1213: Another Board Game Post

Today we had another little jaunt into Toronto. Our original intention was to have a wander around Kensington Market, but by the time we got there it was so hot and sunny that it was getting not-particularly-pleasant to wander around outside, so we decided to repair to Snakes & Lattes to sit in the relative cool, play some board games and wait to meet Mark and Lynette later that afternoon.

Andie and I hit a few old favourites while we waited, including Carcassonne (which I won), Ticket to Ride: Nordic Countries (which I did not win), and Blokus (which I did win). Then other people showed up, including our mutual friend Jon, who introduced us to a few interesting games I hadn’t come across before.

The first of these was Fist of Dragonstones. I’d heard of this before but wasn’t really familiar with it, so it was essentially new to me.

Fist of Dragonstones is a bidding game in which you’re trying to be the first player to score three victory points. This might not sound like a lot, but it’s not especially easy to come by points. Most of the game revolves around bidding various amounts of in-game currency (the exact amount of which you have is kept secret from the other players) in a “closed-fist” bid to acquire character cards with various special abilities. These range from dragons, which provide you with coloured dragonstones, to wizards and magicians, who help you score points from various combinations of dragonstones. Certain cards allow you to mess with the other players or hinder their efforts, but your access to the cards is limited by what money you have on hand — and there’s nowhere near enough for you to be able to bid on everything.

It’s an interesting game that I feel probably takes a few goes to “get” but it proved enjoyable. The dragonstones themselves are sparkly and shiny, too.

The “main event” for the afternoon was a game I’ve been curious about for a while: A Touch of Evil. This game had been sold to me as being “like Arkham Horror but a fraction of the length and a fraction of the complexity”. Since I like Arkham Horror but it rarely hits the table due to the sheer amount of time it takes to play it to completion, I was very curious to try this theme-heavy game that sees you fighting various evil masterminds in Colonial America.

A Touch of Evil is indeed quite like Arkham Horror in many respects in that it encourages players to contemplate the narrative of their characters’ actions rather than just following the game mechanics in a rather dry manner. There’s no requirement to “role-play” or anything, but a considerable amount of enjoyment is added to the experience if you imagine or describe what the characters are getting up to and attempt to contextualise their dice rolls and skill checks.

It’s also interesting in that, unlike Arkham Horror, it doesn’t have to be played as a purely cooperative game. It can instead be played as a co-op-competitive game in which players split into teams to see who can be the first to take down whatever Great Evil is threatening the world this time around, or even as a “free for all” game in which all players are working individually to be the first to take down whatever Great Evil is threatening the world this time around.

There are a bunch of interesting little mechanics in A Touch of Evil that make it enjoyable, and heavily thematic. For example, the game’s setting features a band of “elders” who can potentially be recruited to help out in the game’s final confrontation. However, each elder has their own secret, represented by a card played under their character card. These secrets range from minor misdemeanours which don’t affect the gameplay but which add some flavour to their character to the potential for them to be in league with the Great Evil — or even to be the Great Evil in disguise themselves! There’s a lot of scope for surprises and hilarity, and the game never really felt like it was dragging — by the time Arkham Horror is starting to get tiresome, at least one player in A Touch of Evil is probably ready to trigger the showdown against the scenario’s boss.

I took advantage of Snakes & Lattes‘ excellent prices before I left and picked up copies of Flash Point and Guild Hall to add to the copies of Smash Up and Zombie Dice I acquired the other day. Andie also bought me a copy of King of Tokyo as a belated birthday present, and I grabbed a copy of Race for the Galaxy on behalf of one of my regular board game buddies back home. I’m looking forward to trying all these games out when I get back — we have a “gaming weekend” lined up at the end of the month, so that should be a lot of fun.

Not sure what we’re doing tomorrow as yet. It’s possible we might have another quiet day, then we’ll probably hit Toronto Zoo on our last full day here on Friday. We fly back on Saturday. It’ll be sad to leave after the enjoyable time we’ve had here, but it’ll also be nice to get back to relative “normality”. I miss our rats!

1211: I Want A Place Like This

Toronto is in possession of an establishment that I very much wish was a more widespread “Thing”, particularly in the U.K. Said establishment is known as Snakes & Lattes, and you can probably guess from its name what sort of place it is.

Or perhaps you can’t, since it’s sort of an unusual establishment.

Snakes & Lattes is a board game cafe. That is to say, it’s a cafe in which the playing of board games is not only welcomed, it is actively encouraged. How, you ask? By the fact it has an impressively huge selection just sitting there on its back wall waiting to be played with, ranging from well-thumbed copies of popular card games to the hardest of the hardcore Eurogames and everything in between. It costs just $5 (plus food and drink) to hang out there for as long as you like, and that price gives you access to the establishment’s impressive collection of titles as you please.

Snakes, as it tends to be known, is not just a place to go and play board games, though. It’s also a great place to go and learn new board games. The staff on hand are all ready, willing and able to recommend new titles to you, and even to teach you how to play. If you’re looking for a particular kind of game and you’re not sure what to try, chances are someone at Snakes will be able to recommend it to you.

The other thing that Snakes is is a place to buy board games. A healthy proportion of the games that it has available for play are also available for purchase at the front of the establishment, and for very reasonable prices, too — I picked up a couple of games myself today on the recommendation of a Snakes staffer. Specifically, I grabbed a copy of Zombie Dice, which is a very simple game I’ve heard a few people recommend recently, and a copy of Smash Up, a very entertaining and chaotic card game that rewards being a complete dick to your opponents — I’m looking forward to introducing this one to my friends back home.

I’m certainly going to be taking at least one more trip back to Snakes before our holiday is over, since there are a number of games I’ve had a chance to try that I’d like to take back with me. Specifically, King of Tokyo and Flash Point are two that intrigued me a great deal — King of Tokyo for being an excellent, fun and quick game with simple but enjoyable mechanics, and Flash Point for being a great cooperative game with enough differences from Pandemic — and a similarly short play time — to be worth a look. There are also a bunch of small games that I’m keen to introduce to my friends back home, too — stuff like the color-matching card game Coloretto and the thoroughly silly Ghost Blitz and Anomia, but I haven’t decided which of these, if any, I’m going to pick up my own copy of. I did also try and snag a copy of Love Letter to take home, but that game appears to be like gold dust at present.

Anyway. No idea what’s on the cards for tomorrow daytime, but I believe we’re going out to a comedy club tomorrow evening to see an entertaining-sounding improv and sketch show on the subject of Internet memes. There’s a subject that could easily be cringeworthy, but the comedy club in question is apparently rather highly regarded in the area, and thus I’m looking forward to it quite a bit. Doubtless I will be splurging my thoughts on the matter over these pages tomorrow evening, so look forward to that then.

For now, good night!