What are your favorite board games? I'm looking for games that are satisfying and lead to a sense of accomplishment or fulfillment or connection.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I don't know if I'd considered it a board game, but the Forbidden Island game (and the others like it) spring to mind. The idea is that you and the other players have to work together to gather everything you need including the treasure you came for before the island you're on sinks into the ocean.
It's fun working together and I always thought it did a good job of incentivising that.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Key Flower
Gaia Project
Brass
Dune Imperium
Ark Nova
Terraforming Mars -
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Me and my friends are terrible at that game apparently. Our poor Legacy game world…
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The Crew is solid. Almost too good. I’ll bring a bag of board games and only end up playing The Crew all night if it comes out too early.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Yeah. It's super easy to house-rule Carcassonne as a pure co-op game. Remove the farmers (to keep your sanity, because co-op is actually much harder), keep the rules about Castle and road occupation (where a tie gets scored for each tied player), and play to maximize the combined players score. None of the strategy is lost and trying to carefully double occupy everything is sometimes a nail biting challenge.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
the strategy is to focus on monopolizing the orange and red properties ASAP since they are statistically much higher to land on than any other property because people get sent to jail so often.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Here’s some suggestions, just games I find I get lots of play out of and people are always willing to play.
Dune Imperium is probably my favorite. It’s a deck builder with worker placement. It’s got a lot of different strategies you can take to win, there’s not one set way. Dune Imperium Uprising is an updated (for the 2nd movie) version of the game that fixes some things from the first one, tho I think I still prefer the original. This one is a bit more serious, but I’m including it because it’s my favorite.
Everdell is a great game and very easy to get into. Mostly worker placement with some engine building. Cute theme and it looks great on the table. Definitely recommend giving it a look. Avoid the expansions when buying, they might add too much to the gameplay. There is an updated version Everdell: Farshore, which I’ve heard is better, tho I haven’t played it.
Clank! And any in that series are also super friendly and easy to get into. It’s a dungeon exploration deck builder. Personally I’d recommend going with Clank! Catacombs, which is the updated version that adds a tile based map so each play through is a little different. I have not played Clank! In Space or any of the others.
7 Wonders is a fun pick and pass type game. You build up your city and try to win via military, economic, or scientific power. Easy to pick up, and has more strategy in it than first glance. The 2-player version 7 Wonders: Duel has to be my favorite 2 player game.
Black Hole Rainbows, absolutely ridiculous game, everyone scoffs at it at first and then has a stupid good time playing it. It’s stupidly colorful and definitely over produced but that’s part of the charm. If you can find a copy, buy it. Hard to get right now.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
- Tiny Epic Zombies is a cooperate, often hilarious, always satisfying zombie survival simulator.
- Tiny Epic Dinosaurs is a mildly competitive, generally delightful Jurassic Park / Petting zoo simulator.
- Tiny Epic pirates is a crunchy but quick pirate simulator where most interactions are your human controlled pirates evading the automated Navy while racing for loot.
- The Fast and the Furious (board game) is a fantastic quick co-op romp.
- Here to There is a story driven light economy game ever the focus is on building your economy engine to unlock the next interesting story twist.
- Machi Koro lacks a co-op variant, but it's pretty chill and it's easy to house rule the aggressive competitive cards to pay out from the shared bank.
- The Book of Madness is a fantastic light Co-op deck builder with great positive interactions and a fantastic theme (students at Hogwarts trying to close an evil book)
- Caverna is a robust building game with chill interactions.
Already mentioned, but worth reiterating:
- The Crew
- Tokaido
- Ticket to Ride
- Forbidden Island/Skies/Dessert/Forrest
- Pandemic
And he sure to check out Rhado Runs Through for game reviews. He plays mostly with his wife, and so always reviews how the game feels to play together without backstabbing.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
micromacro crime city is fun. It's kinda like a giant Where's Waldo map except you solve mysteries as a team.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The strategy is to avoid Monopoly. It's not like the game gets any funner if you're playing by the rules.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Ticket to Ride and Carcassonne for me. I play those with my wife and we don't really get in each other's way. She usually wins but I don't care.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
You may want some commas or another space added, friend. They show up as a single uninterrupted line for me and I'm assuming others
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
One I haven’t seen mentioned is Puerto Rico. One thing I like is there is essentially no random chance to this game; everything that happens is a result of choices you or your opponents make.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Imagine is one of the favourite games in my IRL friend group whenever we get together. It's basically Alias, but instead of explaining the word verbally, you use transparent cards with shapes drawn on them that you can overlap and move around. It's chill, fun, and fits any group size.
P. S. The link isn't where I bought the game - I just googled the English version and posted the first link I found.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Waaay obscure, but one of the few board games I've ever really enjoyed is solarquest.
I've played plenty of the usual board games over the years. They just weren't anything I ever played because I wanted to play them. It was something to do, and people seem to naturally gravitate towards card and board games.
I had a chess phase in my younger days. I still play checkers checkers from time to time. "Chinese" checkers too, along with go. But those are still things that I'll suggest when I'm with someone and looking for something to do while bullshitting.
I hate Life, and only play monopoly with the understanding that when I'm done with it, I'm going to give everything I have to whoever is the most behind. Sorry is okay, as is parcheesi.
But solarquest, I'll find people willing to play with me because I like it. That and heroquest, but heroquest isn't really a board game the way I think of the term, it's a constrained ttrpg.
Both of those, my mom got me for Christmas after I begged for them, and I've never once been disappointed with them. I got both of them the year they came out, so we're talking decades of play with both.
Heroquest, I used as a board with the figures good my d&d play for a long time as well as playing it as its own game.
Heroquest is cooperative, so I can definitely recommend it for low to zero conflict play. You're uncovering a map, finding treasure, building a character. It's d&d lite, in the best way. Original versions are expensive, but there's a ton of printable versions out there, and it was rereleased in 2021.
Solarquest is essentially space themed monopoly on the surface. But, beyond your pieces being rockets and the concept of buying up parts of the solar system, there's the flight mechanics where you have to have the fuel to go from one planet to the next. It adds a layer of thought and fun to it. Plus, you're learning some local astronomy.
There's rules for laser fights, and special roll actions, available as optional rules. It's just fun. There's an updated version available with more recent astronomy, fancier supplies and such, but I haven't bought it yet.
Both of them are games I play with other old farts, as well as kids of all ages. I genuinely can't recommend either of them enough.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Betrayal at the House on the Hill has about 50 different scenarios so almost every playthrough is different. But it's best to have at least 4 players to be more fun
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Mansions of Madness. It's my wife's new favorite game. The game has many different scenarios and they play out pretty differently each time. The game is almost all co-op, so it's players VS. the game. I washable the need for an app at first but not does it simplify a lot and helps keep track of a lot of the mundane stuff.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
There's actually a specifically cooperative expansion for Carcassonne, called Mists Over Carcassonne. It adds an element of managing a ghost population while trying to cooperatively reach a target score based on certain scenarios.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Just wanted to add, for the fully cooperative Heroquest experience, they came out with an app for the new edition (but it's compatible with the original base game) that fully takes over the Zargon/DM role.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Just One can also do a lot more than 4 players. If you add additional writing surfaces and erasable markers (or pencils or whatever) it's pretty much unlimited.