Originally posted by Newjak
Congrats 🙂I know right I've barely been into board games but i already have learned a lot.
Also yeah getting a collection going is hard.
I know one friend that has over 500 games and it is crazy.
That's too much, plain and simple. I can't imagine the justification for something like that, or the bank account that would be needed to fund it. My goal isn't to become some massive collector. I want somewhere around 30 games that I enjoy. And I want to have an array of games for different occasions. So, for example, 5 friends are over and we're drinking...we need something easy to learn, casual, and fun for 5-6 people. Or I'm on a double date and I need some cool 4-player games, potentially with teams. Or it's just me and a friend. Or just me. Or a few "heavier" games for a gamer crowd.
Gaming is a social thing for me, I'm not just in its for the games (with rare exceptions when it's just me). So my main goal is accommodating various social situations in ways that maximize that fun. And I certainly don't need 500, or even 100, games to accomplish that. Even with regularly playing stuff, 20-30 games is a huge rotation.
Recent Purchases:
- Risk & Castle Risk: more for Castle Risk, a fun, obscure variation.
- Stratego: lost my old set, needed a new one.
- 221B Baker Street: sounds like a more complex Clue with a Sherlock Holmes theme. I don't have high hopes - reviews are mixed - but it was cheap as balls.
- Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective: apparently an incredibly hard, massively interactive roleplaying/deduction game, that you play cooperatively with any number of people. Reviews looked great, and while it's not a party game, it could be a great 2-3 player game.
- Love Letter: As mentioned earlier, a simple, inexpensive, but deceptively intriguing little game. It initially seems like a lot of luck, and there is a fair amount. But there's ample statistical and deductive analysis that can give players an edge.
Free Stuff (Downloadable/Printable Games):
- Rat Hot: A simple 2-player puzzle strategy game. It's got enough to make you think, and is a nice way to kill 20-30 minutes.
- Mythwars: Clash of the Gods: A card-based combat game with teams of gods from various pantheons. Haven't played it yet, but it seems entertaining.
- Regnum Angelica: Another divine card-based combat system, but this one includes a board for movement and has quite a bit of complexity to it. The free printable version is a "lite" version. It's playable, but not as deep as the full game. If friends/gf like Mythwars, I will test this out, but may not play it otherwise.
Considering:
Lords of Waterdeep, One Night Ultimate Werewolf, Oddville, Hive, Dixit, Ticket to Ride