Tag: fit to print

Top 10 games I played for the first time in 2023

Top 10 games I played for the first time in 2023

Hello, friends! You’ve made it to the end of 2023. Pat yourselves on the back for surviving the year! I feel so lucky for all that happened this past year, including going back to the Philippines and attending several gaming conventions! And of course lots of gaming in between. Here are the top 10 games I played for the first time this past year. 

10. Scout 

I often keep Scout in my purse because it’s such a compact game and easy to each others.

Scout is a delightful ladder-climbing game in which cards have two potential values, players may not rearrange their hand of cards, and players may pass their turn to take a card from the current high set of cards into their hand. At the start of the game, you receive a hand of cards, and you can decide if you want to play the values on the top of the card or the bottom of the card — but you must rotate the entire hand, not just the individual cards. When it’s your turn, you must play a card or set of cards (without rearranging your hand) in order to beat what’s already been played, or you’re out of the round. The game plays up to 5, it lasts about 15 minutes, and not at all difficult for new gamers to understand. Plus, the box fits neatly in your purse so it’s easy to travel with. 

9. The Gods Will Have Blood

The Gods Will Have Blood is such a unique solitaire gaming experience.

The Gods Will Have Blood, a solitaire game from Dan Bullock based on the book by Anatole France’s 1912 Novel “Les Dieux Ont Soif, The Gods Will Have Blood” is such a unique and grim gaming experience. As an appointed magistrate in 1793 France, you are presiding over show trials of accused royalists and counterrevolutionaries, with the goal of elevating your reputation without tanking the legitimacy of the court. You make some tough decisions in deciding who is guilty and not guilty, and dealing with the consequences — and court momentum — of those choices. The game is artfully designed and comes in a small box, making it easy to bust out a solo game almost anywhere.

8. Voidfall

Voidfall is a beast of a game, one that I’ve enjoyed playing time and again.

In all honesty, I kept going back and forth about adding Voidfall to this list. I’ve enjoyed each game of Voidfall I’ve played but the overwhelming giant-ness of the game can be a turnoff for some. First off, it comes in a giant square box, it takes possibly about 45 minutes to set up a scenario, and there’s endless amounts of icons, which over several plays become more intuitive. What looks like a classic galactic space 4x game really plays like a euro. As the leader of a Great House (complete with house-specific abilities), you play through three cycles, each with a game-altering galactic event, a new scoring condition, and a set number of focus cards that can be played. On each focus card, you select two of the three actions printed on it. You can advance your civilization tracks; manage your sectors’ infrastructure, population and production; or conquer new sectors with your space fleets. It’s an epic game that I’m glad a friend of mine owns and sets up when we decide to play it. 

7, Revive

Revive is a game that I want to play over and over again.

Revive features a lot of game mechanisms I enjoy: multi-use cards, tech trees, card-tucking and deckbuilding, all while using dual-layered player boards. The game is set 5,000 years after the destruction of Earth and tribes are now exploring the frozen earth in order to repopulate it and survive. The game is for 1 to 4 players, with each tribe having its own asymmetrical powers. The game is a table hog though, with the main player board, and each player’s tribe board and player board, which holds giant tracks of various machines. Play cards into your board, manage your resources, go up on machine tracks for bonus actions, unlock your tribal abilities and collect artifacts, which counts down the end of the game — there are multiple paths to victory and lots of options to combo your actions, making your turns extremely satisfying. 

6. Ark Nova 

Building my zoo requires the perfect combination of animal cards and conservation projects.

I’ve logged countless games of this online at Board Game Arena and in person. In Ark Nova, you’re working to build and design a zoo, and support conservation projects around the world. The game consists of five actions, and the strength of the actions depends on where the card is placed in your tableau. The game comes with 255 cards featuring animals, specialists, special enclosures, and conservation projects. As you specialize in partnerships with world zoos and increase your reputation, you’ll be able to increase the strength of your core five actions. If you’re looking for an immersive zoo game, this will not be for you, but as a dry euro fan, this puzzly game is worth checking out. 

5. Planet Unknown

Planet Unknown is a fun puzzle where players pick the pieces for you, unless it’s your turn.

I’ve only played Planet Unknown on Board Game Arena but have greatly enjoyed it. Planet Unknown is a competitive game for 1-6 players in which players attempt to develop the best planet. Each round, each player places one polyomino-shaped, dual-resource tile on their planet. The tiles are situated on a Lazy Susan, in which there are two concentric circles holding the various shaped tiles. On your turn, you rotate the Lazy Susan so that you can have the option between two types of tiles – and force others to take the two tiles that result from your spin. When you place the tiles on your planet, you’ll go up the resource track of the type of the tiles you lay down. The Lazy Susan is such a neat mechanism, and the puzzly gameplay keeps everyone engaged at every turn. 

4. People Power

I never thought I’d see a board game on a pivotal moment of history for my people.

In one of my most highly anticipated games of the year (for the past few years actually, since I wasn’t sure when this was going to come out!), People Power is a game about my people and the insurgency in the Philippines during 1981-1986. People Power plays in about 2 hours, which is fairly short for a COIN. And you know what that makes it? Accessible to more people. Seeing people of color in a board game as well as not needing a 30-minute video to explain the battle action are some of the very things that would help diversity this very niche area of board gaming. The actions in People Power are streamlined, the player aides are very easy to follow, and, with such a small map, it makes the game tense and fast-moving game to play. This is a COIN that I can actually teach to others — I could not have said that with previous COIN titles.

3. Fit to Print 

Feel the pressure of reporting and assembling a front page of a newspaper!

In Fit to Print, players take on the roles of editors-in-chief assembling the front page of the tiny town of Thistleville’s newspaper to be balanced with news stories, photos and advertising. All of these items are represented in over 130-plus unique block tiles, which are placed in the middle of the table face down. The game goes through three rounds: Friday, Saturday and Sunday, with each subsequent newspaper front page getting larger. Fit to Print captures the stress of a daily deadline when laying out your newspaper, all wrapped up in a cutesy theme of woodland creatures. When I brought this to a game night recently with some journalist friends to play, one lady said she had stress dreams later that night about missing the deadline. It’s an enjoyable real-time puzzle for 1-6 players, but it’s up to you how fast-paced you want your games to go. 

2. Lacrimosa

This gorgeous euro is trying to continue Mozart’s legacy.

The theme drew me into Lacrimosa and it’s the gameplay that has me coming back to this game again and again. Mozart is dead and his final wish was to finish composing the Lacrimosa movement of his Opus Requiem. Players work as Mozart patrons helping to sell or exhibit his works, commission missing parts of the requiem and travel across Europe to various courts and theaters. Lacrimosa is a deckbuilder that isn’t a true deckbuilder but instead filled with multi-use cards that you can upgrade later by buying stronger cards. You draw a few action cards each turn and decide to use them for actions or rewards based on how you tuck them into your dual-layer player board. It’s a gorgeous board that beautifully merges a strong theme and euro-style gameplay, something that doesn’t happen too often in board games!

1. Votes for Women

Did you guess my top game of 2023 was Votes for Women?

What can I say about this game that I haven’t already? I am constantly talking about this game and bring it with me to every convention I go to in order to teach it to whoever wants to play it. Votes for Women is a card-driven game in which each side has its own set of cards. The goal of the game is two-fold. The suffragists want to push to Congress the 19th Amendment and campaign to have 36 states ratify it. The Opposition will try to prevent Congress from proposing the amendment or if they fail to do that, have 13 states reject the amendment. Votes for Women is a game that I can see myself in (a rarity in this hobby). It’s a game that new gamers and experienced gamers alike can play. I like it best as a 2-player but it can be played 1-4 players, with various team options for the suffrage side and the opposition. The game is beautifully done with awesome components, with lots of history in the cards as well as replicas of historical documents relating to the historic moment in women’s rights.

So that’s my top 10 games that I played for the first time in 2023. Which ones have you played? And what is on your top 10 list? I hope everyone had a wonderful holiday season, and here’s to a wonderful 2024. Some of my new year’s resolutions include playing more games more regularly, and possibly attending a convention that I have yet to attend.

SDHist Con 2023: Molly House, Shores of Tripoli, Fire and Stone: Siege of Vienna, Ahoy

SDHist Con 2023: Molly House, Shores of Tripoli, Fire and Stone: Siege of Vienna, Ahoy

On Nov. 2, 2023, I made the trek from Phoenix to San Diego for SDHist Con, an annual historical board game convention that was founded by game designer Harold Buchanan. This year it was held on Nov. 3-5, 2023. It’s my second time attending the convention in person, and after last year’s convention, I knew this one was a must-attend-every-year convention for me. This year, about 150 tickets were handed out, a combination of gamers, designers and publishers alike. It’s the convention to playtest and pitch your game, meet with wargaming companies, and, just overall, enjoy the sea, sun and seafood that San Diego has to offer! 

SDHist Con held a meet and greet the night before the convention at Eppig Brewing.

I arrived late Thursday afternoon, checked into my airbnb (though there are plenty of motels and hotels near the convention location), and met up with Dan Bullock before heading to Eppig Brewing for a pre-convention meet and greet. SDHist Con provided pizza and salad and reserved space for convention goers at an outdoor beer garden overlooking a San Diego marina. I tried all the sour beers Eppig had and they were all quite tasty. 

Dan Bullock and I went over and ran into Candice Harris of BGG!

I met some cool people for the first time and I really enjoyed the evening. More conventions should schedule a meet and greet beforehand! It’s a great time to meet new people in a low-key social setting before diving head-first into nonstop gaming the following morning. 

Me with Candice Harris (center) of BGG and Liz Davidson of Beyond Solitaire.

Friday

On Friday morning, SDHist Con began! This year’s convention was held at the S.E.S. Portuguese Hall of San Diego nestled in the Point Loma Marina area of San Diego. There are lots of restaurants, coffee shops and breweries within walking distance, including Point Loma Seafoods, a seafood counter place where you can buy food and eat at picnic tables overlooking the marina. The hall was such a great location, and it’s quite near the airport, so you don’t really need a car to get around, unless you’re exploring more of San Diego. 

SDHist Con was held at the SES Portuguese Hall in San Diego.

First up, I ran into Alex Knight, designer of Land and Freedom: The Spanish Revolution and Civil War. I really enjoyed his game when I played at Consimworld this past fall and was excited to meet him in person and ask him to sign my game. It’s a great historical game that plays at 3P, fighting against a common enemy while trying to balance your faction’s needs.

Met designer Alex Knight for the first time!

My first game of the con was Shores of Tripoli from Fort Circle Games, a card-driven historical wargame on the First Barbary War. It’s a 2-player game (the Tripolitania and its allies, vs. American and its allies) and I played as the side of the Americans. Each side had their own deck, and the game takes place over 6 years,starting in 1801, with four seasons (a card play each season) in each year. Army. If neither player has achieved victory by the end of 1806, the game ends in a draw. It’s a neat card-driven game that plays in about an hour. Those who played Shorts of Tripoli (there were four games simultaneously going) were entered into a raffle, and I won a copy of the game! 

Playing Shores of Tripoli by Fort Circle Games. I’ve been enjoying their games!

I stopped by to see Dan doing a demo of his game Blood and Treasure. This is such a great game, and I really hope a publisher picks it up soon! I’ve played it twice before and think it’s such a unique game.

Dan Bullock’s Blood and Treasure prototype about military contracts during the Afghanistan War.

I then signed up for a teach of Matthias Cramer’s The Promised Land, a game that covers the Israelian-Arabian conflict between 1960 (end of War of Independence) and 1978 (Camp David). It’s a card-driven mostly political game, but players can go to war while also negotiating the peace treaty as well. The game has a lot of tracks, and in addition to playing a card from your hand, some dice rolls can determine which actions you can take.

Matthias Cramer has a new prototype called The Promised Land.

I learned the game with all these cool people. We played through one war to get the gist of the game before our scheduled time was up. So many games, so little time!

A bunch of us learning The Promised Land with the designer himself! Matthias Cramer is on my left.

Next up was Molly House. This was the game I was most excited to check out at this convention! Molly House, which just wrapped up its BackerKit campaign, is the latest from Wehrlegig Games. Players take the roles of the gender-defying mollies of early 18th century London. Molly House has masquerade balls, back alleys for cruising and moments of joy within the queer community. But, there could be a constable among you that’s threatening to ruin all the fun! 

Molly House was such a fun experience! I can’t wait until this comes out!

I love the inclusive and unique theme, and I know when the final product is released, the components will be top-notch. This demo included fun fancy pieces, and I immediately backed the game after playing it at the con.

I then attended a panel on creating written content, which was hosted by Andrew Bucholtz, and featured Dan Thurot, Candice Harris of Board Game Geek, and The Players Aid. SDHist Con has an entire schedule of panels and discussions in addition to scheduled gaming in the main hall. 

SDHist Con had a whole schedule of panels during the con. Here, Andrew Bucholtz (from left) leads the panel with Dan Thurot, Candice Harris of BGG and the Players Aid.

It was really neat listening to all the panelists discuss their backgrounds and how they got into creating board-game content. I always love listening to fellow writers to get some inspiration! Plus, I got to meet the Players Aid guys for the first time!

I got to meet the guys at Players Aid! They have so much good wargaming content on their channels!

After dinner, I played an unnamed 2-player card prototype from Joe Schmidt. It’s a quick area control that is played out over three rounds, and the map itself is just four different cards, with the player first to 7 points wins the game. Meeples are either pawns (when they’re lying down) or knights (when they’re standing up) Your card has an initiative number, one of two actions you can do, and where the action can take place. It was really easy to pick up and doesn’t require a lot of space on table (or in your bag!), while still being tense and enjoyable.

Joe’s Schmidt’s prototype was a card game on area control where you use knights and pawns. Interested to see how this will develop!

I then played Lost Legacy, a spin-off of Love Letter, where you draw and play a card, with the hopes of finding the “Lost Legacy” card. I had so much fun playing with these cool folks that I actually forgot to take a photo of the game itself!

Joe Schmidt, Liz Davidson, Dan Thurot and Cole Wehrle are about to play Lost Legacy, and Drew Wehrle stopped by for the photo!

I then taught a game of My Favourite Things, a trick-taking icebreaker card game that’s one of my absolute favorites! You never really know how this game will play out when playing with people you don’t know too well, considering a lot of these people I met for the first time in real life at this convention. But it was a hit! My demo copy of the game was sent to me from the publisher, so this may or may not be the final look of the game.

My Favourite Things is just delightful chaos. Look at all the different categories written here.

Players pick a category and ask their neighbor to write down their top 5 favorite things in that category, plus one they hate, into these card sleeves, at the end covering up their number ranking when you slide the card back into the sleeve. You then play these cards as a trick-taking game, guessing the best way you can about which items are ranked more favorably than others. We got some absurd categories and even more absurd things. It was a riot! It was such a fun way to end the first day of SDHist Con. 

Saturday

I began Saturday by teaching Lacrimosa. I always bring a few games with me to SDHist Con in case anyone would be interested in playing a non-wargame. I taught a 3P game and everyone seemed to enjoy it! The theme is unique – we did have a few “Weekend at Bernie’s” jokes about Mozart traveling across Germany – and the components and dual-layer player boards are just exquisite. 

Growing Mozart’s legacy after his death in Lacrimosa.

I then had lunch at Point Loma Seafoods. SDHist Con actually had this place on the convention schedule, which provided an easy option for gamers to have lunch, plus a good reminder to get some food to fuel your day. I had some fish and chips. I was not disappointed! 

I ordered some fish and chips are Point Loma Seafoods. So yum!

I then played Fire and Stone: Siege of Vienna 1683, which places you in one of the most dramatic sieges in history. Each player has their own set of cards, and you’ll be playing them to attack, dig tunnels and advance your forces, while your opponent is doing exactly that, or you can use the event written on the card. I enjoyed taking my Ottomans toward the Habsburgs in the Vienna capital. 

Fire and Stone is a 2P wargame about sieging or defending the city of Vienna.

Fire and Stone plays in about 60-90 minutes, and with its familiar card-driven mechanism and large hex-based map (instead of a daunting map of teeny-tiny ones), it’s one that makes it perfect as a finalist for the 2023 Summit Awards.

SDHist Con founder and game designer Harold Buchanan!

The Summit Award aims to recognize a historical board game published in the preceding year that most broadened the hobby through the ease of teaching and/or play, uniqueness of topic, or novel approach. I’ve played all four of the Summit Awards nominees, and they’re all different yet fantastic games. I’ve reviews Stonewall Uprising and Votes for Women on The Five By, and John Company I had the pleasure of playing at last year’s SDHist Con with Cole and Drew Werhle! The diversity of these games’ themes and accessibility of gameplay are what I would love to see more of in the historical gaming corner of our hobby. 

Tory Brown, designer of Votes for Women, talking about the game’s map.

I then attended a seminar from Tory Brown, the designer of Votes for Women! I seriously was fangirling the entire time. I’ve taught Votes for Women countless times, to experienced gamers and newer gamers alike. The game has appealed to my girlfriends simply because of the topic, and with that, they jumped into a wargame they wouldn’t otherwise and learned what a CDG is. Tory’s seminar also reiterated how much time and commitment it takes to design a game. She said she started in earnest in April 2020, in the midst of the early pandemic, and worked on the game full time, which was finally released earlier this year. I don’t know how all you designers do it! Props to you all and your time-management skills. 

It was so lovely to meet Tory Brown! I asked her to sign my game.

I then stopped by to listen to the start of a demo for Tyranny of Blood: India’s Caste System Under British Colonialism, 1750-1947 by Akar Bharadvaj. The game is the winner of the 2021 Zenobia Award, which is both a competition and a mentoring program in which game designers from underrepresented groups develop and submit historical tabletop game prototypes. I didn’t get a chance to play Tyranny of Blood but hopefully next time!

A look at the Tyranny of Blood prototype by Zenobia winner Akar Bharadvaj.

I then played one of the new factions in Ahoy by Leder Games. Like with all Leder Games, this game just looks so darling, and I have fun playing the Blackfish Brigade. Ahoy is a lightly asymmetrical game where two to four players take the roles of swashbucklers and soldiers seeking fame on the high seas. The latest Backerkit campaign introduces four new factions, one of which is the Blackfish Brigade whales.

The Blackfish Brigade is one of the four new factions for Ahoy.

In Ahoy, you roll dice at the start of the round and use those dice to fill in sections of your board to take actions. The actions may have certain dice requirements, which will affect which actions you can do on your turn. I did a lot of moving my whale pod around and dropping off fins in order to score area-control points at the end of the round. 

Look at all the cute components in Ahoy!

A big group of us went to get Asian dumplings for dinner down the street at Meet Dumpling. The sweet corn and chicken dumplings hit the spot for me. Look at this fun group! 

Alex Knight (from left), Cole Wehrle, Liz Davidson, me, Dan Bullock, Taylor Shuss, Dan Thurot and Drew Wehrle get dinner at Meet Dumpling.

We then walked over to Craft Creamery for some ice cream, and I seriously squealed when the ice cream of my childhood was being sold at this shop. I spent a lot of time at Fosselman’s Ice Cream after school and totally had to order ube ice cream. 

I had to get ube ice cream from Fosselman’s, which was being sold at Craft Creamery.

When we got back to the hall, the giant Liberty or Death board game was about to start. Look at the costumes! 

Giant Liberty or Death, costumes optional!

I then ran my largest  game of Fit to Print yet at 6P. This game is so, so fun! There’s nothing like being on deadline! Upkeep at 6P was a little daunting but everyone was having a good time analyzing their front page and what they could do better in the next round that nobody seemed to mind the time I spent adding up the scores. 

My glorious Sunday front page! Just ignore the white space though.

Sunday

On Sunday morning, I attended the SDHist Con board meeting, as the public was invited! They talked about the state of the convention, what events are planned for next year, and just overall how they can increase diversity and accessibility at their events. I love hearing discussion on this because it’s a topic that’s near and dear to my heart. There have been countless times I’ve attended events where I’m the only person who looks like me and have even been asked if I’m waiting for my husband or boyfriend. I was not, thank you very much, I was there to play some games. 

The awesome people who make up the SDHist Con member board and advisory board.

SDHIst Con is a convention where I’ve never felt out of place and have always been welcomed. I love schmoozing with all the game designers, listening to their design process, learning new games, and understanding the ins and outs of publishing without our hobby. There’s so much helpful knowledge and feedback being passed around at this intimate, laid-back and friendly convention. And bonus, you also learn a lot of about historical battles and moments in history that people are very passionate about!

The last game of the convention was Heat: Pedal to the Metal, which I was happy to play alongside Harold, fearless leader of SDHist Con! I’ve been playing Heat a lot on Board Game Arena lately, so I was familiar with the game, but it can’t compete with zooming your little plastic car around a hairpin turn and pressing luck by not spinning out.  

The last game of the convention for me: Heat!

And with that, three days of gaming in San Diego came to a close and I began my drive back to Phoenix, which takes about 5.5 hours. Not too bad! I don’t have the dates yet for next year’s convention, but I’ll definitely be there again! I’d love to spend some extra time in San Diego, too, next year. 

Lastly, here are the games I acquired during the convention. I purchased Dan’s The Gods Will Have Blood, a solo game set in France in April 1793 about presiding over trials and influencing the legitimacy of the court, a copy of Shores of Tripoli that I randomly won for playing, and Shikoku 1889. Thanks, Grand Trunk Games for giving me a copy! I can’t wait to get it on table! 

I got a chance to play The Gods Will Have Blood a few days after leaving San Diego. What a cool solo experience! Shikoku 1889 is the last one of this group I haven’t played.

Thanks for reading, friends! Let me know if any of these games look interesting to you. And if you made it all the way down here, here’s a cute photo I took of a driver and his canine companion in San Diego. It’s a sunwoof!

Look at this cool (and ginormous) dog!
Fit To Print: Read all about it!

Fit To Print: Read all about it!

This review of Fit To Print is featured on Episode 140 of The Five By. Check out the rest of the episode, which also features Legacy of Yu, Sea Salt & Paper, Flamecraft and Rise.

As someone who started their career in the newspaper world, it’s rare to see a board game with that exact theme. So, when I saw the Kickstarter for Fit to Print, I immediately backed it. When it finally arrived on my front door, like the morning edition of the daily paper, I was so excited to get the game on table, to see if this tile-laying real-time game captures the essence of what it’s like to assemble the front page of a newspaper before the time runs out. 

Fit to Print, designed by Peter McPherson and with charming woodland creature artwork from Ian O’Toole, co-published by Flatout Games and Alderac Entertainment Group in 2023. It plays one to six people, in about 30 minutes. It’s a fast-paced and hectic puzzle (in the funnest way possible), the perfect game to squeeze into that small time frame when you’ve got a game day deadline. See what I did there? 

In Fit to Print, players take on the roles of editors-in-chief assembling the front page of the tiny town of Thistleville’s newspaper to be balanced with news stories, photos and advertising. All of these items are represented in over 130-plus unique block tiles, which are placed in the middle of the table face down. The game goes through three rounds: Friday, Saturday and Sunday, with each subsequent newspaper front page getting larger. 

Time to assemble the front page! Deadlines matter here!

The rounds are split up between the reporting phrase and the layout phase. Players can decide before playing if they want a frantic, standard or relaxed game, with the timer set at 3 minutes, 4 minutes or 5 minutes for the round. When gameplay begins, players simultaneously flip over tiles in the middle of the table (with one hand one at a time) and individually select which piece to add to their cardboard desk, and when a player decides they have gathered enough tiles to fill their front page, they move onto the layout phase of the game (all the while the clock is still running in case you forgot) and lay out tiles on their front page board. And yes, each player gets a cute little cardboard desk you assemble and take down with each game. 

The whole setup for my front page, complete with a little cardboard desk.

How you place these tiles matters on your board as they’ll score points at the end of each day. News stories come in three varieties: sports and entertainment, news, and business technology, respectively pink, blue and green tiles. Articles also come with moods: good news or bad news. The same types of tiles do not like sitting orthogonally next to each other. Photos want to be separated from other photos, as well as ads. The exception to this is news stories. You can place different types of stories next to each other, but you won’t score any points for placing business stories next to each other. 

Just like real life editorial design, you want to maximize your space, and if you are unable to perfectly piece all the elements of your front page (or worse, didn’t get enough tiles to fill the space, which happens all the time), you’ll be penalized with negative points. The person with the largest continuous white space will receive the biggest penalty. Alternatively, if you take too many tiles, you’ll also get negative points but luckily, you’ll have them on your desk to publish in tomorrow’s front page. 

Players also begin with a centerpiece, which has to be placed anywhere above the fold and covering the star printed on the board. The centerpieces offer different ways to score points if you meet their qualifications. Photos score points for news stories it’s adjacent to. You also want a balanced front page. Too many sad stories vs happy stories, and you’ll be docked points. Lastly, ads give you revenue, which will be added up after three days, and the person with the least revenue goes bankrupt, goes out of business and is ineligible to win.

One of my best front pages! Look at how few open spaces I have!

Fit to Print also comes with advanced modes such as player powers and adding a breaking news deck, which places unique restrictions and bonuses for the day. The rulebook also comes with a family mode to reduce complexity, as well as a solo mode that comes with scenarios to track achievements. Lastly, the game also comes with rules for a newsroom mode, which supports 4 to 12 players in teams of 2. Within each team, one player is the reporter and the other the layout editor, and teams are spaced apart around 12 feet. I haven’t tried this yet but I can imagine the frenetic chaos of the reporter picking up tiles from a centralized table. 

So how does Fit to Print stack up? It’s so freaking fun. That polyomino puzzle is a mechanism many of us are familiar with, but amping up the gameplay with the real-time aspect of it — genius! Every time I’ve played it, I like to yell out things like “30 seconds left” during gameplay, to which someone inevitably yells “Shut UP!” and a few other colorful words that I won’t be repeating for our family-friendly podcast. Once that clock starts for the round, the excitement fills the room and everyone is hyperfocused on picking up pieces to collect on your little cardboard desk

Fit To Print has been a hit every time I’ve played it.

Sometimes your eyes are bigger than the allotted space for your front page. But then Sunday rolls around, and that extra space somehow exponentially makes A1 so much harder to fill up and fill it up well! 

One of my friends described it as Galaxy Trucker with the misfortune of having your ship getting blown to bits. Here, you just scrap your front page after scoring your points and get ready for the next day’s edition. And the game’s artwork is just so cute and the characters endearing. I have a fondness for Boris Erenstein, the grizzled news reporter who started out as a copyeditor and has 20-years of journalism experience behind him. He looks like the type of guy who would make deadlines, even if you have just three minutes left. If you love real time tactile puzzle games, Fit to Print is for you.

And that’s Fit to Print! This is Meeple Lady for The Five By. You can find me on all the socials as Meeple Lady, or on my website boardgamemeeplelady.com. Thanks for listening. Bye!

Consimworld 2023: People Power, Land and Freedom

Consimworld 2023: People Power, Land and Freedom

This year, I was only able to make it for a few days at Consimworld, the annual wargaming convention in Tempe, Arizona. I got sick the week prior (derailing a bunch of other plans), which, of course, left me super bummed, but I made the most of the time there — and got some great gaming in! The convention this year went from Aug. 25-Sep. 1, 2023, at the Tempe Mission Palms, and over 240 people attended. 

The main ballroom at Consimworld, held at Tempe Mission Palms in Tempe, Arizona.

Wednesday

I arrived on Wednesday and started with Brass: Birmingham. This sequel to the classic Martin Wallace game Brass has you developing, building and establishing your industries and network, in an effort to exploit low or high market demands. This game differs from the original as it adds the beer market, and there’s a chance to discard cards from your hand in order to take a wild card. In the original game, you would’ve been stuck with what was in your hand until you drew a card you could use. This was my first time playing Brass Birmingham, and I can see how Birmingham is popular with many gamers. Would definitely play again!

Brass: Birmingham’s color scheme is what I imagine cities looked like during the Industrial Revolution.

I then scoped out the vendor hall and picked up Land and Freedom: The Spanish Revolution and Civil War, a recent release from new designer Alex Knight and Blue Panther Games. This is a three-player wargame where Spain’s three fighting factions — Anarchists, Communists and Moderates — must unite and fight off right-wing army generals aided by Hitler and Mussolini.

Land and Freedom: The Spanish Revolution and Civil War just came out from Blue Panther Games.

This semi-cooperative tug of war is super fun (and not too long at about 90 minutes) and the game is powered by a card-driven mechanism to complete objectives that enable you to seed a draw bag, for which a random chit-pull will give you VPs throughout the game. 

We used a plexi since my copy was brand-new. It’s great for gameplay but bad for photos.

I then had to leave early because I went to a Weezer concert. I had a blast. They were playing in downtown Phoenix, and it’s probably about 10 years since I last saw them in person.

Weezer played a few songs from Pinkerton, which is my favorite album of theirs.

Thursday

Thursday was a full day of gaming! We started with Obsession. I love the theme of this game — think Jane Austen society where parties, gardens and marrying well were your family’s only priority — and it works so well as a resource management, deck-building, worker placement game. Each player plays as a prominent family of the time, and you have a hand of cards that represent different family members.

Your meeples represent servants you employ in Obsession.

On your turn, you’re working to invite people to your parties (playing cards from your hand) to a room in your house (in an effort to upgrade the room). These guests sometimes require servants, of which you have a small army of them and can hire more, and in return, most guests can increase your reputation and/or give you money. Unfortunately, some guests are worth negative points — those rich new money Americans (but they give you a lot of money!) or those cads who are just awful at your parties. After your party, that card is exhausted until you refresh your deck, and your servants get to rest a round until they can be used to help your future guests. It’s such a thematic euro!

Next up was People Power, taught to us by the designer himself Kenneth Tee! I had actually met him on Wednesday and got him to sign my game. (If you must know, I was totally fangirling). I think his friends were very amused. 

Me and People Power designer Kenneth Tee. I had just asked him to sign my game.

So on Thursday, we played Obsession with him and he was kind enough to run a 3P game of People Power. You all know I’ve been waiting for this game FOR YEARS, and even did a fun photoshoot on Instagram when the game arrived earlier this summer, but I haven’t had a chance to get it on table yet. 

Kenneth Tee is about to teach Dan Bullock, Cory Graham and me how to play People Power.

People Power is the latest COIN (CounterINsurgency) game from GMT Games. This one is special to me because it deals with my motherland, the Philippines. Most wargame and board game conventions I go to, I stick out like a sore thumb, and it’s even rarer to play a historical game where that representation is evident. And now it’s here, and I can’t stop raving about it. 

There are over 7,600 islands in the Philippines. This map does a great job of simplifying the main areas for the purpose of the game. I even got to see all the islands I visited this past year.

People Power plays in about 2 hours, which is fairly short for a COIN. And you know what that makes it? Accessible to more people. Seeing people of color as well as not needing a 30-minute video to explain the battle action (I’m looking at you, Pendragon) is one of the very things that would help diversity this very niche area of board gaming. The actions in People Power are streamlined, the player aides are very easy to follow, and, with such a small map, it makes the game tense and fast-moving game to play. And dare I say, this is a COIN that I could actually teach to others? I could not have said that with previous COIN titles. 

We then played a 4P game of Dan Bullock’s prototype: Blood and Treasure, a game about the U.S.-Afghan War and the contractors who would profit from it. Contractors bid for contracts, specialize in industries, and hire workers to complete projects — without getting inspected by the government too much. I enjoy this game the more I play it, but I have to remember it’s not always about completing the most contracts; the name of the game is collecting those government contracts and secretly undercutting your opponents. And with 4P, it’s much more cut-throat.

When Blood and Treasure gets published, we’re all expecting giant chonky pieces in the game, like these weighted chess pieces.

We then played a quick game of Fit to Print! I just received this game in the mail the previous week, and this was surprisingly a big hit! In Fit to Print, you’re all working at a newspaper trying to design A1 (the front page) with a good mix of various articles, photos and advertising while maintaining a balanced set of sad and positive news — in real time! Game play goes for three days (rounds), and each day begins with the reporting phase where you’re simultaneously flipping over pieces from the center of the table one at a time at your little cardboard desk. You then decide if you want to keep that piece for the layout phase or put it back into the middle of the table. You do this for a limited number of minutes, and by the end of it, you’ll have a stack of tiles on your deck. 

I love, love everything about Fit to Print — from its cute artwork to its theme and its gameplay!

Then comes the layout phase: place those tiles onto your blank newspaper page, following guidelines (which you’ll get penalized for not following) and photos next to stories (of which there are three different types) they like. With each day, starting on Friday to Sunday, the size of the paper gets bigger, so it’s such a challenge to figure out how many tiles you’ll need for each day — and if they’ll be able to fit nicely into your template while the clock winds down! 

Consimworld attendees attend the board game auction and raffle.

That evening was the auction and raffle. I stopped by for the raffle part and won this cool game! If any of you have played this, let me know how it is. 

I won a game! That’s always super fun.

We ended Thursday night at Fate Brewing Company for some yummy food and even yummier beer. There are three locations in the Valley, and we went to the one in south Scottsdale. Definitely worth checking out if you’re ever in town. 

Cory, Dan and I enjoy our drinks after a fun day of gaming.

Friday

We started our last day with our annual game of Maria. We play this every year, but I always kind of feel like I’m coming into this game cold. I’m definitely putting a calendar reminder for next year to brush up on the rules for next year’s convention! I must get better at this game! 

Maria is a game based on the War of the Austrian Succession, between 1740 and 1748.

The last game I played at the convention was The North Provenance. I had never heard of this but I was immediately intrigued by the box and card art! It’s a 2P card combo game with multi-use cards where you reprogram Ancients, build Facilities and power up Nodes in an effort to chip away at your opponent’s VPs.

The game has some really net artwork. And depending on if you play it or activate in your tableau, either the protocol or spark action activates.

It’s a constant tug of war, and when your engine gets really built out, the action combinations are so satisfying! 

The box art is also so slick!

I had a great time at this year’s Consimworld, even though I could only make three of its eight-day run. I hope my plans go much more smoothly next year! And for those interested in next year’s convention — mark your calendars! Consimworld 2024 will be held on July 12-20, 2024. Thanks, Consimworld, for having me!