Splendor

 

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Splendor is a great game for 2-4 players, We have played it with all player counts. We have found that it plays well with any number.It is a very easy game to learn and teach. Should take about 30 minutes to play a game. You can learn it and start playing within 5 minutes.

Splendor is an engine building game. The main focus of the game will be acquiring development cards by spending your gems (chips). Every card you buy makes it easier to acquire future cards and may also provide you with prestige points (victory points). The key is that these purchased cards allow players to buy subsequent development cards for a lesser cost. Gets your engine going and be the first player to 15 prestige points and you win.

Order your game here Splendor Board Game
How To Play

Kingsburg

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Get the game here Kingsburg

This is starting to become one of my favorite games. Kingsburg was released 2007 and is for 2-5 players. We have found the 4 player version to be most enjoyable but will still play well with 2.  The 2 player has a variant to the game. Mainy has you rolling extra set of dice for placement. We have not played with 3 players so not sure how that plays. It takes about 90 minutes to play a game. We have come in close to that timeframe with 4 players. Have not timed out how long 2 player has taken us yet. This game is fairly easy to teach and to learn. After playing through 1 time most people catch on and want to play again right away.

BoardGame Geek gives a great description of the game.

In Kingsburg, players are Lords sent from the King to administer frontier territories.

The game takes place over five years, a total of 20 turns. In every year, there are 3 production seasons for collecting resources, building structures, and training troops. Every fourth turn is the winter, in which all the players must fight an invading army. Each player must face the invaders, so this is not a cooperative game.

The resources to build structures and train troops are collected by influencing the advisers in the King’s Council. Players place their influence dice on members of the Council. The player with the lowest influence dice sum will be the first one to choose where to spend his/her influence; this acts as a way of balancing poor dice rolling. Even with a very unlucky roll, a clever player can still come out from the Council with a good number of resources and/or soldiers.

Each adviser on the King’s Council will award different resources or allocate soldiers, victory points, and other advantages to the player who was able to influence him/her for the current turn.

At the end of five years, the player who best developed his assigned territory and most pleased the King through the Council is the winner.

Many alternate strategies are possible to win: will you go for the military way, disregarding economic and prestige buildings, or will you aim to complete the big Cathedral to please the King? Will you use the Merchant’s Guild to gain more influence in the Council, or will you go for balanced development?

Good review of the game below from Dice Tower

 

 

Game Time With Friends

Here are some shots of  the games we got in this week.

Stay Tuned

More Information will be coming soon.  All Games All The Time. We will have reviews,how to play, want lists, top lists,  upcoming games, and so on. We will also have  business information for hosting your own Game Night through us.