with family at the dining room table with this one. The beautiful part of it is that most children could easily pick up this game and become equally as adept at the gameplay as an adult, likely to the degree that they would give you a run for your money!

Any Cellarite recommendations for other games?
Clodfobble • Jul 10, 2009 12:21 pm
Settlers of Catan. It's really better with more than two people, but if you set the board up right you can still manage a reasonable 2-player game.

Also, in the "can be played by kids" and "games don't last for hours" categories, Blokus is a family favorite.
monster • Jul 10, 2009 12:49 pm
TransAmerica
Flint • Jul 10, 2009 2:28 pm
Over a recent long weekend in the country, my father and I tried to invent ScrabbleKub.
Clodfobble • Jul 10, 2009 2:30 pm
And what, pray tell, are the rules of ScrabbleKub?
Flint • Jul 10, 2009 2:41 pm
Well, it involves the creative problem-solving skillset of Rummikub, but you play with Scrabble tiles. It retains the scoring system of the Scrabble tiles, but operates free-form with no board. Because the number of possible tile combinations includes any Scrabble dictionary allowable word, as well as the crossword-style connections and tile sharing, it increases the amount of possibilites one has to weigh against when scrapping/rearranging the whole board and getting it back together before the sand runs out.

I thought this would make it more complex, and therefore more difficult, but in fact it was very easy to fly by the seat of your vocabulary-pants and throw something together.We set out trying to determine a set of restrictions that would make the gameplay more difficult, but not so difficult as to lock up the game and force too many "draw" turns or weak moves. In short, we got drunk and never developed a proper system of rules.
wolf • Jul 10, 2009 2:41 pm
Valley of the Pharaohs, a bookshelf game from the makers of Dread Pirate. Same kind of idea ... wander around the desert, avoid the mummy, steal, er ... excavate ancient artifacts.

I was quite an avid Backgammon player, but I don't know anyone who plays any longer. I play Chess with great enthusiasm and little skill. Also don't know anyone who wants to play Chess, so mostly I have to play against my phone.

I'm too good at Trivial Pursuit, nobody wants to play with me any longer (usually devolves into a game of Me against Everybody Else on One Team, and I still win. Trivia has been a minor hobby since I was in high school.)

I very much want to learn to play Go.

I continue to have the problem of my work schedule interfering with my ability to play games like that ... although there was one very uneventful night where my cow orker and I got to play Scrabble for a couple of hours, then we switched to RummiKub (because I keep a set in my car).
Happy Monkey • Jul 10, 2009 2:59 pm
I can't speak from experience, but I've been admiring that chesslike game with a laser in the board, and the game pieces are mirrors.
glatt • Jul 11, 2009 8:40 am
Ticket to Ride is a fun game for the whole family. It's fairly easy to learn, but then different levels of strategy open up as you get more experience under your belt. Your kindergartener is able to play with you too and have fun, even if the deeper understanding of strategy evades them.


Lost Cities
is also very good, and uses a board, but is really a card game. Two players only.
glatt • Jul 11, 2009 8:41 am
Clodfobble;580707 wrote:
Blokus is a family favorite.


Here too.
monster • Jul 11, 2009 9:21 am
glatt;580834 wrote:
Ticket to Ride is a fun game for the whole family. It's fairly easy to learn, but then different levels of strategy open up as you get more experience under your belt. Your kindergartener is able to play with you too and have fun, even if the deeper understanding of strategy evades them.



Sounds pretty similar to TransAmerica. there is also a TransEurope.
skysidhe • Jul 11, 2009 10:34 am
I agree with kitsune. Having grown up on board games I prefer them.

A couple months ago I bought chess and rummy table top games to be told that table top games are boring and pc games are better.

I am not returning them even if they have been religated to (precious) relic statis.
Glinda • Jul 11, 2009 10:55 am
Mille Bornes!
dar512 • Jul 13, 2009 2:43 pm
Glinda;580848 wrote:
Mille Bornes!

+1

We also like Apples to Apples and Loaded Questions.

I like Scrabble a lot but can't get Mrs. Dar or the darlets to play.

Mrs. Dar and the darlets like Monopoly a lot, but I don't care for it.
TheMercenary • Jul 15, 2009 7:51 am
What? no one plays Candyland or Chutes and Ladders any more? Wtf?
dar512 • Jul 15, 2009 10:25 am
TheMercenary;581644 wrote:
What? no one plays Candyland or Chutes and Ladders any more? Wtf?

We did when the kids were younger. It's possible we just don't have the right demographic here.
lookout123 • Jul 15, 2009 10:51 am
Scrabble and Othello.
wolf • Jul 16, 2009 1:27 am
TheMercenary;581644 wrote:
What? no one plays Candyland or Chutes and Ladders any more? Wtf?


Not since my friend's kids stopped needing booster seats for the kitchen table.

Her kids now are vicious at Dread Pirate and Killer Bunnies from Outer Space.

My friends and I have a girl's game night, that's why I got the Valley of the Pharaohs game. We'll play darn near anything, including Taboo (aka the Oh, Fuck Me! game, because that's what her husband says when he's trying to give the clues), Mad Gab (far more fun just to read the card for amusement rather than trying to play), an assortment of the games from the Cranium family, Scattergories, and our favorite standby, Apples to Apples. My friend has a bunch of those touchy-feely getting to know you games, like Imaginiff, Scruples, and The Go Goddess game, too, but luckily they don't come off the game shelf quite as often.
Beest • Jul 17, 2009 9:15 am
Kitsune;580706 wrote:
I will assume I am in the minority on this belief, but the delights of digital gaming and interactivity as manipulated by keyboard, buttons, motion controller, or touchscreen still can't quite fully emulate some of the enjoyment provided by an old fashioned board game. Choco and I really enjoy the battles we wage against each other in Carcassone - this game of simple plays often evolves into interesting strategies and hilarious, never-ending fights over land control. We've wasted away countless hours with family at the dining room table with this one. The beautiful part of it is that most children could easily pick up this game and become equally as adept at the gameplay as an adult, likely to the degree that they would give you a run for your money!

Any Cellarite recommendations for other games?


We have a Carcassone derivative, Hunters and Gatherers ( they didn't have Carcassone when I was doing some last minute Christmas shopping), also a great game. I love the way you make the board as you go along, so it's different every time.
Spexxvet • Jul 20, 2009 3:07 pm
Careers. The best thing is that you can draw cards with the number of spaces you can move, so you are not at the mercy of the dice all the time.

Risk. Ever play multi-board?