New board games from germany




















Don't be afraid that the games being played might be to difficult if you're new to boardgames. It's almost guaranteed that you'll be explained a game that you'll quickly understand and enjoy. In general, the games are played in English as many of the participant aren't native german speakers. However, if everyone at the table agrees, it is ok to play in german.

Just be nice: if one person at the table cannot understand the language you are trying to speak, you should use English. Skip to content. Frankfurt Board Games. Frankfurt, Germany. Organized by Luis and 3 others. Join this group. What we're about Weekly meeting of board game lovers. Upcoming events 1.

See all. Board Game Night Jugendherberge Frankfurt. Joschka Luis Tamas M 9 attendees. Past events As a teenager growing up in Tucson in the s, he became frustrated with the narrow, child-oriented fare on offer at his local toy shops—roll-and-move games like Sorry!

So he started creating his own games, making photocopied print runs of a few hundred or so and mailing them out to customers. But he felt like part of the lowest caste of nerds.

He has no plans to move back to the United States. They put their name on the box, and people will buy based on their reputation. In North America, the complex board games created during the latter half of the 20th century typically took the form of simulated warfare. Which helps explain why all of the most popular Eurogames are based around building things—communities Catan , civilizations Terra Mystica , farms Agricola —rather than annihilating opponents.

The result is a vastly more pacifist style of a game that can appeal to women as much as men, and to older adults as much as high-testosterone adolescents. In Monopoly, that great bonfire of friendships, the conflict between players is direct, brutal, and zero-sum: You bankrupt me or I bankrupt you.

Which is why so many rounds of Monopoly finish on a note of bitterness. The Spanish-themed El Grande, for instance, does not permit players to attack their opponents directly. Rather, players maneuver their caballeros around a map of medieval Spain in a bid to win the favor of local courtiers. You can play Scythe on Steam too. Designed by Magic: The Gathering creator Richard Garfield, King of Tokyo is a card game that has you and your friends go head-to-head as monsters battling for control of Tokyo.

You'll wield the fierce power of one of six monsters, aiming either to destroy Tokyo by garnering 20 victory points or to be the only monster still standing at the end. You'll roll dice to determine your actions and potentially gain victory points, and special playing cards will give your monster a new effect, like a second head that lets you roll an extra die, body armor, and more.

King of Tokyo is easy to learn, and each round lasts only about a half-hour, making this a quick and fun family game to teach to a new group. Blood Rage is a board game inspired by Norse mythology, casting you and your fellow players as Vikings during the time of Ragnarok. Your ultimate goal is to go out with a bang, earning glory to secure your place in Valhalla, and there are several strategies you can adopt to achieve this.

At the beginning of each round, or "Age" there are three , you'll be dealt cards called Gods' Gifts, giving you various abilities that you can then craft your strategy around. You'll use the game's resource, Rage, to perform actions, and winning a battle isn't always the goal--sometimes, you'll win glory points for being defeated.

At the end of each Age, a piece of the board is removed, and anyone on that portion is sent to Valhalla, earning even more glory for the players whose forces were there. With detailed miniatures and fantastic artwork, Blood Rage is an excellent strategy game where the end goal isn't survival, but earning the most glory before you take your place at Odin's side in Valhalla. Blood Rage is also available on Steam though reviews for the digital edition are mixed. Inspired by the H.

Lovecraft novella, Mountains of Madness casts you and your friends as scientific explorers scaling a mysterious mountain in the middle of Antarctica.

The problem: the higher you and your party climb, the more the mountain will begin to affect your mental health. To ascend the mountain, you and your team must pass a series of timed challenges that require quick and effective communication to pool a certain number of cards, and this task becomes much harder as your team begins to collect madness cards.

Madness cards are the core mechanic driving the chaos in this cooperative board game, as they add new rules that make communicating increasingly hard. There are three levels of madness cards, and you may have to "upgrade" to a harder one if you and your team even partially fail a task and you will Needless to say, Mountains of Madness descends into chaos as the madness cards get more ridiculous and the tasks get more difficult. It's a hard game to win, but that doesn't make it any less fun.

Azul is an easy-to-learn game where you collect tiles based on azulejos , a type of Portuguese tile used as decoration in buildings. The game's premise is that you're an artist decorating the walls of the Portuguese king's palace, but you're competing against other players to complete a full row of tiles on your player board first.

To do this, players take turns drafting tiles from the center of the table, placing them in a repository on the left side of your board. At the end of a round, you'll move one tile from your repository onto the corresponding row on your wall in a colored space that matches the tile. After someone completes a full row and the game ends, players can earn bonus points for their number of horizontal and vertical lines and for filling all tiles of a certain color, so there are multiple scoring conditions to keep in mind beyond just filling a single row.

Wingspan is a newer board game released in , but it's become an instant hit, winning the Kennerspiel des Jahres award and selling out at launch. In Wingspan, you play as bird-watchers looking to bring the best birds to your different habitats.

To add a bird card to one of your four habitats, you have to pay various costs, but it pays off--the more birds you add to a certain habitat, the more powerful your actions will become.

You'll also get special abilities and perks from the birds you have in play, which adds to the fun problems that test your problem-solving skills. At the end of the game, you'll win if you have the most points--these come from completing end-of-round goals, played bird cards, eggs, secret bonus cards, and more.

The art style is absolutely gorgeous, and the cards also include fun facts about each species at the bottom, making it one of the better family board games out there if your kid is interested in learning about birds as they play. However, Wingspan is also one of the best board games for adults as it has a lot of depth and strategy to it, and it now comes with the Swift-Start Promo Pack, which offers a quick tutorial to help you learn the game and start playing fast.

An official digital version is also out now on Steam and the Nintendo eShop. Deception: Murder in Hong Kong is one of the most fun social deception games we've ever played, and it's a great choice for big groups as well, as you can play it with up to 12 people. In Deception, you play as a team of investigators who are interpreting clues to solve a murder, with one person playing as a forensic scientist, who has the knowledge needed to convict the murderer but can only express that through their analysis of the murder scene for example, facts about how the victim was killed, the setting, the time of day, etc.

Each investigator has their own set of weapons and evidence that everyone else in the group can see, and the team must work together to identify which person is the secret murderer within the group, based on items and evidence that could match the forensic scientist's analysis.

Basically, Deception: Murder in Hong Kong is like Werewolf or Mafia meets Clue, and with each playthrough lasting only 15 to 30 minutes, you can easily play several rounds with people taking turns in different roles. Coup is a card game about bluffing and bribing your way to power, so get ready to put on your poker face before challenging your friends.

In Coup, you're the head of a power-hungry family in an Italian city-state, manipulating your way to the top of a corrupt court. Here's how it works: A card deck in the middle of the table players draw from contains multiples of five different characters, each of whom has a unique ability, and each player starts with two face-down character cards. Because no one knows which cards you have, you can bluff and use a character's unique ability, like stealing from the treasury or attempting an assassination, even if you don't have that card in your hand.

At any time, another player can challenge whether you actually have that card. If you do have the card in your hand and choose to prove it, they'll have to lose one of their cards. On the other hand, if you're bluffing or choose not to reveal the card in your hand, you'll lose one of your own cards, turning it face-up on the table.

If both of your characters get turned face-up, you're out of the game. Coup is easy to learn, and rounds will only take you about 15 minutes to play, making it a great card game to whip out at parties. If you love playing Tetris, you'll probably enjoy Patchwork, a two-player game where you place Tetris-like tiles on a 9x9 board of squares to slowly assemble a quilt. Each player has a stash of buttons, which you use to purchase tiles for your quilt, and you'll also keep track of your progress on a separate time board, which will net you more buttons and tiles as you progress.

By the end of the game, you'll be scored based on how many buttons you have left, subtracting 2 points for each empty tile still left on your board. Patchwork is a relaxing game to play--there's something satisfying about fitting tiles together and searching for the perfect piece to fill space on your board, even when there's no hand-eye coordination involved. Two-player board games like Patchwork are also nice to have around if you live with just one other person, as you'll always have a game you can play together.

It's available on Steam too. Even those who don't play board games have probably heard of Catan, a classic board game that focuses on resource-gathering and settlement-building that's simple to learn and addictingly fun. The gameplay of this family board game involves creating settlements adjacent to tiles that each have a number and resource on it. Each time that number is rolled, anyone with a settlement adjacent to that tile will get resources, and you can build new roads and settlements using the resources you gather.

The goal is to be the first to get 10 points, which you can achieve by building settlements, having the longest road, and more. If you try out this German-style board game and enjoy the basic gameplay, there are numerous expansions and themed editions available to spice things up. I recently tried out the Game of Thrones edition of Catan , which adds the Wall and a northern area with White Walkers that will try to break through it. This can completely change your strategy and requires you to consider wall defense on top of managing your resources and settlements.

Modern board games have certainly introduced some new ideas to the genre, but you can't deny the simple magic of one of the best turn-based games out there. Another classic game, Ticket to Ride is incredibly simple to learn, but it also maintains enough tension to keep things interesting. In Ticket to Ride, players collect cards of various train types, which you'll use to claim railroad routes across America.

To claim a single route, you need the required number and type of cards in your hands at once. Once you claim a route, it's yours for the rest of the game, and you'll earn points based on how long the route is. From the start of the game, you'll also have destination cards giving you specific goals connecting Chicago to Houston, for example , which will give you bonus points at the end of the game; however, you'll also lose points for not completing your destination ticket.

The simple but satisfying gameplay of Ticket to Ride has made it a long-standing favorite in the board game community, and it's received multiple follow-up versions and expansion packs to extend your weekly game night sessions.



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