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Tag: Capsicum Games

Meople News: Like a Train out of Hell

19 October, 2018 Kai Weekly News

Fantasy Flight Games With the next expansion Mansions of Madness is leaving mansions behind completely and going full Planes, Trains[…]

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Meople News: Carrot Garden Gods

26 August, 2016 Kai Weekly News

Capsicum Games Capsicum Games will bring a clever, little card laying game named Noxford to Essen. The cards represent districts[…]

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Meople News: Mafioso Sigil

Meople News: Mafioso Sigil

7 September, 2015 Kai Weekly News

Plaid Hat Games An aerial combat miniature game with birds instead of planes is a first, so the rules how[…]

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Meople News: Lanterns of the North

Meople News: Lanterns of the North

10 October, 2014 Kai Weekly News

Foxtrot Games A game doesn’t have to be heavy to sound like great fun. Foxtrot Games’ second Kickstarter project Lanterns:[…]

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Older Reviews

  • Kanagawa

    In Kanagawa, all players are disciples of Master Painter Hokusai, trying to learn in his studio of art how to produce visual effects on canvas, capturing the mood of the different seasons as well as specific objects like trees, buildings, characters and animals. And while his wisdom is available to everyone, not every disciple can take away the same learning from the Master.

  • Welcome to the Dungeon

    Some games are huge and take a long time to play. Others are smaller and quicker. And then there are some games that advertise themselves as mini games: small box, small rules, short play time – all the fun. Iello have their own product line of such games, and Welcome to the Dungeon is one of them. A quick and simple bluffing game that has little in common with dungeon crawling style games, you will try to get the hero killed more often than you help him succeed.

  • Cheaty Mages

    You can trust mages to cheat. Always. Every single time. After all, what would you do with the POWER OF THE COSMOS™ at your fingertips. But using it to win Monster Rumble bets? That is pretty low. Is there nohing so low those mages won’t consider it? As it turns out: nope.

  • Fields of Arle

    Fields of Arle is Uwe Rosenberg’s love letter to the home of his ancestors, East Frisia and especially the village of Arle. It’s a worker placement game that is unusual in not allowing more than two players, but is equally unusual in the number of options you have and factors to consider. It’s a big game, a long game, and a game that brings many aspects of medieval Frisia to life.

  • Perpetual-Motion Machine

    Perpetual-Motion Machine, the new game by Ted Alspach, has nothing to do with physics, despite the title. Instead, it’s a set collecting game shooting for poker hands, where playing a hand lets you improve one attribute of your game play.

  • Rampage

    Panic in Meeple City. Giant monsters are converging on the city, and it doesn’t look like anyone is going to stop them. Within minutes they start throwing cars, tearing down buildings and … MUNCHING MEEPLES!
    Will there be a happy ending for anyone?

  • Onirim

    Every night when you go to sleep, your mind gets lost in the Dream Labyrinth. It will wander there for a while and then get back to you in time to wake up. Unless, of course, you are one of the Dreamwalker, for them it’s a fight to return every night, having to find the eight oneiric doors first, chased by nightmares. And they are all alone – or sometimes with one more companion – with the risk of never waking up.

  • Dixit 2

    Sometimes, game expansion are best when they change nothing at all. If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it, as they say.
    Is this nugget of wisdom true for Dixit 2?

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