Don’t Panic!!!

  

Dead panic is a zombie skinned version of castle panic with a lot of charm and a couple of extra bits above the original game. 
Dead panic has you and up to several pals holding out (relatively) cooperatively against a horde of brain loving zombies who have decided to visit you in your beautiful hexagonal forest holiday home. Their sales methods are robust and you’ll need to utilize all of the gear in the surprisingly well stocked cabin to fend them off long enough for rescue to appear

  
The game is set on a board of concentric rings with the cabin in the centre. Each turn you draw an event card (all bad) which being more random zombies from the bottomless bag and occasionally other survivors. Zombies come in a few different flavors (all unpalatable). Standard dudes who move one space per turn, runners who move two, brutes who move as normal but ads nails hard and crawlers who can slip under your walls without so much as ringing the door bell. 

  
The aforementioned survivors each carry a piece of the three piece radio (they obviously didn’t trust each other) and when they get to you and your radio repair whack they hand it over. Get all three and you can radio in for help in the form of a getaway van that shows up like the mystery machine on the edge of the map. Get your boys to the van and you drive off into the sunset or more accurately off the edge of the board
It’s a good solid game that will gather dust nicely until you need something to play against kids. There’s not a whole lot here for the more mature gamer. Its coop up until the point where one of the survivors gets turned and then becomes a super zombie themselves and make life difficult for their former roomies. This is nice enough but I didn’t see it happen when we played it. The tokens are nice but dull. We’ve been spoiled by zombie games with lovely models and looking at 2D tokens moving in doesn’t have the safe effect as dozens of badly painted zombie miniatures. You could dope it up with zombicide miniatures but then again stick lipstick on a duck it’s still a duck and if you have zombie miniatures it’s 50/50 you have a better zombie game already. 

  
It’s fun while it lasts, it’s fun for kids and you can cook the rules a little to make it easier/harder for them but I’m not sure this will appear very often. 
You could add a traitor mechanic or you could keep track of how many zombies you killed each and have one winner but it’s it’s starting to sound like and a bit like triggers brush. I’ll let you decide at Knavecon you might love it 
Nice reimplementation of a good game. Just not a great game
Huzzah!
Vic 

Knavecon 7 Grand Raffle

bingo

For all of you planning to attend or just happy to support Knavecon I once again give you the Grand Raffle.  for the princely sum of €1 your name will be entered into our draw for a selection of Board Games which will be raffled on the day.  (early supporters will get TWO entries for their euro up until midnight Friday 29th)

The prize fund will be added to as time progresses and more games will be added to the list and this post updated.

So far we have…

  1. A very special Custom Copy of Galeforce 9’s WWE Superstar Showdown with Pro painted wrestler Models
  2. A Copy of 7 Wonders (sponsored by Black Katt Games)
  3. A one off piece of Custom Art from legendary artist Dave “MrSaturday” Stafford

MORE TO FOLLOW

 

SO! how do I get tickets early and beat the rush on the day and benefit from the 2 for 1 offer before the friday before the Knavecon?  Simples just paypal my Swiss bank account at

victorgannon@yahoo.com

Prices are currently

  • 2 x raffle tickets for €1
  • 16 x raffle tickets for €5
  • 42 x raffle tickets for €10

 

Should you feel inclined, feel free to pre-book your tickets for the event too.  Tickets will be available on the door on the day too.  It’s going to be a busy con!

  • Adults €15
  • Students and unwaged €8
  • Accompanied Children (under 12) Free

Huzzah!

Vic

You’ll never be No 2 to me

  
Remember the Character in the Lego movie that was into spaceships? That’s me when it comes to Twilight Struggle. Having discovered it a number of years back I’m still enamored with it. 
I’ve spoken a bit before about the game. As two player games go it’s hard to beat. Playdek have released it for the PC this week. For €12. 

  
Playdek don’t mess around they’ve released some cracking implementations of card games for the phone/tablet market. Having finished the PC version they’re now switching their efforts to improving the AI and developing a phone/tablet version which will be cross platform 
The sharp ones in audience will have twigged the AI comment. The game comes with a reasonable AI opponent. It’s better than I thought it would be but it’s no match for a human (yet). I think a game like this just like diplomacy is a hard one for any developer to attempt. So hats off to them for including it. It’s shown as easy AI but I’m damned if I can find an option to dial up the difficulty apart from giving it a head start in points. 

  
The interface is very nice. I’ve played TS on vassal and a few web implementations. This is the best one so far. Everything is in there and it’s crisp and responsive. It would have been nice to see what’s left in the draw deck but it’s a minor niggle and you should be card counting anyway. Audio is good too with sweeping music and snippets of leader speaker between turns. You’ll probably turn it off. 
Multiplayer is where this game shines. It links to the Playdek setup so if you previously played a playdek multiplayer you’re already there along with your buddy list. The game plays both realtime and asynchronously which is key since a game can last Several hours. There’s even a rating system in there for players so you gain score as you win and matching opponents by skill level becomes easier 

  
If you’re a fan of TS rush out and buy it. If not come to Knavecon 7. I’m going to be showing people how to play. The mechanics. Not how to win. That’s a headache for just you
Huzzah!
Vic 

Bend them to your will

  
Star Wars Rebellion is a great game. If you are a fan of bigger games like War of Ring and a Star Wars fan you’ll be in Jedi heaven
The game sees the Powerful Empire square off against the underdog Rebels. At the start of the game the rebels secretly pick a planet from the pool of 32 and this is their home sweet home base which the Imperials what to find. So the game is expensive hide and seek and every time the empire slowly rolls into a new system the Rebels get to say in Eddie Murphy accent “That’s not iiiiiitttt!!”. Unless it is their home base and then the gloves are off. 
The Imperials job is easy. Find the rebel base and wipe it out. To aid them in their task they have a lot of resources at their command in the form of space and ground troops. Storm troopers, at-ats, tie fighters, star destroyers, Death Stars to name a few. The imperials always seem to have the upper hand as not only can they like the Rebels persuade systems to ally with them and thus produce more units they can subjugate rebel systems and force them to work for them too. 

  
The rebels spend their time trying to trick the Imperials away from their home base location and also go cap in hand to the various systems trying to get support. Remember murphy’s golden rule. 
Star Wars has always been about the characters (unlike every other film). Well key characters that make epic decisions. Each player starts with a brace of slowly added to characters each variously skilled in diplomacy, research, fisticuffs and something else. They have a number of uses and are effectively your actions. You can assign a character to a mission in a particular sector. block another character from completing a mission or send them to lead a fleet to another system. 

  
Missions for the imperials completed result in things like systems being turned loyal, rebel leaders captured, clues to where the rebel base isn’t and therefore narrowing down where it could be and so on. Additionally the imperials get another type of mission called a project where they get to build big stuff like super star destroyers and Death Stars.  
Missions for rebels successfully completed allow them to harass the imperials with sabotage markers, turn systems to rebel loyalty and even move their secret base. Some of them gain them loyalty and when the turn maker that starts at the bottom advances up and touches the slowly lowering loyalty marker at the top it’s a win for the rebels. So the rebels need to hold out to the biter end and the imperials need to get their distressed skates on and find that base asap

  
Battles occur when fleets meet. There’s two distinct battlegrounds per system. On the ground and in orbit. Both are exercised in the same fight and last boots standing rule the system. Battles are brutal and bringing more guns than your opponent is a goods move. Heroes bring tactics cards which inflict extra hits or reduce damage or much to the horror of the rebels we cornered in our first game stop them From bugging out when things look grim. The units have two types of attack dice. Anti small stuff and anti big stuff. Each unit fires a mix of these. Small stuff would be fighters and grunts. Big stuff would be AT ATs, speeders and capital ships. 
The theme is strong. The imperials seem overwhelming. The rebels are holding on dodging and weaving, waging a guerrilla war. The outnumbering Imperials are trying to smother the underdog. It all feels just right
The build quality is pure Fantasy Flight. The models are sweet. I particularly like the partially constructed Death Star. You will never paint all 150 of them. I know this is a challenge accepted for a lot of you painters out there but there are a shit ton of small models here. Ground troops especially. The rules are straightforward. Well laid out and well explained. No ambiguity. 

  
It’s truly a thing of beauty. Looking from the Imperial side out over the big map it’s hard not to cackle when you crush another rebel gathering. You’ll need space for this (pardon the pun). Your kitchen table might struggle. It’s not as big as say firefly but it is as big as forbidden stars. One quick note. It’s surprisingly fast to setup. You’ll be on the road in ten minutes max 
So far loving this game and my head has been strategizing for the next Game. Always a good sign. 
Well done FF another thoroughbred 
Huzzah!
Vic

Come on baby light my squire

 Lancaster is a worker placement game with a wealth of opportunities to screw over your opponents. If that isn’t enough to get your dander up it’s got a lovely theme (raising Knights, fighting the evil French and more importantly each other) and it’s beautifully constructed. The game features a stack of solid wooden pieces. I dare say if your game collection caught fire Lancaster would burn the longest…..
The unburnt version of the game sees up to five noble families moving through three phases five times to gain as much favor (score) as possible with the King. “Hey look at me King! No hands”.

  
Like most worker placement games you compete to build your economy and score points. You have a number of options in this regard. Your pool of Knights which start weak and few can be increased and upgraded and placed worker style on either your home castle spots for some safe but small economic rewards, on the castles on the English map for better rewards but a competitive environment or off in France to score favour points from the king risking getting tied up there or worse still captured and ransomed. 
The central map is clever. Each castle of which there’s ten or so give you rewards in the shape of nobles and/or some economic rewards. The nobles when claimed come to your castle and like an elderly relative never leave. These well to dos give you more voting power for the next phase

  
Parliament phase sees players either voting in new laws or keeping the ones in place at the moment. The laws consist of things like the player with the most squires gets a free knight. For every three nobles you have you get some kings favor. Person with most Knights at war gets some points and so on. The trick here is to keep laws in place that suit you and block ones that favor others. Just like real life. 
The last phase then is resolution where the Knights pay out on what they’ve claimed and the Knights come home. Except for those Knights who didn’t win their battles in France they get stuck out there and have to continue fighting next round. 

  
Another thing that has to be mentioned is the squires. These guys add to the strength of the knight when pushing another knight out of a spot on the map. The only thing is. If they later themselves get pushed out of a claimed spot by an even bigger Knight and his entourage they bugger off back to general supply leaving you to clean your own armoires trousers. The central map is nearly always contested and getting all the Knights on there is like trying to squeeze everything into a Ryanair overhead locker. Going early and late into a fight and figuring out what squires a player has behind their screen is key. Blow your wad to early and your done. Let someone muscle in and not have enough force to dislodge them later well, your done too. 
There’s a wealth of paths to winning the game. Every single point is hard earned. Every move is a brain burner and the important lessons of anticipation and disappointment are relearned every turn. 
I really like this game. The pieces are lovely and solid. The rules are straightforward. The theme is good. It’s close run, there’s always a way of winning if you can just find it…. I didn’t. But I didn’t come last. By one point! A victory of sorts. Will have it at Knavecon 7 on the 30th of April
Huzzah!
Vic 

Chaos Panties

pant

Gamers, Painters, Modellers lend me your ears.  MrSaturday aka David Stafford has shown me his latest project.  The very sweet Pantheon of Chaos which is now in Kickstater.

Pantheon of chaos is a throw back to the good old days of gaming (which are still here) where players controlled mighty Chaos Warbands and spent their time roaming around beating seven shades out of lesser unfortunate Chaos Warbands.

The group of modellers putting the warriors together really know their stuff.  I particularly like “Arkus the Vengeful” who’s chaos patron has a black sense of humour.

SO. Check it out.

Pantheon of Chose

pant2

Still not sweet enough

  
Splendor reminds me of Quake 3. It was a lovely slick engine in need of a good game. I’ve had Splendor for a long time now (in gamer time) and it occasionally gets wheeled out. Particularly when non gamer relatives call. 
I’ve spoken about this game before and like a number of other games that people rave about I’ve never really gotten it. That’s fine I don’t get lots of popular things it’s part of the reason I’m a gamer. 

  
Splendor is a game of theme tacked on gem dealing where you are trying to build up your economy and get to 15 points before the others do. (Bloody others and their ways). You buy gems of five different colours. Diamonds, sapphires, rubys, emeralds and brown ones each of which cost you coins of these same colours. In a turn you can buy stuff, draw some coins or reserve a cards and claim a joker.
Buying is simple, pay the cost and take your gem. Each gem card has a purchase cost of this many of this colour, this many of that colour and so on. You can pay for it through a mix of multi coloured jokers (gold), coins in hand and gems you’ve already bought. Each of the previously bought gems add an ambient value but never actually get spent. Some of the more expensive gems come with a score value so collect enough of these and you’re well on your way to getting to the 15 point finish line. Another complication is the Royal gem whores (or whatever they’re called) who once you’ve assembled particular combos of gems will visit and never leave like a bathroom smell. They each add 3 points to your score so getting them in your camp is key. 

  
You see since I first played this game I’ve learned a bit about its nuisances. This is a race game. Every single move counts and cock blockery abounds. Well it does with two or three players if you’re keeping an eye on your opponents (but you’re not because you’re self centered and only think of yourself). With four players it’s a lot more random and strategy goes out the window. 
This game will click with a certain mindset. That said it’s often a close race and has that “i would have won if I had one more turn” vibe going on which is always great. 
I don’t know what it is about this game. It’s just short of being a really really good game. It’s missing that one dash of magic sauce and it would be a classic. Maybe it’s me (it’s not) but ill happily play it but not in preference to a whole lot else. Curse me and my sophisticated tastes
Huzzah
Vic 

The Grand Knavecon Raffle

  
It’s back. It’s bigger. It’s badder. The Grand Knavecon raffle returns once again for Knavecon 7. Kicking it off we have something rather special to win. 

A deluxe copy of Galeforce 9s new game WWE Showdown with…. Pro painted models of the wrestlers!

Those of you who are members of the Ireland’s Gaming Community group on Facebook will know the prolific painter John Wickham. John foolishly agreed to owe me a favor recently for something and quickly figured the best way to pay it off (and avoid any inevitably unpleasantness) was a small painting commission. 

He’s nearly one model down and it’s looking sweet. For your chance to win this unique prize you owe it to yourself to enter our raffle. 

Full details on how to enter to follow (yes yes same as last time)

Huzzah!

Vic 

Nothing is forbidden

  
It’s time to revisit Forbidden Stars since I’m still very much in love with the game. My forbidden love for forbidden stars if you will. 
It’s not often I want to pamper a game by buying my own copy, painting the models, carefully protecting them and getting doped up tokens for it… Ok, well, I’ve done the first but I’ve strongly thought about the others. 
Forbidden stars is a game that just keeps giving. It’s expensive but it’s well worth the price. It’s just so good. I’ve had the pleasure of playing a dozen games of it and I still like it as much as the first time I played it. If anything it’s gotten better. It ticks all the boxes. Map conquest, random map, variety of races that all play differently, brilliant theme that’s not just tacked on, nice models, meaty, brutal, desperate. There’s very few games I’ll play over and over again without wanting a change. 

  
If you’ve not read my earlier gushing review of it. It’s set in the 40k universe and sees four players take on the roles of chaos (all out attack), orks (tough as old boots), eldar (weak but dodgy), space marines (balanced) and set out to recover a set number of relics belonging to you before the others get theirs. These relics are placed by your opponents usually as far away from your guys bases as possible. The map setup is slick with a number of strategic decisions required from the off. The game sees you constantly re evaluating your strategy. It’s an object lesson on how plans go out the window when faced by the enemy. 
As for enemies there is no pretense of alliances. I have objectives to claim and you’re in my way. Step aside. Actually .. Don’t. Occasionally. Very occasionally you’ll “co operate” with others if it’s to your advantage but it’s rare. It’s so 40k. It’s all war. All the time. 

   
Battles are nicely done and it’s not just down to bring as many guns as you can and you win. Every race fights differently. Be prepared. You can improve your punch by upgrading your battle cards. Actually there’s so much to spend your limited resources on it becomes a tough set of choices each turn. Choices abound, you find yourself spreading it about building your resource base, your forces, upgrading your guys, defending, attacking, foiling another players plans, the list is endless. 
A special mention of order sequence must be made. You place your orders face down on sectors and it’s possible to stack one on top of the other. These are then revealed and resolved in reverse order. More importantly opponents can stick THEIR order over yours and (as I’ve seen all too often) change your brilliantly drawn up plan into a mitigated disaster. 
I could go on and on about the keen minis, the high quality pieces and so on but I won’t. I urge you to try it out. I’ll have at least one copy at Knavecon and I reckon it could be the game of the con. You mark my words. 
Huzzah!
Vic 

Nostalgia isn’t what it used to be

  
They say you can never go back. They (whomever they are) are often right. Heroquest is just such a beast. Unlike Space Crusade you realize pretty quickly that you wasted your youth playing this game. Ok maybe not just this. Don’t get me wrong at the time it was good fun but it’s aimed squarely at younger players. I mean just look at the gurning 80s kids on the box. 
  
Heroquest is a basic fantasy dungeon bash featuring plastic miniatures. Everything you need is in the box and the rules are very straightforward. This is heaven for younger players. My kids love it. If you’re even a passable Dungeon Master you can entertain children by bigging up the story. More importantly this is a gateway game to a whole world of adventure. 

  
The game sees up to four brave heroes, Barbarian (good attack), dwarf (tough and slow), wizard (powerful attacks weak Defence), elf (ranged attack and good with colours) set off into surprisingly well finished dungeons to have at it with the overlord and his dastardly plans. 
The overlord is played by one player who takes control of the monsters and reveals the dungeon as players open doors. It’s good fun. I alway like being the overlord. I don’t need to justify myself. 
The game is exactly what you would expect. Kill monsters. Grab gold. Buy better kit. Repeat. That’s fine. It’s McDonnells. The game comes with around a dozen missions and they’re all good fun, not that you’ll play them all because your gaming ADHD will kick in three missions in and you’ll find something else. 

 
Again be warned this is a simple game if you’re a more seasoned gamer look to Descent 2 or Imperial Assault for a more grown up experience. 

 
All in all a nice slice of nostalgia and if you get it for a good price go with. it’s become more rare surprisingly for a mass market game and fetches quite a high price now. That said it’s chock a block with plastic (jelly baby ish) models so it’s a big un. Tell you what. I’ll have it at the next Knavecon, so if you want to try it let me know

 
Huzzah!

 
Vic 

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