nicoga3000
Saint Nic
GMT will have some, but not many, of the Twilight Struggle CEs to sell via their own website - they've said so repeatedly since the KS launched.
Any idea when?
GMT will have some, but not many, of the Twilight Struggle CEs to sell via their own website - they've said so repeatedly since the KS launched.
Any idea when?
For those of you who aren't Kickstarter backers but who want to buy one of the excess copies once we've shipped the Kickstarter copies, there's really no use for us to start that order-taking, as we won't know how many copies we have available until we get them in the warehouse, count, and examine them.
Right now, the process looks to me like it'll be something like this:
- Late September/early October: Ship all the Kickstarter copies
- Mid October: Open up orders for the excess games on our website on a first-come, first served, one-copy-per-customer basis. Charge for the orders.
-Early November: Ship the non-Kickstarter copies.
GMT will have some, but not many, of the Twilight Struggle CEs to sell via their own website - they've said so repeatedly since the KS launched.
Whenever they get them in to give to KS backers? This is what they posted in their September monthly email:
I would strongly recommend signing up to their Inside GMT email list if you're looking to jump on the leftovers.
I was considering using a toothpick to color the eyes of the Kemet Phoenix miniature. Is that an OK idea or should I try again with the brush?
Totally legit. I've even known people to use those super fine tip markers. I always say do what gets the job done.
Good to know. I feel that even my smallest brush was to big, and when I tried it I just left a big black spot around the eye, which I couldn't clean out entirely.
And while you're here, a good wash can be achieved by mixing red brown with acrylic thinner in a 50/50 ratio, right? Do I have to seal it first before doing the wash or is it ok to do it over my current colors (which are also acrylic)?
Small picture of my new boardgame, Potion Explosion. It will be at the Essen fair and should be available worldwide right after the fair.
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As for wash mixes, yeah - 50/50 is a good start. The best thing you can do is use an acrylic thinner versus water (since water dilutes the pigment). Best to start at 50/50 and add more thinner little by little if needed.
Oh wow, I am into these kind of color matching games and having it as a multiplayer variant in board game form is pretty neat. Maybe I'll come by on my lunch break to see the final version of it. i'll be there working for Indie Boards & Cards again. Do you know what the pricing will be?
also who of the people involved with the game are you so I can say hi?![]()
Good to know. I feel that even my smallest brush was to big, and when I tried it I just left a big black spot around the eye, which I couldn't clean out entirely.
And while you're here, a good wash can be achieved by mixing red brown with acrylic thinner in a 50/50 ratio, right? Do I have to seal it first before doing the wash or is it ok to do it over my current colors (which are also acrylic)?
Small picture of my new boardgame, Potion Explosion. It will be at the Essen fair and should be available worldwide right after the fair.
![]()
Oh wow, it looks like FFG bought legend of the five rings from AEG and is making it into a lcg.
https://www.fantasyflightgames.com/...rd-game/products/legend-five-rings-card-game/
I like playing card games, but I will probably never really get into a physical LCG. Keeping up with stuff is just too much work.
Having played 3 games of Dominion thus far, I like it! It's worked well in 2-player games and I'm hoping to try it in 4-player games.
I've already noticed all the talk about the big money strategy, and some of the responses on the forums, so I'm glad there are other options at least with some kingdoms. I also hope to pick up Seaside (possibly followed by Intrigue) to make for even more variety.
Ive been playing Dead of Winter and The Resistance with friends lately, and it seems we enjoy the bluffing part of it, would Battlestar Galactica be a good one to get if none of us have ever seen the show? Or is there something similar but with a different theme?
Most of the LCGs are pretty solid with just a couple of core sets if you just plan on keeping it casual.
That is still a lot of money compared to a one and done card game.
Yeah I agree. Don't understand why having to buy multiple core set is not looked upon as a bad business model.
Well people know going into it that it's an expandable model. The option is to have a box that MSRPs for 40 with an amount of cards that keeps the cost/actual playable product ratio in check, or have an insanely steep price of entry. I never would have checked out Doomtown if I had to pay 60+ for it.
Not everyone who plays is going to be a tournament level player. Not everyone NEEDS the maximum amount of allowable cards. With maybe the exception of the Game of Thrones Second Edition core, every LCG on the market is incredibly playable with a single core set.
That and the alternative is to go back to blind boosters.
Edit: I will agree that sometimes the distribution is a little suspect. Netrunner is a particularly egregious offender in that if you DO want three copies of each card, you're buying a third core for, I believe, a total of 11 cards.
Star Wars is the best - you can only have two matching objective sets per deck so a second core gets you everything you need.
Netrunner maniacs have killed the appeal of it for casual players by (among other things) insisting that you need to get multiple core sets to play. You don't.
I'm glad that Netrunner has enough going for it to have a burgeoning competitive community, but that crowd really doesn't help the casual gamer get into the game at all.
Oh wow, it looks like FFG bought legend of the five rings from AEG and is making it into a lcg.
https://www.fantasyflightgames.com/...rd-game/products/legend-five-rings-card-game/
That's probably true, but I guess I'm talking about someone like me, or like the people who want "a card game in one box", and don't have any problem with playing the game, it's the keeping up with expansions and such
And while it's true that you don't have to buy the expansions to enjoy the game, a lot of that core set's design seems deliberately designed to have holes that expansions fill in. NBN, for example, is pretty much just a novelty in the core set.
Trucker is one of the ultimate kind love or hate games. Throw me in the love pile but I do wish it was a bit quicker too so I could play it more. Sometimes I just skip stage 1 because it's pretty meaningless ultimately (not enough cash at stake).I played Galaxy Trucker for the first time (and only time for now) back in July. Yeah, it was a long game to set up, explain, and take in. Didn't really like it all that much really.
Trucker is one of the ultimate kind love or hate games. Throw me in the love pile but I do wish it was a bit quicker too so I could play it more. Sometimes I just skip stage 1 because it's pretty meaningless ultimately (not enough cash at stake).
Well people know going into it that it's an expandable model. The option is to have a box that MSRPs for 40 with an amount of cards that keeps the cost/actual playable product ratio in check, or have an insanely steep price of entry. I never would have checked out Doomtown if I had to pay 60+ for it.
Not everyone who plays is going to be a tournament level player. Not everyone NEEDS the maximum amount of allowable cards. With maybe the exception of the Game of Thrones Second Edition core, every LCG on the market is incredibly playable with a single core set.
That and the alternative is to go back to blind boosters.
I played 4+ hours of Talisman tonight because we had 5 players who had never played it and 1 player who had, and we got tricked into it because everyone else who HAD played it avoided our table like the plague when invited.
I'm not sure if I'll get invited back to those nights, ha. Hopefully it wasn't a big deal. I was trying not to be rude, but I can't remember the last time I was so irritated at a player at a game night. Someone seemed to me (hopefully I was mistaken) to be trying to actively annoy the host by taking his turn as slow as possible every time, and going through a bunch of cards, and asking really slow questions. And this was probably hours in, by which point even the host just wanted the game to end.
It ended with the host, on the crown of command, losing a single life and getting instantly sent to jail as a result because of a follower. That seemed ridiculous but apparently there's no rule against getting sucked from there directly into the most remote corner of the city.
Speaking of the rules, apparently the board and cards have more information than the rules about some things. You can bribe the jailer to let you out of jail. As far as I could tell, the rules don't even mention that. There was at least one card with confusing text, and the rules apparently don't have a reference for cards, so you can't look for clarification.
Aside from that player and the rules, I think the thing that bugged me the most about Talisman is how many turns I had nothing to do. I might put up with long games if I can at least do SOMETHING fairly often -- collect some stats, roll some dice, build up an empire, whatever. I kept having my turns take 10-15 seconds where I would roll, get a monster...and it would get placed on some other square, so I would get zero benefit. Or I would land on a square, roll, and nothing would happen.
Meanwhile, some of the other players (especially the player mentioned above) would be repeatedly having turns where they flipped 2-3 cards, maybe rolled some dice, spent a bunch of time puzzling over card text, and so forth.
Please forgive the rant. At least we got to play a fast 3-player game of Dominion after, and it was such a relief even though I fatally thinned my copper too early and ended up in last place.
This is why I actually prefer digital Talisman. I like the game, but I'd rather just deal with the AI.
This is huge news for me as I've been playing the CCG off and for 20 years and started back up competitively 2 years ago. For someone that has no experience with the LCG model I'm kinda worried how FFG will handle Organized play and the storyline. Also 2 years is a long time for current players to have to wait. Also I find it kinda funny that FFG's space in the GenCon CCG hall was right behind AEG's.
As one who quit about six years back, I'm hoping for a total reboot as I think AEG has lost control of the story along time ago.
At the same time, I don't think this moves makes sense for FFG, this game has a very limited appeal, but they can stretch the brand to other ips (all those samurai themed boardgames they make).
Well hell, I like the look and sound of that a lot. It looks like it would scratch the same kind of itch that FITS does. I see in a BGG thread where someone asked about the release date that you said it should drop in the U.S. Maybe by Xmas time? I'll have to keep an eye on info about it then because if the components are super-sturdy and nice, I could see that maybe being a sought-after game. Is that a wooden box that it is set up in and dispenses the marbles? Wooden-boxed games seem to be all the rage as of late.Small picture of my new boardgame, Potion Explosion. It will be at the Essen fair and should be available worldwide right after the fair.
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