Saturday, March 16, 2019

G3 Marching on

Moments in time are strange things.

Taken out of context some could wonder what is going on.

A group of people collectively yelling "yyyaarrrghhh!" like time displaced pirates celebrating with the last pint of grog.

Two people fighting over Jacarandas, Cassias and Poplars while making terribly plant based puns.

A whole table deciding that one person is always evil rather than take him on his word.

Others are assigned roles to protect the earth from invading aliens, waiting for their orders from a glowing iPad screen.

One man standing pointing at those around him, one after another. Fascist! Fascist! Fascist!

Roles are assigned. Alliances are made. Points are awarded.

Raucous. Rowdy. Unruly. 

Yet all the while there are smiles, laughs, pats on backs and the occasional hand shake. Good game. Shared experiences that will hopefully bring those people back to the same place again.

Moments in time are strange things.

Remember all the ones you enjoy.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Winterborne Review: A Year in the Life of a Viking Clan


You will be amazed by the things you can achieve when you put your mind to it. 

At least that is how our vikings must think in Winterborne, designed by Brian Suhre and published by Talon Strikes Studios. We have just a year to bring the most honor to our competing clans. How do we achieve this?



At the start of the game you are given a deck of six cards representing your clan. You are handed your province tile on which your three main characters reside. The Warrior, who you will use the conquer and build. The Shaman, who will help you trade, tax and pray to the Gods. Finally, an Explorer, who quests to find you new cards and raids to bring back food. With these components you will use a mix of deck-building and action selection that is spun seamlessly around a roundel movement system. 

On your turn you draw four cards and play all you can to trigger actions. One card will activate the character you wish to use and a second card will give them movement. The character then sets off clockwise around your province, where they finish movement may affect certain actions concerning the colored region they finished in. 



It is in this that you will find the core of your decisions in Winterborne. If you are looking to trade, each different region will offer different choices, or if you wish to explore you may have different cards you would like to bring to your hand. There is a puzzle to the efficiency you need in your card play, as the game contains very little player interaction it becomes about how well you can play with what you have.

Also with this kind of card play, it almost always feels like you are making headway, a great feeling of momentum. Very rarely did I find myself without an option that wouldn't gain me anything. If you did end up that way it most likely came from your own poor choice in card purchasing earlier in the game. For example ending up heavy handed with explorers and no way to gain the goods needed to do any actually exploring.

It is through exploring that the games internal time clock is set, as you pick up cards to improve your deck you are also pushing the game toward the finale. Spring turns to Summer, turns to Autumn and before you know it you are in Winter. Once Winter hits you only have three turns before the end and you better have been prepared. This also marks the time a unique ability for each player gets activated and you can turn in your favor from the Gods to unleash it. Knowing your power from the beginning should play into how you planned out your game, so you can take the maximum advantage of it.

Having played Coldwater Crown I am not surprised that Suhre has put together another great game. It sits on the low end of medium for weight and I could see teaching this to someone who is wanting to get deeper into the hobby. There is plenty of the decision making that I enjoy in games, without breaking my brain completely.

Overall, this has the feel of an old school euro and I can see this becoming a mainstay in any collection.

*photos of art may not be final product

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

The Gaming Con Beyond the Pines

PineCon 2019


A trip to Flagstaff. 
An escape to the north. 
Leaving the metro expanse behind for the weekend. 
A chance to experience games with friends with no distractions.

Now you have to say that is all very tempting, so why not jump at the chance. Taking an extra day off from work we headed up Thursday night, with all these promises laid out in front of us. I can say that all of them delivered.

I could speak to all the games that I got to play, but you can read reviews of those games and understand what there is to love about them. Card playing, worker placement, action selection, decisions, calculations, failures and successes. But all the talk on how good a game is does not speak to the other's that enjoy that experience with you.

Our gracious host promised an awesome weekend and he delivered. He played his role dutifully scooting from table to table making sure we were enjoying ourselves all weekend. Major kudos to the man who can keep his energy going while all others around him are waning and then still managing to serve up an Italian feast to keep us going.

Yet, all this may have come crashing to the ground if it weren't for the bravado and camaraderie of the other 12 guests in attendance. Feeding off the joy that the host enabled in all of us we set upon the 72 hours before us with salivating passion for games. The pure abundance of cardboard delight that was before us was overwhelming. The united gaming cry of "Oh, I want to play that.." reverberated repeatedly through the house, a multi-tongued promise that will never be kept.

These empty words echoed around your head, and you realize that no matter what you play it is really about the who you are playing with. The table filled with chits, cards and plastic pieces just becomes the experience hub for shared conversation. Building relationships and finding common ground beyond the world we live in.

The essence of why we game.

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

TableStop Thoughts: Faith

It's a new year people!

This blog felt like it wasn't going to happen, going round and round about what to write about in the first post of the new year. After plenty of thinking and pray I have decided to take a moment to get more personal with my thoughts and where I see 2019 going.

Over the course of 2018, the continual growth of my faith has impacted my thought processes and in turn has affected how I view my hobby in gaming.

I often find that current cultural awareness and my own social shortcomings make it hard for me to talk directly and openly about my beliefs. Looking at it objectively I find it funny that it is easier for me to nerd out over board games then it is for me to talk about how God has affected my life in the past couple years.

Life events and hard truths coming to the surface at the end of 2016 into early 2017 caused me to take a deeper look at my life. I fully believe that God created humans with a hole within them, then he set us upon the world with free will. We would choose how to fill that hole. We misdirect ourselves to the material to meet that need. Money, power, sex, hobbies. I look back at how heavy I was into my hobby, but without Jesus in my life that was my replacement for everything. It began to speak louder to how I had neglected my marriage and my wife.

I won't delve too deeply into details, needless to say, over time our marriage had become broken and disillusioned. We weren't talking through issues and were assuming a lot of one another without discussing it. I placed all my energies into my hobby, making that the love of my life instead.

Through a series of events in early 2017: 
An abortive attempt at counselling from my parent's pastor.
A mechanic detailing my marriage into a triangle with God at the peak. 
Being urged to undertake the 30 day challenge, in which you listen to christian music for a month.
A failed promotion attempt at work, impacted by my own emotional state. 
Through all this I was led to get myself back to church, and a friend who I had made through gaming also happened to be the son-in-law of a pastor at a local church. I went with an open heart and a mind to listen.

Now, it's not like I didn't already consider myself a christian. I had spent my late-teens in churches in the UK with my parents. I had been baptized in Phoenix, AZ in the late 90's after my brush with cancer. The wife & I had attended a few different churches in Arizona since arriving, but nothing would stick. My walk gradually moved apart from Jesus. I had checked him off my list, thinking I was good to go. Much like the reason I had a mechanic talking to me, I had failed to maintain my life. Not up keeping the spiritual oil had caused my life to corrode on the inside.

So there I was finally in a position to treat going to church seriously and I had a place picked out. Amazingly at this new church they also had a marriage school that was starting out. Over the rest of 2017 I began to take a good look back, looking at all these small details, these coincidences, pushing myself and my wife on a journey. A journey that is obscured to you until you take that step back and look at it from God's view. Seeing all the falling dominoes in our lives that had led us to that breaking point and what God had prepared for us to help mend the broken parts. Not coincidences anymore, just the path that led us to the right place.

Almost two years later now, and I am stepping up in marriage school. Offering to help lead teaching. Which is a huge step for me. Deep down it is definitely something I'm not fully comfortable with, but I honestly feel this is an opportunity to give back and share. Share the joy and hope I've felt through the process.

This is a culmination of my prayers in regards to the direction my life is to take. As to what is my place in God's plan. What is His purpose for me?

How does this cycle back to gaming? In the past I think I was using my hobbies as my escape. A selfish tool to forget my own problems. Now I want to concentrate on the outreach aspects of gaming, sharing this hobby and the relationships I have found through it.

The amazing church family I have found has a message. Live, Love and Share. Live like Jesus, Love like Jesus and Share his message everywhere you go. I want to be able to show the love He has shown me to others around me. I am feeling called into a form of leadership or even ministry, and my knowledge/love of gaming could allow me to use that as a tool.

Even in this, an area I am very comfortable in, I still have my own anxieties and fears. I find myself reminded that God has often used people who were themselves reluctant, nervous and broken. Even a great leader like Moses, as God asked him to go speak to the Pharaoh and demand the release of the Israelites. Moses asked who he was to be given such a task. God simply replied "I will be with you."

So as 2018 closes and I reflect. I see it as a year I began to find balance and comfort in my faith. I look into 2019 and have hopes that it will be a year I push away my social anxieties and take the reins.