Tabletop Games
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Secret Hitler makers ship their game to every U.S. senator

Secret Hitler is a board game produced by Max Temkin, who was behind Cards Against Humanity. It published last year after a successful 2015 Kickstarter that raised $1.4 million. While the name itself is chortle-inducing and the fun is in figuring out which one of your friends is the closet fascist, it makes a very real point about how such leaders come to power. This week, its creators sent a copy to each of the 100 members of the United States Senate. The makers of Secret Hitler — Mike Boxleiter, Tommy Maranges and Temkin — explain that Hitler himself "required the cooperation of well meaning men who hoped to appease and control the Nazis." Regardless of his political aims, that fairly describes how Donald Trump backed into the Republican nomination against a weak establishment afraid...
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Hero turns Bloodborne bosses into Magic cards

Bloodborne fans the world over will be happy to know that one ambitious Redditor has finally rendered nearly every one of the game’s bosses as a card for Magic: The Gathering. And, if we’re being completely honest here, they did do a good job. “I think I did a good job,” wrote vNocturnus. “I did my best to keep the cards fairly ‘balanced,’ choose [mana] colors that were fitting of the characters' lore and their in-game abilities, and implement card abilities that are in line with not only their in-game abilities. But the colors I chose for them.” They even went the extra step to credit the artists who made the source material. So, if you’re looking for a new screen saver or background image you have the option of Magic or non-Magic images. Now if someone could just load these into Arts...
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Mothership, for those times when you just want to punch a starship in the mouth

Sometimes, I get a hankering to play a complex, 4x-style space exploration game. Then, a couple hours in, I realize that all I really wanted to do was blow shit up. Thankfully, now I have Mothership, a board game custom built for those times when all I want to do is punch a starship in the mouth. The Kickstarter campaign for Mothership caught my eye for one reason, and one reason alone: It’s a miniatures-based strategy board game with a blistering 40-minute playtime. That’s not possible, I thought to myself. But, lo and behold, designer Peter Sanderson has gone and done it. Charlie Hall/Polygon Mothership is a game for 2-6 players. Inside the box is a double-sided gameboard and 42 plastic spaceships with transparent plastic stands. Players go to their separate...
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Wartile is gorgeous, back from the dead and coming to Steam next month

Wartile stormed onto Kickstarter less than a year ago, but the campaign was canceled in part due to a lack of funding. Now the small team at Playwood Projects is back with a more complete version of the game, launching on Steam’s Early Access platform March 17. Even more impressive is the fact that even without crowdfunding support, Playwood still got the game ready to meet the delivery date that it originally pitched in its Kickstarter campaign. Wartile is a unique blend of real-time strategy and tabletop miniatures-based gameplay. While the enemy moves and attacks on their own, players click and drag their own game pieces around making attacks. It looks a bit like a sublimely animated version of Battle Chess, with one key difference. The terrain in Wartile is absolutely stunning. F...
Tabletop Games
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Dark Souls: The Board Game in the flesh at Toy Fair New York

Dark Souls: The Board Game was on display at this year’s Toy Fair New York. Steamforged Games’ head of game development David Carl was there to give Polygon a guided tour of a pre-production run of the game, one of only two in existence. He says the first production run is complete, and shipping to distribution now from the manufacturer. Dark Souls had an incredible Kickstarter campaign, bringing in more than $5.4 million in 2016. The game seeks to recreate the classic Dark Souls experience, and many have wondered if the company famous for a Blood Bowl-inspired take on soccer was up to the challenge. From what we’ve seen, the game looks solid. Carl explained to us how a play session will take shape. Each roughly two-hour game will be composed of four parts. First, players will have a...
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Hot and heavy Mass Effect pack comes to Cards Against Humanity

The massive Mass Effect nerds at Cards Against Humanity have teamed up with developer BioWare to produce an expansion pack for the vulgar card game — a small card pack themed around the beloved video game franchise that’s all about boning aliens in space, Cards Against Humanity announced today. The 14-card Mass Effect Pack is now on sale for $1, with free shipping available to U.S. customers. If you want a pack, you should buy it sooner rather than later — “once we are sold out on the site, we are done forever,” Trin Garritano, director of events, emotions and various promotions at Cards Against Humanity, told Polygon. Illustrator Cara McGee did the artwork for the pack; you can see the cover above, and the inside of the placard below. “And yes: Shepard and Kaidan smooch when you close...
Tabletop Games
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Dungeons & Dragons best new sourcebook is free

For a franchise that makes its money selling books, Dungeons & Dragons has a habit of putting up an awful lot of free content on its website. Just last week it dropped something special; a 33- page, fully produced supplement for the venerable role-playing game. But this isn’t just any sourcebook. It’s a crossover guide that ports your game of D&D into the latest setting of the wildly successful collectible card game Magic: The Gathering. Plane Shift: Kaladesh is written by James Wyatt, who was an integral part of the Wizards of the Coast D&D team dating back to 2000. In April last year, Wyatt moved over to the Magic team, where he’s been helping beef up their lore. The results have been phenomenal. Chris Rallis/Wizards of the Coast Ryan...
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Monopoly’s thimble goes the way of the dodo

Monopoly is ditching a classic piece this spring: the thimble. Following millions of votes cast to preserve other favorite pieces in manufacturer Hasbro’s recent “Token Madness” campaign, the thimble came in dead last in the popularity poll. Heard the news? The thimble is OUT! It’s time to say sew long to our thimble-y friend. #MonopolyVote pic.twitter.com/qNFbMJazXi— MonopolyUK (@MonopolyUK) February 16, 2017 A replacement will be announced March 19, with an updated version of Monopoly hitting shelves sometime thereafter. Among the possible new tokens that fans weighed in on earlier this year are a penguin, TV and the most contemporary revision of all, a Mr. Monopoly emoji-style piece. Monopoly has long been one of the more polarizing board games on the market, thanks to its...
Tabletop Games
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Stay sane with these family board games

Adam Saltsman is an indie game developer currently working on the turn-based survival game Overland. He and his wife Rebekah also run Finji, the indie game label behind Night In The Woods and other projects. As if that wasn’t hard enough, they are the proud parents of several children. To stay sane, his family has been playing an awful lot of board games. This story is a adapted from a post at his blog, where he wrote about some of their favorites. I’ve been wanting to write this post for a while now but I don’t know. The collapse of our democratic republic, shipping Night in the Woods and some other things happened. But it’s okay, and here we are! First, some context. My kids are turning four and six in February, and we’ve been playing a whole heck of a lot of Chutes & Ladders and C...
Tabletop Games
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Digital board games are booming, and one company is holding an awful lot of cards

Tabletop publisher Asmodee has a hot hand going into 2017. This year, it hopes to further fortify their brand in the digital space. Philippe Dao, chief marketing officer for Asmodee Digital, told us that his team could have as many as 20 new games on iOS and Android this year. In the past few years, Asmodee has made aggressive moves to acquire several large publishers and developers. That includes Minneapolis-based Fantasy Flight Games, known for licensed titles such as A Game of Thrones The Board Game and Star Wars: X-Wing Miniatures Game. In October, Asmodee also acquired F2Z Entertainment, which owns the Pandemic and Dead of Winter line of board games. It even snatched up North American rights to the Catan brand, making it a one-stop-shop for some of the industry’s biggest...
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PAX Unplugged is a brand new convention focused on tabletop games

Penny Arcade and ReedPop are partnering to bring a new convention to Philadelphia this November. Called PAX Unplugged, it will focus exclusively on tabletop games. The two companies already partner for multiple conventions, including PAX West, East and South. But while those events primarily focus on video games, Unplugged will be the first show dedicated in its entirety to that hobby. The team is still working to determine logistics, collect vendors and schedule events but director of events Ryan Hartman tells Polygon that his team has already secured a large block of hotel rooms in and around the city. “If we were going to do an out and out brand new PAX-style PAX, you could almost copy and paste the model to Philadelphia,” said Hartman. “This is a chance to be able to reinvent the...
Tabletop Games
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Graphic novel will celebrate the life of Gary Gygax, father of D&D

Journalist and author David Kushner, best known for his book Masters of Doom, is adapting his 2008 profile of Gary Gygax into a graphic novel. Called Rise of the Dungeon Master and illustrated by Koren Shadmi, the 144-page book is scheduled for release on May 9. Kushner was among the last journalists to interview Gygax before his death at the age of 68. His feature story was published in Wired magazine days after Gygax’s death in March of 2008. It remains one of the most comprehensive firsthand accounts of the birth of Dungeons & Dragons, and the life of Gygax himself. “Like the game itself,” writes publisher Nation Books on its official page, “the narrative casts the reader into the adventure from a first person point of view, taking on the roles of the different...
Tabletop Games
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Kingdom Death: Monster is the Everest of board games

This article is absolutely NSFW. On my kitchen table was the ass end of a giant demon bird. I was inspecting its empty orifice, comparing it to a photo on my iPad. The directions said that I had to glue a tiny lump of human hands, less than a half inch across, into the beast’s cloaca. I’ve stuck a lot of things to a lot of other things in my time playing tabletop games, but this was a first for me. I read the directions over again. I compared the photos to the parts in front of me. I looked up the definition of “cloaca” while I trimmed off some flashing to adjust the fit. Then I gently pressed some super glue out of the tube, applied a firm, even pressure and counted to ten while the cyanoacrylate got a good bond inside its hole. I held the model up to the light to admire my handiwork,...
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How a mature board game became the biggest Kickstarter game ever (update)

The biggest game in Kickstarter history isn’t a video game. It’s a gruesome and graphic miniatures game called Kingdom Death: Monster. This week it unseated a fun-loving, cuddly game called Exploding Kittens to become the most highly-crowdfunded project in the games category. With more than $9 million already pledged, it may be one of the most controversial projects ever to succeed on Kickstarter. This story contains images and content that are extremely NSFW. So what do we mean when we say gruesome and graphic? Here’s a sample of what Kingdom Death offers: In the opening tutorial for the base game players have the opportunity to sever a lion’s testicles and carry them off as a prize. Inside the game manual is a character from the game lore dressed in what can best be described as a...
Tabletop Games
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Doom’s new board game will hurt you plenty

While this year’s reboot of the Doom franchise was seen by many as a light-hearted send-up of one of the most violent games of all time, the board game adaptation is surprisingly hardcore. Doom: The Board Game is more than a refresh of Fantasy Flight Games’ 2004 offering. It’s both deeper and more streamlined than the original, and it’s a hell of a lot of fun to play — even with just two players at the table. Doom was unveiled at this year’s Gen Con in Indianapolis, Indiana. We spent about 20 minutes getting a feel for the game on the show floor, learning how the turn was structured and admiring the bits. I’m happy to say that the retail product looks almost identical to what was on display there. The multipart miniatures come pre-assembled and are clean, deeply detailed and well...
Tabletop Games
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Tabletopia is slick as hell, and it’s free on Steam

Over the past few years, I’ve seen a lot of online tabletop solutions come and go. Some, like Tabletop Simulator, are popular but open the door to copyright infringement. Who wouldn’t want to click a button and download hundreds of dollars worth of Fantasy Flight Games’ X-Wing miniatures? Others, like the Vassal system, are opaque and unwieldy. But today there’s a new player in town, and it’s called Tabletopia. I’ve been trading emails with the team at Tabletopia for a little while now, and over the past few years, they’ve been creating a tremendous, stable platform. But they’ve also been getting buy-in from some of the tabletop industry’s best minds. And, starting today, Tabletopia is available as a free-to-play game on Steam. Here’s how it works. Tabletopia isn’t a traditional digital...