Our family obsession with games is pretty well known. BabyGeek's Aunt Julie likes to mock us whenever we beeline for the Game Preserve in Indianapolis' Keystone area. Yes, the store is full miniature-painting, card collecting adolescent boys who would rather be Lothar the Thief a dragon-slaying, third-level sage, but isn't that a rather sane response to junior high or high school?
Boys master escapism and learn dice probability while girls review image-obsessed popular media, feel insecure despite their innate youthful beauty, and pick on each other- and the boys frequenting the game shops. Who in this scenario is healthier? I'll tell you, as a college advisor, it looked like more of these boys emerged from high school with their souls intact (albeit somewhat buried). These are the gentle, slightly dreamstruck boys who parents should want to see on their doorsteps during the mate selection years. One wise friend even suggests game playing as a criteria for his daughter's potential suitors (citing classical origins from "The Odyssey").
(And, yes, former geek boys- I know I got the whole Lothar description all wrong. Maybe there are no sages on the third level, or a player can't be a sage and a thief. Yes, I could have called a number of former D&D players in my life and gotten a well-drawn explanation, but those are minutes of my life that would not be refunded, so please bear with a shoddy hypothetical. Plus, Jim may be so overcome with sympathy for my inadequate description that he actually logs in and edits these paragraphs.)
But I digress...
We walk past the RPGs and the "collecting" games into strategy and party game heaven. These corners of the game store are not populated by the normal young boy clientele. They instead have a few straggling adults trying to locate and purchase games quickly with minimal interaction with the young fellows lest they end up on some type of child predator watchlist.
That doesn't allow for much browsing time unless you go during school hours when the store is much less crowded. And although the staff at Game Preserve is excellent, informed, and helpful, very few have played every game in the store. We were quite grateful when a game-obsessed friend and game design hobbyist referred us to Board Game Geek for game reviews.
When I started finding great games at thrift shops, I found that many of them contained everything except the rules. Board Game Geek, with its great network of dedicated users and smart incentives (Geek Gold and Thumbs Ups) for uploading photos and information, offers a very full profile of games including rules, variations, and helpful homemade tools.
The geek forums are great if you want to discuss a game at length, show off a thrift shop find, trade games or parts, or asking about getting replacement parts for a specific game.
In honor of the season, BGG offers a Game Gift Guide. They also offer links to recommended game stores and other good game gift lists.
Games can be great gifts as they offer joy to players again and again (unless you are playing Uno with one of our relatives or Monopoly after adolescence).
BGG or "The Geek," offers a lot of insight into games and the people who play them.
Some of our favorite games:
- Carcassonne: a game where you build the game board as you play (tile placement). This addictive game has given us hours of fun playing with college students, friends, kids, and relatives of all ages. The expansions make it a little more complicated, but it's easy to learn them incrementally. The play time isn't too long (unless you're playing with our friend's mom who ponders things forever and wins most of the time). This game has appeal for our strategy, wargaming friends as well as the casual party game player.
- Gang Of Four: a Hong Kong poker game with references to the Cultural Revolution. In our family, this game now alternates with traditional card favorites like Cribbage, Tripoly, Euchre, and Bridge. It's "a fast paced party game" (as we love to remind anyone who takes their time in making moves), and it inspires a deep level of competitiveness in some already malformed personality types (me, Jake, Andy- there can only be one champion, and it will be me! Muhaha!!!).
- Catch Phrase: normally we avoid electronic games because they require batteries and are usually pretty watered down. This game is well worth the battery expenditure. We used it on a long car ride to a university conference with six students, and we were all so engrossed in competition that when a car driving near us on the busy interstate blew a tire all of the players screamed loudly in their unexpected return to corporeal earth.
- I-Spy "Go Fish: this thrift store find has proven to be a real favorite. It keeps even the most energetic young kids occupied much longer than I expected. Even very young verbal child can be engrossed in the cards. My friend Heather's beautiful daughter Maggie likes to hold up a single card and say "Can you find the monkey, Momma?" and gets as much joy from this variant as her brothers do from the actual game. A great, widely available game (I often see it at Target).
- Pueblo: this city building game exercises players' spacial thinking. It's lots of fun with adults. A word of caution: NEVER, EVER, EVER allow another player to convince you to put it on a lazy-susan unless you really enjoy nausea.
- Wise and OtherWise: King of the bluffing games. This game springboards off ancient sayings- creating hilarious results. Sadly, after much play, I cannot remember many of the actual colloquial wisdom. Instead I think the ancient Native American saying is "Tall tree make squirrel, short bush make bear." Thanks, Mitch! (It may not sound funny now, but it shot carbonated beverage out my nose at the time.)
- Tikal: an archeology tile placement game best suited for more patient players. It's quite rewarding and encourages strategic thinking.
- Apples to Apples: a word association card game that anyone can enjoy. It has a very even playing field, so people win this game who may not ever win other games. It works with a huge number of people and produces a lot of laughter.
- Blockus: reminiscent of stained glass, this lovely game pits players' spacial sensibilities against each other in a race to place the most tiles. It's fun for adults and older kids- though young kids like to play with pieces (note: it would be a choking hazard for the very young).
- Loaded Questions: a real get-to-know-you-better game. We love playing this with friends and family because you always end up learning interesting things- even about people you know well (and not just schlocky stuff like in Scruples).
- Things, Humour in a Box: every year at the big family reunion people can wait to get this game out of the box. It's got a lot of room for snarkiness and is best played with larger groups.
- Curses: another family reunion favorite. This game is not for the reticent should only be played by unabashed hams and people willing to buy in to silliness. One stick-in-the-mud can ruin the game or get their feelings hurt when mocked by the more boisterous and jovial players. Prepare to be completely goofy and don't drink any beverages during the game unless your sinuses need bathing.
As can you- what games do you love, and why? What games should be relegated to the dust bin?
I'll second Carcassone. Awesome, fun game. Anyone who likes it would probably also like Settlers of Catan -- a bit more strategy/complexity, but very fun for a small group.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoy the lists at BGG, and I want to mention that I've made a few purchases from cardhaus.com, a retail site that advertises on BGG. I've been happy with all my shipments, and the prices are usually lower than amazon.com.
ReplyDeleteOnce Upon a TIme by Atlas Games is the best card game I've ever played. Ever. It does take the right crowd though. It is a free style story telling game where you are only lightly cued by the cards in hand. It is also easy to break the intent of the game and force a win quickly and simply, so not for type A personalities who are too far down the competitive side.
ReplyDeleteI have to second Settlers of Catan, though I haven't bought my own copy yet.
Then there is Dungeon Twister, which is much more interesting as a name with out context, but is still a fun game. It is sort of like a 2 player 30 minute version of hero quest.
Cathedral is another one of those spatial games, and pretty fun for a 2d tile placement game.
Acquire is a tile game too but it plays out on the z axis as well as the x and y.
As for places to buy games, I have been buying from Thoughthammer.com recently. They have decent prices and a set 8 dollar ground shipping until you break 125 dollars where it becomes free.
I love the Game Preserve in Bloomington.
Oh, those are great! Though I do have to have we've grown tired of Blokus... Too little interaction, too much staring at the board in silence. Wise and Othewise is a staple at our house, as actually is D&D (and I only started playing in my 20s! Hecause I'm a girl. I didn't even know about it in high school. Yeesh.) We'll have to check out those other ones you mention - many are new to my ears, though BGG is a great site I've visited before.
ReplyDelete(I am a 12+1/2 year old female human) I do not like Settlers of Catan (or the variations) very much, but I'm an impatient person. I do, however, like Cranium games such as Cadoo, and many, many, MANY more. The last time we tried one on someone under 5, (my then 4 year old cousin) she didn't like it. But of course, she's more impatient than I am!
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