Tag Archives: Ark Nova: Marine Worlds

4th February 2025

Blue and Pink were just finishing their supper when not one, but three copies of Ark Nova walked in, escorted by Ivory, Cobalt and Green.  This was because the “Feature Game” was to be its Marine Worlds expansion and, as Ark Nova is a substantial game that doesn’t get as many outings as it deserves, everyone was keen to give their copy a bit of an airing.  The game is much longer than those we usually play on a Tuesday so everyone who was keen to play was early and started setting up promptly.  Given the length, we also erred on the lower end of the player count, with just Ivory, Cobalt and Green playing.  The game is all about planning and designing a modern, scientifically managed zoo, but the game-play is more like Terraforming Mars with animals, than Zoo Break or Zooloretto.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Although it is quite a complex game, functionally it is not difficult to play on a turn by turn basis, though there is quite a lot to manage and keep a track of.  On their turn, players take one of six possible actions:  activating one of the five action cards (Cards, Build, Animals, Association and Sponsor) with a strength equal to the number above the card.  When activating a card players perform the action based on its power level which is dictated by its position in the row.  During the game, players can upgrade and turn over the action cards to a more powerful second side using various Bonuses.  The Marine Worlds expansion introduces several new elements to the game.

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

Firstly, there are sea animals that have to be played in new special enclosures that must be built adjacent to water.  Roughly half the sea animals are reef dwellers, and whenever a player adds a reef dweller to their zoo, they trigger the ability of all reef dwellers in that zoo. To deal with the dilution of the deck (caused by adding more cards), all sea cards feature a wave icon, and whenever it is revealed in the display, you discard the first card in the row, then replace it.  For each of the five Action cards there are four alternate versions with a little twist. Players draft these action cards at the start of play, replacing two of their standard action cards with these new ones, increasing the asymmetry in the game.

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

A new fourth University option is also available on the Association board.  If a player takes it, they claim one of six special Universities from the Reserve that feature one Research icon and one of six animal icons.  When a player takes this, they reveal Cards from the top of the deck and keep the first revealed card with an animal icon that matches their chosen University.  There are also new bonus tiles and other little bits and pieces to smooth out the game play.  Although the Marine Worlds expansion comes is modular, the group chose to play with all the components (Marine animals, asymmetric maps and drafted action cards).

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

Ivory took a Sponsor Card that gave him extra money for breaks and an Association Card that gave him the ability to hire workers.  This coupled with the lake map which gave extra money for building around the lake meant Ivory had access to lots of cash as the game developed.  Both Cobalt and Green took a Sponsor and an Animal Card, with Cobalt taking a map that allowed him to discard cards for money while Green had the map with the park restaurant.  While Cobalt was also able to build up a lot of cash, Green spent most of the game playing the poor relation, just scraping by.  The game started slowly, with initial conservation projects devoted to Australian animals, Birds, and African Animals.

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

Both Green and Ivory wound up spending all their early money, trying to get Animals out, whereas Cobalt focused on the Association board and playing Sponsor cards.  After struggling with money for the first couple of rounds, Ivory managed to get two Australian animals, allowing him to put a token on the conservation card, giving an additional Zoo Dollars at each break/income step and from then on, money wasn’t too much of an issue for him. Green however, struggled for money for most of the game, where Cobalt continued to focus on Sponsor Cards and Association Actions, and as a result, he took an early lead on the Research track which gave him a much greater card choice. Cobalt did build an early aquarium, however, and started filling it up with fish.

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

After a quick start, both on the conservation track and appeal track, Ivory’s game slowed down significantly—he was too focused on animals, compared to Green and Cobalt.  They had both spent time taking Association actions, leading them to Upgrade cards and progress up the Reputation track. Cobalt was able to significantly move up the Conservation track in the middle game using his Sponsor Cards, whereas Green focused on one big move by having lots of birds in his zoo.  Much to Pink’s disgust, although the panda was an option at one point in the game, the “wave” added by expansion pushed it on, so nobody got the Panda.  Instead, by the end of the game, Ivory had quite a collection of monkeys, Green had a few some birds and Cobalt had a lot of fish.

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

Going into the end game, Cobalt some way ahead on the Conservation track, followed by Green, while Green and Ivory were fairly similar in Appeal.  Cobalt then started playing lots of animals in his zoo and managed to completely fill it moving rapidly along the Appeal track.  It was clear he was soon going to bring the game to a close, due in part to both his (and Green’s) ability to make donations by upgrading the Association card. Green was also moving forwards on both tracks while Ivory was lagging behind albeit with three conservation cards in hand. Fortunately, Ivory had lots of “x tokens”, allowing him to play all his conservation cards (and gain the additional worker he needed, shooting up the conservation track, though sadly, it was too little too late.  From there, It wasn’t long before Cobalt’s Tokens to crossed, ending the game.

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

Everyone had made some mistakes reading their cards and/or abilities which cost a little bit, but was probably fairly balanced out.  Everyone managed to get the full four Conservation points on their personal scoring cards, but Green picked up quite a few extra points from the Sponsorship cards leaving him level with Cobalt.  Inevitably, this led to a hunt for tie-breakers—the rules state that the tied player who supported the most Conservation Projects wins the game.  As Green and Cobalt had also supported the same number of Conservation projects the rules dictated they should share the victory.  That said, Green magnanimously said he felt Cobalt had the edge by virtue of having way more coin at the end of the game.

Ark Nova: Marine Worlds
– Image by boardGOATS

On the next table, Blue, Pink and Mint had finally got underway playing Kavango.  This is a conservation, card-drafting game.  A bit like games like Sushi Go! and 7 Wonders, players draft cards to build their Reserve.  Like games like Terraforming Mars, however, cards can only be added to a player’s Reserve if they have its requirements.  These might be the food supply, or enough protection (environmental, poaching or climate).  Climate protection is unique because, as in real life, players have to work on that together.  At the end of the game, after three rounds, players add up the value of their animals, and any bonuses together with any points scored during the game for Research, and the player with the most points is the winner.

Kavango
– Image by boardGOATS

Pine joined them briefly and expressed an interest in playing another time, but decided this week he would take himself home to better acquaint himself with his C-vitamins and avoid unnecessarily sharing his bugs.  Mint was the nominal first player, though mostly the game is played simultaneously.  Blue started hard and fast building up lots of income, however, she was forced to invest heavily in Climate protection—honourable, but not necessarily lucrative.  Pink and Mint were a little slower to start, but made good progress.  Both got caught out by a very minor rules malfunction that had a significant impact:  Cards not used at the end of the round are supposed to go into a discard pile, but instead were returned to their decks.

Kavango
– Image by boardGOATS

Towards the end of the game, this suddenly became significant as some types of card are not available in the final rounds.  So, those that needed, for example, termites (like Mint), were unable to get them.  Pink and Mint were most obviously affected, though everyone got caught in some way or another.  The card draw hindered Blue as she struggled to find any migratory animals at all and had to abandon her personal objective as unachievable.  In contrast, Mint and Pink both did really well with theirs (birds and toxic creatures respectively), making the result much closer than it would otherwise have been with Blue the victor with a hundred and seventy-one, a single point more than Mint.

Kavango
– Image by boardGOATS

Meanwhile, Plum and Byzantium had kindly agreed to take Lime to the other side of the room to play the Golden GOAT Award 2024 Winner, Stamp Swap.  Somehow, despite the flurry of outings it received towards the end of last year, Lime had missed out on playing it.  This is also a drafting-type game, but this time with stamps (mostly).  The game takes place over three rounds, each split into two parts:  Firstly players take it in turns to choose from a central pool, then players divide their pile into two and the first player chooses one pile from another player to take, who keeps their other pile and chooses one from another play—and thus the piles of stamps are swapped.

Stamp Swap
– Image by boardGOATS

On previous outings, Byzantium had managed to annoy Blue by just beating her.  It had been his birthday at the weekend, so the question was whether he would get another, albeit slightly belated, birthday gift in the form of another victory.  Sadly for Byzantium, it was not to be though.  Plum took ten more points than him during the game and another ten more in the end game scoring between them, giving poor Lime quite a trampling on his first game.  Stamp Swap wasn’t the only popular new game to get an outing this evening.  On the next table, Jade and Sapphire were introducing Purple and Black to Fromage, a sort of cheesy worker placement game with simultaneous play and a time component, not completely unlike Tzolk’in.

Fromage
– Image by boardGOATS

The actions are tied up in four “mini-games” which players take it in turns to participate in.  It has proven quite a popular little game because once everyone knows how to play, there is relatively little down time and despite playing different areas at different times, quite a lot of interaction.  Players simultaneously choose where to place their workers, in their quadrant of the board, and once everyone is done, the board is turned and then players retrieve any workers they can and then place workers on their next quadrant.  Players score points for occupying tables in the Bistro quadrant, holding the majority in regions in the Villes quadrant, filling different tables in the Fromagerie quadrant, occupying contiguous areas in the Festival quadrant, and for fulfilling Orders.

Fromage
– Image by boardGOATS

This time, Purple and Jade made a bit of a killing in the bistro taking nearly thirty points each, while Sapphire took twenty-two points in the Villes.  Black’s strategy was somewhat different, picking up points more evenly across the board and focusing particularly on fruit.  In the end, despite the differences in approaches, the scores were very similar, with only three points covering second to fourth.  The winner was Jade, however, some twenty points clear of Sapphire, who just nicked second, but a single point.  The game had been well received, and the group ended up “Doing a Lime” and playing it a second time.

Fromage
– Image by boardGOATS

The second game was also tight, although everyone was much more even in where they scored their points.  Sapphire just edged it though, again by a single point, again from Black, pushing Jade into third.  There was still time after the second game for something else, something new, something quick—Flip 7.  This is a really simple “Push your Luck” game reminiscent of Port Royal, where players simply turn over cards and gamble on not revealing the same number twice.  The catch is that each numbered card appears in the deck that number of times (i.e there is one one, two twos and so on).  Flipping over seven in a row gives fifteen bonus points.

Flip 7
– Image by boardGOATS

There are also some action cards in the deck, “Flip Three”, “Freeze”, “Second Chance” and modifier cards which give extra points.  Players take it in turns to decide whether they want to “flip” or ” stick”.  The game ends when players have reached the pre-agreed total (two hundred, according to the rules, though games can easily be made longer or shorter as desired).  In the first round, three players scored well, but the rest of the game did not go so well.  In fact, the only player who managed to score in every round was Black with a fairly consistent total around thirty.  It was no surprise that he was the first to pass two hundred and was therefore the winner, ahead of Sapphire and Purple, who were joint second with a hundred and seventy-six.

Flip 7
– Image by boardGOATS

Learning Outcome:  Zoos are even more fun with sea creatures.

6th February 2024

People were still eating when Ivory rolled up nice and early to start setting up Ark Nova.  Although it was not the “Feature Game“, we are planning to feature the Marine Worlds expansion in the next few weeks and wanted to play the base game before we did.  So, Ivory was soon joined by Cobalt, Plum and Green on the other side of the table, leaving the rest to decide who would play the “Feature Game”, CuBirds, and what everyone else would play while they did.  Before long, Pine, Pink, Lime and Blue were dealing out the bird cards while Purple, Black and Teal moved to the next table and rummaged through the game bags to decide what to get out.

CuBirds
– Image by boardGOATS

CuBirds is a fairly simple set-collecting game built round a central market.  Players start with a hand of seven cards and, on their turn must place cards from their hand.  They have to place all the cards they have of one type, adding them to one of the four rows on the table, at either end.  If there is already a card of this type in that row, then they take all the cards between that card and the newly added cards into their hand.  Optionally, if they have enough cards of a given type in their hand, they can complete a flock of them, that is play the cards, keeping one or two in their display (a bit like harvesting a been field in Bohnanza, where harvesting a field of five beans might leave a player with two Bean Thalers).

CuBirds
– Image by boardGOATS

The game ends immediately when one player’s collection has either three cards of each of two bird types, or seven different bird types (of the eight available) in front of them.  It should play out in about half an hour, though inevitably, the first play through took longer as everyone felt their way through.  When any player places the last card in their hand, everyone has to ditch their whole hand which can be quite brutal with players losing partial sets and having to start collecting again. Pink was the first to upset everyone’s plans, quickly followed by Pine.

CuBirds
– Image by boardGOATS

A lot of fun was had identifying the bird types, and nobody got close to guessing what the tall, thin, “little brown job” was, which turned out to be a reed warbler, but was soon universally known as “WeirdBird”.  When the end of the game was triggered, both Blue and Lime had a magpie apiece with Lime’s paired with four toucans and Blue’s with three robins, while Pink just had two little ducks.  Fittingly, as by far the most dedicated birder in the group, the winner was Pine with three flamingos and three “wols” with a spare parrot.  It had been fun, but rather than play again, as he’d missed out on both the previous plays, Pink had been keen to give the new full-sized, Scandinavian Northern Lights version of Ticket to Ride a go.

Ticket to Ride: Northern Lights
– Image by boardGOATS

Like the other variants, Ticket to Ride: Northern Lights has slight changes to the rules and a new map, which in this case, similar to the older, festive themed Nordic Countries, though it plays up to five instead of just three.  The base rules are quite simple: on their turn, players either take train cards from the face-up market (or the blind draw deck), or spend cards to place trains on the map for points. Once or twice during the game, players may instead choose to draw Tickets, which give players points at the end of the game if they are completed (i.e. the owner has connected the two locations with their trains) and score negative points if they are not.

Ticket to Ride: Northern Lights
– Image by boardGOATS

Northern Lights additionally has some triple routes (which only take effect with five players) and some routes have a “+X” next to them and when trains are laid on these the player takes X train cards from the face down pile.  In general, Locomotive (wild) cards can replace any other card but for ferry routes they can be replaced with a pair of the same colour (that doesn’t have to be the same as the rest of the cards used).  Unlike most of the other versions, however, if there are three or more face-up Locomotive cards in the market, the market is not refreshed.  The biggest differences are the addition of Bonus cards, however, which extra points at the end.

Ticket to Ride: Northern Lights
– Image by boardGOATS

This time the Bonus cards used were Capital Investment (B), Local Area Network (F), International Tycoon (G) & Ferry Master (J).  These gave Bonus points for completing Tickets to the capital cities (Stockholm, Copenhagen, Oslo and Helsinki); completing the most short Tickets; connecting to the most countries; and completing the most Ferry routes.  The map is very tight with a lot of short routes, spread over a fairly long thin map and a wide variety of Ticket lengths.  Everyone complained that their starting Tickets weren’t compatible, though Blue and Lime both kept all three of theirs, even so Pink surprised everyone when he took his first set of Tickets very early.

Ticket to Ride: Northern Lights
– Image by boardGOATS

Pine soon followed and his sniggering as he kept all the new Tickets was ominous, signalling that he’d already completed all three—a fact confirmed when he drew more on his next turn too.  Blue and Lime covered similar spaces,connecting the north-west to the south-east, while Pine’s network dominated the east and Pinks sprawled over the south.  Everyone was getting on with doing their thing when suddenly, Lime brought the game to a rather abrupt end, catching everyone else out.  As a result, Pink and Pine both had an incomplete ticket that costing them fourteen and twelve points respectively, while Blue had two giving her a combined loss of sixteen points (though part of that was her own fault as she’d overstretched her self and would have run out of trains anyhow).

Ticket to Ride: Northern Lights
– Image by boardGOATS

In spite of that, it was a very, very tight finish with just six points between first and third place, meaning the Bonus cards became much more critical than might have been expected earlier in the game.  Lime set the target with a nice round hundred points, but he did not take any of the Bonus points and was just pipped by Pine who took several of them with Blue making up the podium.  It had been an imperious game from Lime, and he was unlucky to have lost to Pine who was the first to admit that he’d got very lucky with his Tickets, especially the draw where he’d already completed the Tickets, quite remarkable given how spread out the network is on this map.

Ticket to Ride: Northern Lights
– Image by boardGOATS

Meanwhile Purple, Black and Teal had been playing Azul.  This is a favourite game within the group, which is unusual as we tend to eschew abstract games. Players are mosaic building, taking tiles from a shared array of factories, adding them to their Storage on their personal player boards.  At the end of the round, any full rows are scrapped with one tile progressing into the player’s mosaic.  Players score when the tiles added form rows or columns, and the longer they are, the more points players get.  The catch is that each Storage space can only hold one tiles of one colour.  If there is nowhere to put tiles taken from the Factories, left over tiles go into the Scraps bin costing players points which can be very costly as Black found out when he lost fourteen in the final round.

Azul
– Image by boardGOATS

For a little variation, the trio added the Joker tiles and the five double score markers from the Special Factories Promo tiles.  The Joker tiles are a set of ten beautiful promotional tiles that can serve as a proxy for any of the other tiles, though their aesthetic comes at a price as players can’t use them for end of game color Bonuses.  The five double score markers allow players to double the points scored for a row or column, by taking the marker of the matching colour.  Everyone took one of these during what was a hard-faught game where Purple and Black tied for with seventy points.  The clear victor was Teal, however, with eighty-eight points.

Azul
– Image by boardGOATS

Teal and Pine took their leave, so after some chatter, Purple and Black joined Lime, Pink and Blue in another game of CuBirds.  This time, Black collected magpies but twice had enough for sets but kept losing them.  Pueple got three WeirdBirds and was busy collecting parrots when the game came to an end.  Both Lime and Blue tried to collect a set of seven different birds, but while Blue got close with five (and a duplicat “wol”), Pink was imperious.  Before his final turn he had a set of three toucans and two sets of two (flamingos, ducks and robins), pretty-much guaranteeing him victory, regardless what he was left with, though he chose to check-out with another flock of flamingos.

CuBirds
– Image by boardGOATS

While all this was going on, on the other side of the room an epic game of Ark Nova was underway between Ivory, Cobalt, Green and Plum.  This is a much longer game than we usually play with an advertised playing time of upwards of two hours and reputedly considerably more with inexperienced players and setup time included.  It is all about planning and designing a modern, scientifically managed zoo, but the game-play is more like Terraforming Mars with animals, than Zoo Break or Zooloretto.  That said, although it is quite complex, functionally it is not difficult to play on a turn by turn basis, though there is quite a lot to manage and keep a track of.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

On their turn, players take one of six possible actions:  activating one of the five action cards (Cards, Build, Animals, Association and Sponsor) with a strength equal to the number above the card, or move a card back to the first space and take a cross token instead.  When activating a card players perform the action based on its power level which is dictated by its position in the row.  Once a card has been played, it is moved the first space in the player’s five card row (i.e.to the lowest power position on the left) moving the other cards to the right to replace the card removed, effectively incrementing their power by one.  During the game, players can upgrade and turn over the action cards to a more powerful second side using various Bonuses.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

The Cards action is the simplest action, which lets players draw cards from the deck (the number depending on strength) then advance the marker two spaces along the break track which defines when the round ends.  The Build action allows players to pay to construct one building on their zoo map.  Players can build basic enclosures with a size of one to five, but they can also build a petting zoo for animal storage or pavilions and kiosks (which give players Appeal and money respectively based on adjacent filled enclosures).  With the upgraded build action, players can build multiple different buildings and have access to the large bird aviary and reptile house which allow the storage of multiple animals.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

The Animals action allows players to add animals into enclosures in their zoo. Some animals have a special requirement and need a symbol in their tableau and/or the upgraded animal card. Adding an animal to an enclosure has a cost, and then the player turns over the empty enclosure of at least the size needed or places the listed cubes into a special enclosure (an aviary or a reptile house).  The player then adds the animal card to their tableau and resolves the abilities on it and receives ticket sales along with possibly Conservation points and Reputation.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

The Association action allows players to take one task on the Association board with different tasks available based on their power level.  This allows people to gain Reputation points, acquire a partner zoo they don’t already own, gain a partner university, or support a Conservation.  Finally the Sponsor action allows players to play exactly one Sponsor from their hand which offer ongoing abilities.  They can allow players to place unique tiles in their zoo and offer end game Conservation point opportunities. Some Sponsor cards have conditions on their play similar to the animal cards.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Players take it in turns to take actions, resetting every time a break occurs, until the end game has been triggered.  There are two tracks, Appeal (Tickets) and Conservation that follow the same course, but in opposite directions.  The game end is triggered when one player’s pair of scoring markers cross, after which, everyone gets one more turn and then the end-game cards are scored.  The player with the largest overlap between their Conservation and Appeal values is the winner.  Everyone was familiar with the game and had watched the rules refresher video, so the group could make a fast start, however, Cobalt and Green had played a lot online and Plum had only played once, so there was a difference in experience levels.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Green and Plum took early Association actions taking the two Reputation universities, scuppering Cobalt’s first turn who couldn’t make use of the double science university.  Cobalt therefore took a partner zoo and snapped a Conservation project from the display in the first few turns. Early game sponsors included: “Veterinarian” by Green (grabbing him an additional university and allowing Conservation projects to be performed at Association level four instead of five, although he didn’t make use of this throughout the game); “Quarantine Lab” by Plum (providing her immunity to venom, constriction, hypnosis and pilfering); “Expert in small animals” by Cobalt (reducing the cost of two-sized animals by three); and “Expert in Herbivores” by Ivory (providing three money each time a herbivore is placed into any zoo).

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Plum was very pleased with her “Quarantine Lab” as it meant she didn’t really have to bother with the effects of red tokens that say you have been bitten or poisoned because it meant there was one less thing to get in here way and complicate her game.  Cobalt used his expertise in small animals to good effect, especially when combined with partner zoos, with a petting zoo and several small animals, allowing his money to stockpile. Ivory concentrated on reptiles while Green played several negative effect cards early (e.g. boa constrictor), which hit Ivory and Cobalt (the latter multiple times, and grabbing some of that stockpiled cash). Plum appeared to take an early lead possibly due to her Quarantine Lab which kept her out of all the early pilfering and poisoning.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Cobalt was first to complete a Conservation project, using the snapped card to release a herbivore into the wild and gaining the two-enclosure Bonus, immediately followed by Ivory.  In the middle-game, the African Bush elephant and Serengeti National Park appeared side-by-side in the display, so Cobalt took the risky decision to nab these over two consecutive rounds, but was forced to discard five or six cards from an unexpected break. Having kept the elephant and Conservation project, Cobalt played these to grab an extra scoring card and race up the Conservation track and triggered the scoring card discard. Ivory and Plum took to the Appeal track. Green remained languishing on both tracks, particularly the Conservation track where he barely moved all game.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Cobalt was first to upgrade his cards, leaving only the Association action not upgraded, whereas Green concentrated on Sponsors and Association actions. Plum was working through some difficult choices, ultimately deciding to having to flip the Animals card so that she could play the Elephant she had been nursing. She left the Reputation as the non-upgraded card, which unfortunately removed some of the better options that the Elephant gave.  Plum was just a Europe icon away from being able to take the multi-regional goal, but ultimately forgot that having high Appeal is the negative element to the score and didn’t do the things to convert her Appeal to give her points.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Green was slow to get going, but eventually, managed a master move with his first Conservation project and flew up the scoring to overtake Plum, and began chasing down Ivory and Cobalt.  It was very close between Ivory and Cobalt on who would trigger the end game: Cobalt managed to keep his counters from crossing, causing Ivory to trigger the end game and allowing Cobalt one last turn. Although Ivory scored well on the final turn, Cobalt covered his zoo (giving him seven more Appeal) and scored more than twenty points in the final turn.  In end game scoring, it became apparent that Plum had misunderstood her end game scoring card.  She had thought it gave points for empty enclosures in her zoo (rather than empty spaces) and had set about building lots of them towards the end.  Without this, her game would have ended very differently.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Ivory took the third place on the podium having realised Green was closing and decided to end the game perhaps a turn or two earlier than he really wanted which may have inadvertently caused himself more damage as Green needed some three turns to score anymore.  Green did exceptionally well taking a full four Conservation points from his Bonus card and three extra points from Sponsors, and with it, almost taking victory with a total of eighteen points.  However, Cobalt’s final turn plus two scoring cards (one of which was for small animals) meant he won with a convincing score of thirty.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

It had been quite stressful getting the game completed in time, especially with some long turns where actions were chained together, for example Plum played one card which enabled another full turn, but with two new cards it was tough to decide which gave the better option.  All that said, it had been very enjoyable and everyone had got on with their game and helped each-other where necessary.  The group clearly demonstrated that the game can be played in around four hours even with four, so long as everyone knows what they are doing and keeps moving.  It will be a few weeks before the Marine Worlds expansion gets an outing, but it will be exciting when it does.

Ark Nova
– Image by boardGOATS

Learning Outcome:  Reed warblers are weird warblers.

Essen 2023

Today is the final day of this edition of the largest games fair in Europe and arguably the world, the Internationale Spieltage.  Known to gamers worldwide simply as “SPIEL” or “Essen”, the annual fair is of particular significance as many new releases are scheduled to coincide with the event just in time for Christmas sales.  Following the recent change in management, this year there were quite a few changes.  Aside from the logo, the most noticeable was the layout in the halls—according to one game designer, every stand except his was in a new location in an effort to theme the halls.  For the most part, this seemed to work, though inevitably some people will feel they lost out in the great shuffle.

Essen 2023
– Image from spiel-essen.com

One thing that hasn’t changed, is the lack of general gaming space, especially when compared with the likes of the UK Games Expo and Gen ConSPIEL is a games fair, not a convention—it’s purpose is to showcase new and up-coming games and sell them to the general public, but also small and medium-sized resellers.  Additionally, there is a lot of business going on behind the scenes, including designers demoing games to publishers, and publishers meeting with producers and other publishers to discuss contracts.  It is arguable that large amounts of playing space are counter to SPIEL’s priorities, but they could definitely do with providing more chairs—not everyone has the stamina of a twenty year old, and the number of people just sitting on the ground suggests more seating is an essential.

Essen 2023
– Image by boardGOATS

Following the cancellation of SPIEL in 2020, there were restrictions on numbers for 2021 and Covid mandates in 2022 leading to reduced numbers (93,600 and 147,000  respectively), so 2023 was the first year when things were back to normal.  One question therefore, has been whether numbers would return to the levels, or even exceed those of 2019, when there were 209,000 entries.  It will be a few days before the statistics for 2023 are reported, but anecdotally, the answer is yes, with some exhibitors commenting that Friday was the busiest it had ever been, and the annual no-ship Maths Trade and Auction was as mad as ever.

My Gold Mine
– Image by boardGOATS

This year there is the usual selection of the latest releases including, The White Castle, Nucleum, Kutná Hora: The City of Silver, Evacuation, The Glade, My Gold Mine, Amygdala, Forest Shuffle and Footprints.  There are also expansions for previous games like Cascadia (Landmarks), Ark Nova (Marine Worlds), Lost Ruins of Arnak (The Missing Expedition) as well as this year’s winners of the Deutscher Spiele Preis, Planet Unknown (Supermoon).

Ticket to Ride Legacy: Legends of the West
– Image by boardGOATS

A common theme are the re-releases and reimplementations of old favourites and there are a lot of these this year, like Ticket to Ride (Legacy: Legends of the West) Elfenland, Zooloretto, Dixit (Disney Edition), Shipyard (Second Edition) and NMBR 9.  As usual, there are also loads of mini promotional expansions available for games like Flamecraft, Die Wandelnden Türme, Keyflower, Underwater Cities, Dorfromantik and 2022 Golden GOAT, Praga Caput Regni, amongst others.  There truly is something there for everyone.

Dixit: Disney Edition
– Image by boardGOATS