‘Council of Verona: Corruption’ Expansion Coming Soon
Early review of ‘Council of Verona: Corruption’; Coming soon to Kickstarter!
Continue ReadingEarly review of ‘Council of Verona: Corruption’; Coming soon to Kickstarter!
Continue ReadingDone unwrapping presents today? Wait! There’s one more — a special two game episode of Geek & Sundry’s TableTop.
Continue ReadingThere’s an important piece of information out there, and everyone’s after it. It could be the most valuable MacGuffin ever. Your goal is to figure out the secret before everyone else and get to the Dead Drop.
Continue ReadingAdd another game to your wishlist, folks. Rise! is a powerful strategy game waiting for you to surprise your friends with.
Continue ReadingCrash Games makes a fun impact on game night with Council of Verona, an abstract strategy game.
Continue ReadingCouncil of Verona takes players to the world of Romeo and Juliet, where the families once again take issue with one another.
Continue ReadingJust a couple months ago Crash Games successfully funded a quick train-based card game called Yardmaster. Game designer David Short was inspired to take this small game and make it even smaller. Introducing Yardmaster Express.
Continue ReadingTrains aren’t a new theme for board games, so I’m all out of train-related puns—I’ve already used things like “all aboard” and there’s only so many things you can say about tracks. Nevertheless, there is a lot of variety in the types of games that feature trains, and now game designer Steven Aramini and publisher Crash Games have come up with a new one: Yardmaster.
Continue ReadingPay Dirt is a board game about mining for gold—but we’re not talking about ’49ers with pickaxes and pans here. This is modern-day mining, with excavators and bulldozers. And paperwork. (Well, just a little.)
Continue ReadingGood things come in small packages. (Okay, to be fair, good things come in big packages, too.) Just because a game can be played in thirty minutes (or eight) doesn’t mean it can’t be fun and engaging, even a bit …
Continue ReadingSometime in the late 19th century, a German named Jacob Waltz claimed he had found a gold mine in the Superstition Mountains in Arizona, and started showing up in town with large gold nuggets to cash in. He died, only …
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