Skip to content
Meople's Magazine

Boardgame talk for Meeple & People

  • Home
  • Reviews
    • Video Reviews
    • Abstract Games
    • Auction Games
    • Card Games
    • Cooperative Games
    • Deduction games
    • Dice games
    • Family Games
    • Negotiation Games
    • Strategy Games
    • Worker-placement Games
    • All reviews
  • Articles
    • Meeplepedia
    • Nostalgia
    • First impressions
    • Meople Comics
    • All articles
  • News
  • About us
  • FAQ
  • Contact

Tag: Kodama

Meople News: The Peace of Dog Forest

12 April, 2020 Kai Weekly News

Indie Boards & Cards Many times before the Kodama tree spirits have held their competition who could shepherd the more[…]

Read more
Cidade Velha, Historic Centre of Ribeira Grande

Meople News: Horizon of the Universe

28 June, 2019 Kai Weekly News

Alderac Thunderstone Quest is on Kickstarter again and ready to take you to New Horizons. What you get in this[…]

Read more
  • View meoplesmagazine’s profile on Facebook
  • View meoplesmagazine’s profile on Twitter
  • View meoplesmagazine’s profile on Instagram
  • View ../meoplesmagazine’s profile on YouTube
  • View meoplesmagazine’s profile on Google+
  • View meoplesmagazine’s profile on Flickr

Tweet the Meeple

My Tweets

Older Reviews

  • 7 Wonders: Babel

    7 Wonders is still one of the most popular games out there. Simple rules, quick to play even with 7 players, different every time you play. It’s no wonder the expansions keep coming. They might not necessarily improve the game, just because it’s very good already, but they add enough to keep 7 Wonders interesting even after many, many games played. Babel is the latest expansion, and the one that changes the game the most yet.

  • Odyssey -Wrath of Poseidon

    Nothing is easy when the gods are against you. Especially not getting home across the sea when the god in question is Poseidon. And even less when Poseidon is a friend from whom you just stole the last piece of pizza. That’s the setup of Odyssey – Wrath of Poseidon: up four players are Greek navigators on their way home, one player is Poseidon who feels slighted by the Greek’s victory at Troy. Together, they play an asymmetric deduction game.

  • Trains

    Deck-building was a big game genre the last few years. But pure deck-building is exhausted, every major publisher has a couple of deck.-building games already. But deck-building as a mechanic still has a lot to offer, and incorporating it into a larger game offers many options yet to explore. Trains is one such game that takes deck-building and builds a wider game around it. So build your decks to build your tracks and lay rails across Japan.

  • Futschikato / Fuji Flush

    Our first review of a 2016 Essen game is, by necessity, of a light game. We have to play it a couple of times, after all. Futschikato / Fuji Flush, a card game by Friedemann Friese, is as light as any game we ever reviewed, but nevertheless is a really fun game. That’s all thanks to one small twist: low cards can gang up on high cards. No matter how good your card is, you can never feel safe.

  • Leaping Lemmings

    If there’s anything everyone knows about Lemmings, it’s that they have suicidal tendencies and enjoy the occasional long walk towards a short cliff. That’s what six scientists thought when making a bet about whose lemmings would leap further. Initially, the rodents proved more sane than the scientists in question, but a few generations of genetic tampering later, the Lemmings were happily leaping. Or being eaten by eagles, dead is dead.

  • ebbes

    ebbes means “something” in the dialect of the Palatinate area of Germany. Asking to play ebbes there might not immediately make someone get up and get this card game, because you might be asking to play something, with no indication what exactly. Fortunately, that is not a problem anywhere else in the world, as far as I’m aware, and you can enjoy the game without suffering from linguistic confusion first.

  • Power Grid: The First Sparks

    For the 10th anniversary of the legendary Power Grid, designer Friedemann Friese came up with something special: he transported the games mechanics to the Stone Age. Gone are the days of burning coal, now you go hunt mammoths.

  • Oltre Mare

    Not every that has merchants as a theme need to be a complex trading game. On the contrary, Oltre Mare is a light game where you don’t worry about the price development of olive oil but instead need to think about the best use of your cards.

RSS Meople's Magazine

  • It is not dead what can eternal lie
  • Meople News: Journeying the Shadow Roads
  • Meople News: The State of the Situation
  • Meople News: Reality-bending Heist
  • Cartographers
  • Meople News: Dreadful Humours
  • Meople News: Who run Krakentown?
  • Essen 2020 – SPIEL.digital
  • Meople News: Lost Hops, Veiled Cabbage
  • Meople News: Study the High Laws
WordPress Theme: Poseidon by ThemeZee.