Went to PAX East. We went 2-3 years ago, and it seems like tabletop has only grown since then. LOTS of people buying games, playing games - it's good to see.
I played and bought a few games, as well:
MEGA Catan / Catan Big Game Tournament - I was curious to see what a 64 player Catan game is like, so I joined this tournament. The way it works is that the board is one long, pre-printed sheet, which players sit on either side of - like a Catan banquet. It's pretty much Catan, but the gamerunner calls out one number for the entire crowd (kinda Bingo-ish), and either side of the table takes their turn at the same time. You are only in direct competition with the player opposite of you for Longest Road and such, but you can trade with the five players around you. However, the first to 25 points (in the entire group) is the winner. It was interesting, but I got walloped. It actually only took as long as a regular game of Catan.
Hounded - This is a pretty cute, 'thematic abstract' I guess you'd call it, with a nice variable setup and asymmetric play. One player is a hunter and his pack of dogs, and the other is a Fox trying to outwit them. All the pieces do something different and useful, but it's easy to remember. Think of chess, but the board is very colorful and randomly made up of tiles with different effects. It seemed like the Fox really has it stacked against him, but it's actually pretty challenging for the hunting party to try and pull off a strategy to trap him. I thought this was a pretty neat game, and it's fairly inexpensive.
Pass the Buck! - We met up with some fellow GAFfers at PAX and they bought this game from the Indie Tabletop section. It's primarily a bluffing game like Mascarade, but it adopts a climbing structure almost like Phase 10 (a game I fucking loathe) and actually makes it work. You all play as employees at a company, trying to pass off 'work cards' to each other in order to not have tasks left and get promoted - but you can only pass it if the work matches that player's job skills (which are secret). There is some funny roleplaying to it, where you "call HR" if people refuse to take the work and you think they're bluffing. It's got a nice mix of that sort of super-critical social gaming, but then some cathartic release once somebody has been outed as being in, say, the IT department, and everybody can now dump their bullshit IT tasks on them.
and what I bought:
Orleans - Picked it up on sale at a table. Not sure what to say about this game that hasn't been said already. Highly rated, can't wait to try it.
Nautilion - I like the Oniverse games a lot, and had no idea this was coming out. This time, it's a dice game. I played a couple of basic games of it (of course, it has expansions right in the box) and won both - bizarre for this series of games, even on the basic level. I enjoyed it, but I'm looking forward to cranking the difficulty way up.