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Showing posts from January, 2019

Game 75: Carcassonne

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I can't imagine a better game than Carcassonne to have as our milestone 75th post; on the other hand, I can't believe we played 74 other games before we got to this classic!  We've had this game and a couple of (the many existing) expansions for quite a while, and all the pieces are mixed together, so we'll count this as one game.  We decide each time we play whether or not to play by all the rules of both of our expansions or to limit things a bit - as we feel the house rules should be for any given day.  In all the years we've had Carcassonne it hasn't lost any of its appeal for us. I don't think I'd mentioned this on the blog yet, but I ALWAYS play green.  Not only is it my favorite color, but I've played it so much that I get confused if someone else plays green.  I will, however, give way if a guest is playing and would be broken-hearted to not be able to play green.  (Hosts should be gracious in that way, right?)  The picture below i

Game 74: Tic Tac Chec

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Well, we're back to empty-nesting, so it was time for a 2-player game, and we pulled this one off the shelf.  It's a pretty clever blending of chess and tic-tac-toe.  The rules say it can be played in as fast as 3 minutes, but partway through our first game I was wondering if either of us would find a win-position.  Eventually we did.  We played best of three, and it was amazing how each time one of us did get into a position where it was impossible for the other to stop a win.  I'm still not sure if we would achieve a 3-minute game if we weren't as smart (and therefore didn't see something coming) or if it's the case that we're not smart enough to force a win earlier on.  Here are the pieces, ready to go, and then a few moves in.  I won the first game - light pieces on the diagonal.  David won the second game.  I learned on the third game that I need to keep my mouth shut!  He was one move away from winning, so I grabbed the ca

Game 73: Anomia

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Anomia is another game we hadn't played for a long time.  Elisa came over last night, and this is the game we settled on.  David, Jacob, Ocean and I were the other players.  This is our last chance for a while for large group gaming, as Jacob and Ocean fly to Australia tomorrow.  I hadn't remembered how outrageously fun this game is and how outrageously frustrating it is!  The idea is very simple. Each card has a symbol and a category on it.  You draw a card, and if the symbol on your card matches the symbol on someone else's card, then you have to try to come up with an object in the category on their card before they come up with an object in the category on your card.  Whoever comes up with a word or object first wins the other person's card.  Whoever has the most cards once the deck runs out is the winner.  The came contains 6 different decks.  I imagine that this is so up to 6 groups could play at the same time.  (It is the "party edition" after al

Game 72: Wise and Otherwise

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  Wise and Otherwise is a word game which is similar to Balderdash and Literati in that players try to make up creative, compelling responses to try to get others to vote for theirs and in which each player is trying to guess the correct response.  In this game, rather than working with definitions of words, players are finishing old sayings/aphorisms from other countries.  David and I played with Jacob, Ocean and Caleb just before Caleb left for the airport to fly back for the final semester of his senior year in college.  It was a good, fun way to end our holiday time together.  Players take turns being the one to choose the beginning of a saying from the card that the other players need to try to finish.  The board itself has a mix and match of beginnings and endings of sayings, each of which makes use of the number of the space that it is on.  Ocean had the brown pawn and dashed to an early lead.  She and David ended up tying in the end.  Here is the front of one o