Party Games Archives — Meeple Mountain https://www.meeplemountain.com/category/party-games/ Board Game Reviews, Videos, Humor, and more Mon, 11 Mar 2024 02:55:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.meeplemountain.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/cropped-logo_full-color_512x512-100x100.png Party Games Archives — Meeple Mountain https://www.meeplemountain.com/category/party-games/ 32 32 Just One Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/just-one/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/just-one/#respond Tue, 12 Mar 2024 12:59:26 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=296877

I lead employee engagement for a food & beverage manufacturer when I’m not here talking games. At a recent lunch event, I decided to bring some of the games from my personal collection to the office to spur some laughs while we did yet another round of bland lunch catering.

I put my copy of Just One (2018, Repos Production) at one table, then waited to see if anyone would engage with it. I was pleasantly surprised to see members of our HR department sit at the table, read the short list of instructions, and dive right in.

Within seconds, you could see the magic beginning to form. Players used the (admittedly terrible) dry erase markers to begin following the game’s simple rules, putting one player in the hot seat while all other players used their easel to come up with a clue that hopefully no other player wrote on their dry erase easel.

When the HR team members not currently in the hot seat showed their words to each other, the usual amounts of surprise, cursing, and accusatory gestures took place. Left with only a word or two to come up with the answer, it was great to see the active player struggle to come up with the right word…and when they did, it was high fives…

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Decrypto: 5th Anniversary Edition Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/decrypto-5th-anniversary-edition/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/decrypto-5th-anniversary-edition/#comments Sat, 24 Feb 2024 14:00:10 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=296324

I would have told you that Decrypto had been out for way longer than five years. Like Just One, Decrypto arrived in 2018, out of the blue, and immediately established itself as a go-to word game. To think there was a year in which we received Decrypto and Just One. The heart quickens. We had no idea how good we had it.

To celebrate five years of success, Scorpion Masqué has released a 5th anniversary edition, spicing up the classic—board gaming has a short memory—with 440 new words. Does it change the game in any appreciable way? No, this is still very much the Decrypto people know and love. It does freshen things up a bit, though, for those who’ve put their copy of the original release through its paces.

It takes a round or two to get used to Decrypto’s structure, and it’s difficult to describe in absence of the game in front of you. What I’m trying to tell you is, what I describe may not sound fun. I assure you, it is.

The players are divided into two teams, each of which has four secret words that everyone on the team can see. Each round, one player on each team (the “Encryptor”) has a secret three digit code that they need their teammates to guess.…

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Heroes of Barcadia Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/heroes-of-barcadia/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/heroes-of-barcadia/#respond Sun, 18 Feb 2024 14:00:09 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=296197

Tales from the Tavern

A group of evil monsters has stolen all the drinks in the land of Barcadia, and now it’s up to your merry band of adventurers to brave the dungeon and recover all the drinks. Or… something like that. Heroes of Barcadia is less about the narrative and more about the laughs and, of course, the drinks. What exactly is it, then?

Well, it’s a dungeon-crawling game for 2-6 players (or up to 8 with the expansion), but unlike many dungeon-crawlers, you’re in direct competition. These other heroes are not your allies; they are your rivals! After all, what good is recovering the lost hoard of stolen drinks if it’s not you getting all the glory? You’ll take turns exploring the dungeon to find power-ups and slay monsters. Once you have three power-ups, you can try to take on the final boss and recover the drink hoard.

As a game, it’s… pretty basic. Heroes of Barcadia keeps the gameplay dead simple. There’s very little room for strategy. The rooms you uncover, the power-ups you get, and the dice you roll to fight the monsters are all random. You have little control over your destiny here. It is less of a game and more of a classed-up, shiny new way to have fun with your friends and…

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Broad Lines Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/broad-lines/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/broad-lines/#respond Wed, 10 Jan 2024 14:00:03 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=294461

I don’t enjoy failure, but I’ve come to believe that the best party games are the ones that constantly force you to fail. Just One is hard. Codenames can be crushingly difficult. In That’s Not a Hat!, failure is inevitable. Wavelength, Pan T’es Mort, Concept, I could go on. The specter of disaster looms. It often pummels you. Why do we play these, exactly?

I Know You Want It

Add to this fine tradition Broad Lines, a new cooperative party game from designer Piero Modolo and publisher Cranio Creations. Broad Lines seems to draw obvious inspiration from Just One, but instead of a word game, it applies the same general structure to Pictionary.

The active player, whomever that may be, draws a card and picks a number, which corresponds to a word. The goal of the group, it may not surprise you, is to get the active player to guess this word. The first player takes a square transparency and a dry erase marker, and draws one of two things: either a single curved line, or two straight lines. Once they’re done, the transparency gets placed on the provided easel, and the active player gets two guesses.

[caption id="attachment_294488" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Can you guess the word?[/caption]

Assuming they’re wrong, play continues…

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Wool Gang Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/wool-gang/ Sat, 30 Dec 2023 13:59:16 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=293629

Sheep, dog, and sheepdog games have had a bumpy ride in the Bell household.

Wilson & Shep was a cute hidden movement game that my kids never latched onto. Good Dog, Bad Zombie was certainly more good than bad. Sheepy Time was OK. Adult games featuring sheep, like Agricola: All Creatures Big and Small or Glen More II: Chronicles, have always landed well, particularly any game that features “sheeple” wooden meeples as a spendable resource.

The newest entry in the sheep/dog/sheepdog category? Wool Gang (2023, Gigamic) is a family-weight card game that landed somewhere in the middle. Wool Gang has a cool box, quick rounds, and great card art by Pauline Berdal. In other words, it’s a solid production.

As a game? Wool Gang (designed by Jérôme Bodin) never crossed the threshold from mildly interesting to above average.

Spin the (Points) Wheel

Wool Gang is a set collection card game for 2-5 players. Once a player crosses 20 points (tracked using a points wheel that displays each player’s current score), that round becomes the final round of the game, and the player with the most points wins.

Each round of Wool Gang plays the same. The entire deck of action cards and sheep…

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Bravo Bravo Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/bravo-bravo/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/bravo-bravo/#comments Wed, 06 Dec 2023 14:00:41 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=292750

“I’m surprised this flick made it to theaters.”

I find myself uttering that line from time to time, especially when I see a film featuring actors I’ve heard of. I get it—it’s called “the movie business” for a reason, and that means that sometimes studios release films because they need to make a quick buck.

Bravo Bravo (2023, Randolph) elicited the same sort of comments during recent plays with my two kids (a nine-year-old daughter and a seven-year-old son). It feels like a game that exists only to further the business of making money, because it is a terrible product.

A somewhat shocking moment occurred when my daughter made the following comment after our first play of Bravo Bravo:

“This isn’t really a game, right?”

Bravo Bravo is a bit like the vastly superior Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza, published by Dolphin Hat Games. In both games, a card is revealed, and players have to say a certain word (or, like Dolphin Hat’s also-superior 800 Pound Gorilla, perform a certain gesture). If they say the wrong word or dance the wrong dance, there’s a penalty.

[caption id="attachment_292751" align="alignnone" width="768"] Meet "Steve"[/caption]

In Bravo Bravo, here’s the ruleset: when…

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Six Second Scribbles Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/six-second-scribbles/ Mon, 27 Nov 2023 14:00:34 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=292301

On the one hand, there is no reason to write a full length review for a game like Six Second Scribbles. There isn’t all that much to say. In fact, if I’m being honest, I considered writing the review before I even cracked the shrink on the cards—I was that sure of the outcome. 

On the other hand, when a game’s design so perfectly reflects not only the personality on the box but that of its corporate publishing identity, it deserves a unique header on the website and an extra paragraph or two to celebrate the accomplishment. 

Six Second Scribbles is the creation of Hazel Reynolds of Gamely Ltd, a Brighton, UK publisher. The Gamely philosophy includes small boxes, laughter, a manageable carbon footprint, and charity. I really want to like games from a company like Gamely. How pleasant, then, when the little yellow (which is also metaphorically green) box is a smash hit at the table. 

Laugh track

There are three decks of cards in Six Second Scribbles: Easy, Tricky, and Almost Impossible. Each player receives a face-down card that lists ten items under a single category. With one minute on the clock, players must flip and then draw as many items as possible using a golf pencil and a rather small piece of paper. 

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Alibi: 3 Intricate Mysteries Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/alibi-3-intricate-mysteries/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/alibi-3-intricate-mysteries/#comments Sat, 18 Nov 2023 13:59:37 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=291455

Any time I get the chance to play yet another one-shot murder mystery / escape room game, I am down!

During our meetings with dV Giochi / DV Games at SPIEL 2023, I had the chance to chat with Barbara, our contact with the publisher. While our conversation was brief, we talked about my coverage of some other one-shot mystery games that hit the sweet spot for me. These include the Exit: The Game series, Unsolved Case Files, the Cold Case series, the Suspects games and a few other titles.

Barbara listened as I spoke about my bonafides, and our conversation ended with a review copy of the new mystery game Alibi. Alibi is an interesting package: it includes three one-shot cases that each take about an hour to play. Each player takes on the role of a suspect in a murder case and is given a very small deck of cards with their character story and background during setup.

Alibi is essentially a five-player-only game, with a six-player variant where one person takes on the persona of a detective who seems a bit like Hercule Poirot, the hero from the Agatha Christie mystery novels.

Like a good dinner party murder mystery game, no one knows if they are the murderer or not…

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Chicken! Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/chicken/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/chicken/#respond Sat, 23 Sep 2023 12:59:39 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=286971

To Be (Chicken) or Not To Be (Chicken)

Chicken! does not pretend to be anything other than what it says on the tin. The game comes in a small cylindrical tube adorned with artwork of foxes, chickens, farmers, and eggs. That’s pretty much the whole experience. In the game, players roll dice on each turn and can press their luck to score the most points (see: chickens). The first player to reach 25 points is the winner. It’s a fairly straightforward concept.

On your turn, players are passed some number of dice and must roll them all. You set aside any chickens or foxes you roll, leaving you with some blank dice or eggs. For every egg you roll, you must “hatch” (add) a die to your pool from the middle of the board. You then have the option to reroll all non-chicken, non-fox dice to press your luck. The catch, of course, is that if you ever roll three foxes, the foxes have raided the henhouse, and your turn is over, scoring zero points.

To mitigate this risk, Chicken! offers each player the opportunity to, well, “chicken out.” At the start of your turn, you can take a one-point penalty. If you do, you can reset the dice…

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Everything Ever Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/everything-ever/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/everything-ever/#respond Tue, 19 Sep 2023 13:00:57 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=287167

The beauty of trying so many games each year is that you know it immediately when you play a winner.

Such was the case with my first play of Everything Ever (2023, Floodgate Games), which took place with Floodgate’s marketing lead, Ian Birdsall, at Gen Con 2023. Ian, along with myself and two complete strangers at the con, played almost a full game while standing at a demo table.

It was the perfect movie, in a sense, even though this was a game in real life: action, drama, comedy, a couple of sweet moments, and rap songs. Ian was gracious enough to provide a review copy after the play, allowing me to see if the gameplay would be replicated in my home environment.

Additional plays only cemented my initial thoughts. Everything Ever is great.

Every Rule

Each of Everything Ever’s 250 cards feature the word Every and then something else from the world you might already know well. “Everything That’s Orange.” “Everything That Has a Hook.” “Every Bird.” “Every Character on ‘The Office.” “Every Disney Villain.” You get the idea.

A draw deck of three cards per player is set in the middle of the table, then the first two cards are revealed. Each player begins play…

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Monikers Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/monikers/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/monikers/#respond Wed, 23 Aug 2023 12:59:52 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=285285

How do you rate a board game like Monikers? Much like Wolfgang Warsch’s The Mind, which took an old theatre camp game and committed it to paper, Monikers is a curated rendition of an old favorite. I have always called it Salad Bowl. You may know it as The Name Game, The Hat Game, Celebrities, or a number of other options. How do you review something that’s always been there? How, exactly, does one review Charades?

The interior of the Monikers box, which is packed with cards. That's it. Cards for days.

A Rose by Any Other Moniker

In the traditional game, the first stage involves handing out slips of paper and pens, on which everyone writes a word. These can be famous people, events, concepts, whatever you want, really. Like most party games, the exact parameters are up to the group.

Monikers elides that. The box is full of cards with pre-printed prompts, like Oprah, The Kraken, A Russian Nesting Doll. You know, the classics. From there, the structure is identical to the original game. In lieu of pieces of paper, each player is dealt a pile of cards, from which they choose whichever appeal to them. Those cards are shuffled into a deck, which is set in the…

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The Arkham Asylum Files: Panic in Gotham City Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/the-arkham-asylum-files-panic-in-gotham-city/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/the-arkham-asylum-files-panic-in-gotham-city/#comments Tue, 08 Aug 2023 13:00:04 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=283879

I’m a sucker for Batman films, but once the net loosens a bit, my experience with the world of Batman becomes a little spottier.

Luckily, it’s essentially impossible now to avoid a run-in with The Caped Crusader and the gallery of misfits that populate Gotham City. There are too many TV shows to count, and while I don’t read comic books, a recent visit to a comics store in Chicago tells me that iterations of the character are exploding even now. The recent film The Flash seemed to feature Michael Keaton’s return as Batman more than The Flash character himself, at least in the previews.

One of our tabletop marketing partners reached out because he had a new copy of The Arkham Asylum Files: Panic in Gotham City ready to ship. I watched the trailer, and had to admit that this looked like a fun activity, even if it was very close to the line of board game versus video game. There are plenty of tabletop elements, all secretly packaged in a handsome black box, but players must use an app to drive the entire gaming experience.

(As of the writing of this article, Panic in Gotham City is only playable on newer iOS devices. That meant I actually couldn’t play this game when I first got it.…

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Moku Tower Game Review https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/moku-tower/ https://www.meeplemountain.com/reviews/moku-tower/#respond Sat, 05 Aug 2023 13:00:53 +0000 https://www.meeplemountain.com/?post_type=reviews&p=283753

Moku Tower is, without question or qualification, the most striking review copy I’ve ever received. There’s something here for all the applicable senses (Taste has, lamentably, been yet again neglected by the board game publishing industry).

For the eyes, a veritable cornucopia. The box is handsome. A slight lip separates the top from being flush with the bottom. Inside, there’s an onion-bulb glass timer filled with black sand, a dark wooden base with one cheekily raised corner, and a cloth bag for holding the pieces, which come in a cardboard tube. The pieces themselves, asymmetrical chunks of wood, have varied grains and colors. As you can see from the photographs, to call Moku Tower “photogenic” is to do it a disservice.

A tastefully arranged portrait of the main components of the game.

Something pictures can’t capture: the smell upon opening the tube is divine. Each piece is made from a different type of wood. The combined scents of ash, birch, camphor, maple, pine, rosewood, sapele, and walnut mingle into an intoxicating blend.

All the while, you experience the tactile joy that sits at the core of this hobby. The box is made of thick board. The timer is heavy for its size. The wooden shapes make you feel like a…

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