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Showing posts with label World Boardgaming Championships. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Boardgaming Championships. Show all posts
Friday, November 7, 2014
A look back at hip-pocket wargames
Friday, October 3, 2014
Spring and summer photos
Saturday, August 16, 2014
WBC 2014 Saturday and Sunday: WS&IM fleet action, Acquire semifinal, and demos
One quick go-back on my earlier posts recounting my World Boardgaming Championships experience this year: The very first thing that Keith Ferguson and I did Thursday morning, on our way to the registration desk, was to bump into Josh Tempkin of Tall Tower Games. He spent a good part of the convention demonstrating several of his games:
- "WarTime," which I've written about before as a fascinating, innovative real-time wargame involving sand timers
- "Throne Dice," which surprisingly I still haven't taken the time to play
- "Commissioner," which I learned at UnPub 4 as "Lesser Evil"
Thursday, August 14, 2014
WBC 2014 Friday: WS&IM loss, Acquire victory, and EIC demo
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
WBC 2014 Thursday: TPA and a day of not winning
Last week I conducted my fourth annual pilgrimage to the World Boardgaming Championships in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the summer highlight of my gaming year. I had a fairly loose schedule in mind, with only a few key tournaments that I specifically wanted to hit.
Saturday, August 10, 2013
WBC 2013 Sunday: Convention wrap-up
First, a shout-out to Charlie Hoopes, whom I mistakenly failed to mention in my "WBC 2013 Thursday" post. Charlie is the designer of the family game Fill the Barn and has a work-in-progress abstract two-player called "AtataT." I'd seen "AtataT" at UnPub 3 but missed out on playing it. Charlie made a point of catching up with me during the Trains Planes and Automobiles tournament, and we had a nice chat about our respective game designs. I look forward to seeing more of him.
Sunday morning provided an opportunity to catch up with the representatives from one of the vendors and talk a little about "East India Company." This company is a well-known publisher with a line of games to which I think "EIC" would make a valuable contribution. The fellows I spoke with weren't the people who make decisions about which submissions to evaluate, but they do much of the playtesting. We talked a little about the wide variety of quality and maturity they see in some of the game designs that they are given to check out. I thought it might be valuable to pass on to them a copy of the rules of "EIC" with my contact information, just as an indicator of how far along I've developed the game and to help with their company's evaluation of whether to get a closer look at it. There's no telling what will come of this contact, but I was glad at least to have reached out and pursued a potential relationship.
Friday, August 9, 2013
WBC 2013 Saturday: Wooden Ships fleet action and semifinal
Saturday at the World Boardgaming Championships was the day I'd been preparing for - the Wooden Ships and Iron Men fleet action and, if I qualified, the semifinals with a goal of reaching the final and competing for the championship.
Wooden Ships fleet action
Tim Hitchings always puts on a great fleet action at WBC. This year, the scenario involved a meeting engagement in the Dogger Banks between a British fleet of six ships-of-the-line and six frigates escorting nine merchant vessels against a similarly outfitted Dutch fleet. The goal of each fleet was to escort its merchants safely off the opposite side of the board. I served as the rear commodore of the Dutch fleet, with the ship-of-the-line Holland and a frigate under my command, as well as three of the merchants.
My fellow Dutch players, Admiral Ron (l.) and Commodore Tim H. |
Tim Hitchings always puts on a great fleet action at WBC. This year, the scenario involved a meeting engagement in the Dogger Banks between a British fleet of six ships-of-the-line and six frigates escorting nine merchant vessels against a similarly outfitted Dutch fleet. The goal of each fleet was to escort its merchants safely off the opposite side of the board. I served as the rear commodore of the Dutch fleet, with the ship-of-the-line Holland and a frigate under my command, as well as three of the merchants.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
WBC 2013 Friday: Gryphon and Avalon Hill
Continuing my saga from yesterday's post...
Vendors
Friday at the World Boardgaming Championships was the first day that the vendors set up shop, and my friend Keith Ferguson was eager to be there when the doors opened. Somehow I got the Friday morning schedule wrong and missed out on competing in a morning tournament, so I went to the vendors' hall instead. As soon as I walked in, I saw the Gaming Nomads booth with Incan Gold (designers Bruno Faidutti and Alan R. Moon, artist Matthias Catrein, publisher Gryphon), which my family had been playing using a makeshift homemade version. For $20, it seemed reasonable to get a copy of the real thing, since it gets some play in my house. I overheard someone ask for Salmon Run (designer Jesse Catron artist Eric J. Carter, publisher Gryphon), which I didn't even know they had until they pulled it out from under a low shelf, so I picked that up, too. Finally, I decided to get Pergamon (designers Stefan Dorra and Ralf zur Linde, artist Klemens Franz, publisher Gryphon Games), which has been on my wishlist for a long time but which I just never picked up until now. So I bought three Gryphon games from the first vendor I saw. I decided discretion was the better part of valor at that point, and turned around and walked out again before my credit card got any other bright ideas.
Vendors
Friday at the World Boardgaming Championships was the first day that the vendors set up shop, and my friend Keith Ferguson was eager to be there when the doors opened. Somehow I got the Friday morning schedule wrong and missed out on competing in a morning tournament, so I went to the vendors' hall instead. As soon as I walked in, I saw the Gaming Nomads booth with Incan Gold (designers Bruno Faidutti and Alan R. Moon, artist Matthias Catrein, publisher Gryphon), which my family had been playing using a makeshift homemade version. For $20, it seemed reasonable to get a copy of the real thing, since it gets some play in my house. I overheard someone ask for Salmon Run (designer Jesse Catron artist Eric J. Carter, publisher Gryphon), which I didn't even know they had until they pulled it out from under a low shelf, so I picked that up, too. Finally, I decided to get Pergamon (designers Stefan Dorra and Ralf zur Linde, artist Klemens Franz, publisher Gryphon Games), which has been on my wishlist for a long time but which I just never picked up until now. So I bought three Gryphon games from the first vendor I saw. I decided discretion was the better part of valor at that point, and turned around and walked out again before my credit card got any other bright ideas.
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
WBC 2013 Thursday: "Small" tournaments and second-hand buys
Last week I spent four days at the World Boardgaming Championships in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. WBC is one of my favorite conventions, and this one had a few highlights that I hope to share over the next few posts.
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
WBC: Thinking about August in December
I'll preface my remarks by stipulating that I am a relatively new member of the Boardgame Players Association, and all I know is based on what I read in the newsletter and elsewhere online. None of this represents any kind of official news or information from the BPA. Caveat lector.
Friday, August 17, 2012
WBC: Acquire and acquisitions
Early in our game of Acquire. I had a majority holding in Worldwide (the purple hotel to the right), but that wasn't enough to prevail |
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
WBC: Designers' forum
One of the great things about a convention like the World Boardgaming Championships is having the opportunity to interact with fellow designers. The open gaming room at WBC was practically an informal design laboratory of demonstrations and playtesting.
My friend Keith F. and I had only the briefest chat with one of my favorite designers, T.C. Petty III, whom I met at WBC last year when he was demonstrating the semi-cooperative Viva Java, a game that has already seen its successful Kickstarter campaign and has a Dice Hate Me release expected this month. T.C. is working on a couple of ideas that sound characteristically original and off-beat. It will be fun to see what creations find their way to production out of his unique perspective on game design.
TC Petty III's Viva Java Image courtesy of Dice Hate Me Games |
Sunday, August 12, 2012
WBC: Wooden Ships semifinal and final
I was pleased to qualify for the semifinal in the World Boardgaming Championships Wooden Ships and Iron Men tournament. The previous year, I'd lost in the semi-final to Evan Hitchings, and as it happened, this year would provide the opportunity for a rematch.
Semi-final: Frigate frenzy
For the semi-final, we were each given the opportunity to choose from among three orders of battle:
Semi-final: Frigate frenzy
For the semi-final, we were each given the opportunity to choose from among three orders of battle:
- Two elite-crewed American frigates, including one 44-gun ship
- Three crack-crewed British frigates
- Four French frigates - one crack and three average
Friday, August 10, 2012
WBC: When ships were made of wood
The Wooden Ships and Iron Men tournament has become an enduring staple of my experience at World Boardgaming Championships. My post a few days ago described my loss in a one-on-one engagement, but I enjoyed a fair degree of success later in the competition.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
WBC: "Ethics in Gaming" revisited
At WBC on Thursday last week, Joel Tamburo hosted his annual seminar on Ethics in Gaming. This was my second opportunity to attend.
I arrived a little late and found myself in the middle of a conversation on the interpretation of rules
ambiguities. Not entirely a matter of ethics, the question on the floor seemed to center around whether an unaddressed action in the rules should be allowed (because the rules don't prevent it) or prohibited (because the rules don't allow it or provide for it). Peter, an attorney, likened the question to that of Constitutional interpretation, whereby some people hold that rulings on Constitutionality ought to depend on the intent of the founders at the time that they wrote it, as best we can determine from other writings at the time. Others hold that interpretation of the Constitution necessarily changes with the times, and so it is with game rules: It doesn't matter how the game designer wanted you to play the game; what matters is how the players want to play. So, then, the question became, does the designer's intent matter?
Signing of the Constitution of the United States U.S. Government. Public domain |
Monday, August 6, 2012
World Boardgaming Championships: Wonders, ships, and farmers
Last Thursday, I arrived at the World Boardgaming Championships in Lancaster, Pennsylvania with a "flexible plan" (which is just one step above no plan at all) of how best to enjoy this annual trek to the highlight event of the Boardgame Players Association.
Sunday, August 5, 2012
World Boardgaming Championships 2012: Quick note upon return
I just got home earlier tonight from the World Boardgaming Championships (WBC) in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. A quick note before going to bed, with more to follow:
- 7 Wonders: quarterfinals, and the loss of a card
- "Ethics in gaming" seminar
- Agricola with the Interactive deck
- Wooden Ships and Iron Men: Made the finals but lost
- Acquire: Still learning
- "East India Company" demo/playtest
- Heartland Hauling: first impressions
- War Time: Reprise
- Mars Needs Mechanics: Gaslight supply and demand
- Trains Planes and Automobiles: My first event as GM
- Acquisitions: Chicago Express, St. Petersburg, and Leaping Lemmings
- A gift: 1949 edition of Clue
Thursday, August 2, 2012
East India Company: Turn sequence re-work pays off
After work today, I got a fourth playtest of "East India Company" with my friends Brian G. and Frank H. Earlier this week, I'd completely reworked the turn sequence to improve the flow of decision-making and order of events, plus I added a couple of commodity tiles to the initial set-up to open up the early game.
Monday, July 30, 2012
East India Company: More playtesting, more adjusting
My family and I did another run-through of "East India Company" this weekend with my wife, my 19-year-old son, and my mother-in-law, of all people, who isn't afraid to learn something new from time to time. I made some adjustments to correct the issue with the pace of the game this time, and I wanted to see how effective they were.
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Ethics in gaming: Reflections on the WBC seminar
[While on vacation in North Carolina, in anticipation of going to the World Boardgaming Championships in Pennsylvania in a few weeks, I scheduled a re-post of one of my most popular articles, a reflection on the "Ethics in Gaming" seminar from the 2011 WBC convention. Originally appeared 15 August 2011]
Last week at the World Boardgaming Championships, Joel Tamburo led a fascinating seminar on ethics in gaming. I had no idea what to expect and was pleasantly surprised at the directions that the conversation took. Right away, the group explored the question of whether it is ethically acceptable to lie in the course of a game. The immediate example that came up is Diplomacy, a game only half-facetiously blamed for ruining good friendships. A consensus emerged that there is an understanding that in a game like Diplomacy, lying is an expected part of negotiation. Although success requires alliances, winning sooner or later requires betrayal. So as long as it is understood among players that lying is - or can be - part of the game, then that becomes part of the game's acceptable code of ethics.
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