Gaming at Kevin’s - December 7
Jacob and I cruised over to Kevin's last weekend for some Sunday gaming. Normally a long haul for us, it was very convenient this time because Jacob and I were able to get in some Christmas shopping for Julie and Matthew at the nearby shopping malls. Jacob spent his own money on his gift for Matthew and was a great helper while we found a few items for Julie.
Kevin always has such a friendly crowd at his place, and the group is usually a good, manageable size (6-9 people). Onto the games...
Condottierie
As the 'geek likes to say, this is a "card game that's masquerading as a board game" - a fun opener that almost always seems to end too quickly for me. I'm sure this is partly because each game has been played with 1 or 2 first timers. Players play cards to participate in an auction for provinces with a goal of owning three contiguous. Most of the cards have face values, while a some can be played to double a player's bid, force each of the facecards to be worth only 1, or force an auction to end early. Jacob set up the winning play this game by contesting a province adjacent to his that would give Kevin enough contiguous provinces to win the game.
Unfortunately not enough strength stayed in the hand, and I wound up 1 or 2 points short of Kevin's total (he had few but sufficient cards) and he won the game.
Medina
This game will soon hold the record for game I've seen played the most without ever playing it. This looks fun - the bits are so cool and I haven't played many building games like this.
Domaine
Ahhh, Domaine... this one I've been wanting to try for some time. Jacob and I saw a large format version of this at GenCon last summer, and since that time it has been on our short list of games to try. So when the opportunity to play it came up, Jacob and I snatched the box and Sabrina joined us.
Domaine is a very spatial game (you can read an online tutorial). There is a random layout in each game with the 9 land tiles (a fixed center), and players alternate placing each of their four castles on the board with an adjacent knight. There are some special squares on the board - some help produce victory points (villages and forests), others produce income (mines), and then there are the meadows which are essentially empty space. The goal of the game is to segment off chunks of the game board with borders, creating domains around your castles.
If you try and get too greedy and build a huge domain, it will either take too long or your opponent will just disrupt your plans. Economy enters the game as players must pay gold to perform actions, which include training knights, building borders, or expanding an existing domain into an opponent's. The card deck composition is creative - cards are labeled A, B, C, and D, and all of the "A" cards are shuffled together, then the B's, etc. The A's are placed on top of the B's, B's on the C's, and the C's on the D's. This creates a changing economic environment in the game. For example, action cards to build borders are more common early in the game and often cost less than later in the game. The easiest way of getting money is selling your action cards - they have a sale price as well as an action cost (the selling price is always less than the cost). Cards that you sell back to the bank go face up in a pool of cards that your opponents can then purchase back.
We made a few serious rules blunders during play (I was teaching Sabrina and Jacob how to play while I taught myself), the most serious being how knights are handled. Nobody was building knights early on because we missed the rule that said you can only expand into someone else's domain if you have more knights in the expanding domain than in the opponent's. This is obviously a critical reason to recruit knights, and without this understanding it doesn't make much sense to ever hire a new one. We pointed out to Kevin how worthless the knights seemed, and he quickly corrected us. This came just as the domains were getting completed, so there ensued a rush to build knights. We also missed the rule that you can't steal a knight adjacent to a castle (hence the configuration you'll see below in the end game).
I held a fairly healthy lead for a while, but Jacob and Sabrina came on strong as they began to complete their domains. I pulled out the victory by expanding a domain and grabbing a resource monopoly at the end which pushed me slightly ahead in victory points (I was orange, Jacob blue, and Sabrina red). This game is on my short to-buy list - after the holidays though (hey, it's Christmas - we shouldn't be buying stuff for ourselves!).
Clans
Kevin, Jim, Jeff, and Sabrina then played a game of Clans. This is most definitely not on my to-buy list. This is an abstract game with a fairly weak theme, and my one playing with Angela wasn't very enjoyable. Maybe I should give it another try... but really, why, when there are some many games I like out there?
Aladdin's Dragons
A new guest arrived that I hadn't met before - welcome Greg! Greg is an experienced gamer but hadn't tried Aladdin's Dragons yet, so I offered to teach it to Greg and Jacob. I enjoy this game and will rarely turn down an opportunity to play it. This game is an auction game with a few magical twists (artifacts and spell cards that can be used to disrupt auctions or alter the game mechanics). Each player has a series of tokens numbered from 1 to 9 (minus the 3), and players take turns bidding face down with the tokens on a number of spaces (caverns where you can get gems, the town where you can get cards and other advantages, and the palace where you can get artifacts). The player with the most artifacts wins the game. The basic strategy is to acquire gems early on so that you can by artifacts as the game progresses. This game is always pretty close when I play it, and this was no exception. I managed to pull out the victory with one more tile than Greg, and two more than Jacob.
Well, that was it for this session (for Jacob and I anyway - it was getting late and Jacob had school on Monday). Stand by for another session report - we had a game day it our house yesterday with a huge turnout and a number of interesting games played.