Category Archives: News

Boardgames in the News: Games Conventions Move Online

This week brought the sad, but largely inevitable news that the 2020 Internationale Spieltage in Essen was “postponed” to 2021.  This has been a bad year for boardgame conventions.  In the last couple of days, Gen Con (Indianapolis at the end of July) has also fallen to Covid-19 and it is now surely only matter of time before Origins (Columbus, Ohio), which was postponed from June to October, follows.  However, as many game-groups are moving online, so now are the conventions.

Virtually Expo
– Image from ukgamesexpo.co.uk

UK Games Expo was one of the first to make the announcement of their “Virtually Expo” to be held in August.  We now also have “SPIEL.digital” “Origins Online“, “BGG.CONline” and “Gen Con Online“. It is still not entirely clear how these will run, though Virtually Expo, will be through a mixture of online platforms over a specific set of dates, and BGG.CONline starts tomorrow, so we will soon have a better idea.

SPIEL.digital 2020
– Image from facebook.com

Online conventions are clearly no real replacement for the face-to-face interactions at the large game fairs, but could allow the publishers to access a wider audience as well as being better for the environment.  As such, it will be interesting to see whether online conventions continue beyond 2020 and whether the seething mass of humanity that descends on the Messe Essen every October will be a thing of the past.

Essen 2019
– Image by boardGOATS

 

Spiel des Jahres Nominations 2020

This year, many things are different: the UK Games Expo was postponed and then cancelled and today it was announced that Essen has gone the same way.  The most prestigious awards in board gaming, the Spiel des Jahres are not unaffected either.  The Jury met online and likely some struggled to play the games; the award parties will probably also be affected.

Spiel des Jahres Committee 2020
– Image from SpieldesJahres on twitter.com

The nominations have been announced as usual though.  There are three categories, the Kinderspiel (children’s game) , the Kennerspiel (“expert’s” game) and the most desirable of all, the family award, the Spiel des Jahres.  The nominees for this year’s awards have been announced as:

  • Spiel des Jahres
    Spiel des Jahres 2019My City by Reiner Knizia
    Nova Luna by Uwe Rosenberg and Corné van Moorsel
    Pictures by Daniela and Christian Stöhr

In previous years the group has picked out the eventual winner well in advance even of the nominations, however, last year the games generally seemed to be light, almost party games.  These are not our usual faire, and in recent years, the Kennerpiel des Jahres has been a better fit.  The Kennerspiel nominees are not especially complex games, but are typically a step up from the light family games that are now being nominated for the “Red Poppel”.

– Image by from spiel-des-jahres.de

Last year the winner of the Kennerspiel award was Wingspan which also picked up our own “Golden GOAT” Award at our Un-Christmas Dinner.  With all that has been going on, however, we are unfamiliar with almost all the nominees this time round and likely won’t get the chance to play any of them until after the winners have been announced (20th July in Berlin for the Kennerpiel and Spiel des Jahres Awards; 15th June in Hamburg for the Kinderspiel des Jahres).

Golden GOAT - 2019
– Image by boardGOATS

 

Boardgames in the News: UK Games Expo Cancelled, Essen Still to be Confirmed

Over the last couple of months, the Coronavirus Pandemic has had a huge impact globally, and board gaming has not escaped.  For example, the largest distributor in the USA, Alliance Games, has stopped shipping games and the parent company, Geppi Family Enterprises (GFE) have been with-holding payments to vendors.  Just over a month ago, we reported that many conventions had been cancelled, and the UK Games Expo, usually held at the end of May/start of June was postponed until August.  Since then, Friedhelm Merz Verlag GmbH who run the Essen Spiel in October, have stated that they are monitoring the situation in Germany, where Oktoberfest was recently cancelled.

Essen 2020
– Image from ukgamesexpo.co.uk

Yesterday, sadly, the directors of UK Games Expo announced that they have now reluctantly taken the decision to cancel the event this year; the next UKGE is now scheduled for 4th-6th June 2021.  The 2020 UK Games Expo Award nominees and winners will still be announced in August, however, and the organisers are currently looking at the possibility of a virtual event.  The UK Games Expo does not carry pandemic insurance, so cancellation has serious consequences for their finances, however, in their statement they say have sufficient financial reserves to survive this, although those reserves will be completely depleted.  The overwhelming support on Facebook alone, gives some confidence that the event will survive despite this and will come back even stronger next year.

– From facebook.com

Boardgames in the News: The Deadly Double and Pearl Harbor

The Deadly Double is an eighty year old, “put-up and take” dice game with a slightly sinister past.  The game, designed to be played in cramped conditions in while sheltering from air raids, is almost trivially simple.  Each player starts with a pile of chips and contributes a fixed stake or “ante” to the kitty.  Then, players take it in turns to roll the two bespoke dice, one black with yellow numerals and one white with red markings.  The faces of the black die feature the odd numbers from one to nine while the white die has multiples of twelve up to sixty, giving pairs of one and twelve, three and twenty-four etc.  The sixth faces are zero and “double X” (or “XX”) for the black and white dice respectively.

The Deadly Double
– Image from strangefulthings.com

If a pair is rolled, the active player takes the kitty.  In general, players roll once per turn unless they roll a special combination. For example, rolling a zero with a sixty and they contribute to the kitty again; rolling a zero with an even number multiple of twelve, and the player rolls again, and so on.  Rolling the “deadly double”, XX, with a zero means the active player must make a large contribution to the kitty defined by a re-roll – a decision must be made before the re-roll, but neither option is good as both are likely to be large: either the face value of the white die, or the number rolled on the black die multiplied by the number of players.

The Deadly Double
– Image from dicecollector.com

It was perhaps the peculiar numbers featured on the dice that inspired the conspiracy theory that was reported in The New York Times in March 1967.  According to an interview with Lasislas Farago, a former United States intelligence expert and military historian, readers of the New Yorker noticed that the newspaper advert for the game showed the numbers seven and twelve, adverts that were published about two weeks before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7th December 1941.  The Germanic eagle logo and images of a bomb shelter led to the idea that these adverts were in fact warning Japanese agents in the US of the date of the impending attack.  It was thought that five and zero shown in the advert might represent the planned time for the attack while the XX, the Roman numeral for twenty, might indicate the latitude for Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.

The Deadly Double
– Image from dicecollector.com

Even the name, “The Deadly Double” could have alluded to the axis powers, Germany and Japan.  According to Lasislas Farago the mystery deepened when the FBI contacted the New Yorker to discover who placed the advertisments, only to find that they didn’t know – the gentleman in question was completely anonymous.  The advert had been placed over the counter and paid for in cash and the clerk had no recollection of who placed them.  Apparently, neither the game that was offered nor the company whose signature was on the advert ever existed.

The Deadly Double
– Image from dicecollector.com

However, The New York Times published a follow-up article the following day featuring an interview with a Mrs. E. Shaw Cole of Montclair, New Jersey.  She claimed that she had helped her late husband and designer of the game, Roger Paul Craig to design the adverts.  Although they were indeed visited by the FBI, she claimed the numbers were all just a coincidence.  Despite this, and earlier comments on the subject from Mr. Craig reported in the Los Angeles Times in 1942, the urban myths and conspiracy theories still refuse to die and the game, The Deadly Double, will forever be associated with the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, that ultimately led to the USA joining World War II.

The Deadly Double
– Image from dicecollector.com

Boardgames in the News: Covid-19 Impacts the Industry

Last week, we speculated on some of the changes that the Coronavirus Pandemic may have on board gaming and the community that surrounds it.  Initially, games groups and conventions were postponed and retailers were limiting sales to online orders only, but now the distribution network is also suffering major disruption with knock-on consequences.  A week ago, arguably the largest distributor in the USA, Alliance Games, announced:

“Product distributed by Alliance has been shipping from our Fort Wayne, IN and Austin, TX warehouses. Both are closing at the end of the day on Tuesday, March 24thin the interest of employee safety and to comply with direction from local governments. Any orders not shipped by that time will not be processed until further notice.”

Yesterday, it was further reported that the parent company, Geppi Family Enterprises (GFE), released the following:

“As the world responds to the outbreak of COVID-19, our focus is on protecting employees, understanding the risks to our business, evaluating the risks to our industry and examining the Federal Government resources available”

“While the full impact of this epidemic is still unknown, one thing is certain: supply chain disruptions have cash flow implications across the extended industry that can’t be underestimated. While we work to understand the current industry landscape, the unfortunate truth is that we are no longer receiving consistent payments from our customers. This requires that at this time, we hold payments to vendors previously scheduled to release this week.”

Some small games producers, rely on the income obtained from distributors.  For Twogether Games, for example, this means three months of revenue will be delayed.  For some small companies, such a large loss, even if it is only short term, could be the difference between remaining solvent and bankruptcy.  Although board games may not be seen as an essential at the moment, playing games is good for our mental health and has been recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO).  Additionally, any purchases made now, could help keep a small company from going under and their staff from losing their jobs.

– From twitter.com

 

Boardgames in the News: WHO advise “Play a Game”

The current confinement will be very difficult for many people, so national governments have been offering advice on how to pass the time.  For some people, working from home is an option, but for others work has dried up and they are stuck at home with other frustrated family members.  One of the many things to pass the time that as been suggested by both the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the British government, is playing board games.

Candy Land
– Image by BGG contributor binraix

This is perhaps no surprise to most board gamers, but it is not the first time a game has been used during a health crisis.  The well-known US children’s game, Candy Land, originated during the Polio epidemic in the first half of the twentieth century.  The game was invented by a retired schoolteacher named Eleanor Abbott while she was recuperating in a polio ward in San Diego.1  The game was such a success with children on the ward that Ms. Abbott submitted it for consideration by Milton Bradley (who later became part of Hasbro), where the simple race game grew to become one of the company’s most successful products.

Candy Land
– Image by flickr contributor Tiffany Weisberg

By the 1950s, rise in the number of polio cases was impacting the idealised American family, and a culture that viewed children through the lens of “wondrous childhood” became deeply preoccupied with managing and containing risk and danger.2  For mothers who were responsible for keeping their children safe from this unseen menace playing this sweet, light game was a safe alternative, and, as a result, Candy Land is still popular today.

1 Walsh, T. (2005), Timeless Toys: Classic Toys and the Playmakers who Created them, p80-83.
2 Kawash, S., Amer. J. Play (2010), 3, 186.

Goats in the News: More Welsh Goat Entertainment

What is it about Welsh goats causing havoc?!?!  First, it was a couple of mischievous Welsh goats playing on roofs, and now it is a whole flock stopping traffic and eating garden shrubs.  The herd of Kashmiri goats, were originally a gift from Queen Victoria to local landowner Lord Mostyn but are now regarded as wild and life in the hills around Llandudno.

Llandudno Kashmiri Goats
– Image by George Good, from dailypost.co.uk

They often venture down from the hills when the weather is bad, but Storm Gareth has driven them much further into town than usual.

– From twitter.com

Boardgames in the News: Gaming at a Distance

With so many people tucked up at home there has been some debate as to whether this will encourage people to play games more.  Among gamers, there has been a lot of discussion about solo games where players compete against the game, but this loses the social aspect.  Online gaming is also an option; this can enable playing with real people, but loses the tactile element of gaming that so many people love.  In most cases though, people are not “home alone”, they are with family, so perhaps this is an opportunity to play games with them?

Cities of Splendor
– Image by boardGOATS

The occasional board game column in The Guardian has published a list of twenty family games including some modern family classics like, Ticket to Ride: London, Splendor, Kingdomino, Dobble and (inevitably) Pandemic.  It also includes a few, more recent games, like Wingspan, and Just One, as well as some less well known games like Patchwork Express, Legacy of Dragonholt and Blue Lagoon.

Wingspan
– Image by boardGOATS

There has some suggestion that there has been a flurry of buying games to play with their families, but is there any real evidence of this?  Anecdotally, there have been comments that prices of games have increased on Amazon.co.uk which could indicate an increase in sales.  The website camelcamelcamel.co.uk tracks prices on Amazon, and it seems to indicate that prices for many popular light games have increased in the last week.

Ticket to Ride: Europe on camelcamelcamel.co.uk (23/03/20)
– Image by boardGOATS from camelcamelcamel.co.uk

There is another possible reason though: Amazon has suspended warehouse services (storage and shipping) of non-medical supplies and “high-demand” products for third party sellers.  This would have the effect of pushing prices up.  A lot of Friendly Local Games Shops sell online though, and many of these have sales on at the moment, so why not support one of the small businesses that are struggling at the moment, and leave Amazon to deal with toilet rolls and hand sanitiser?