Here we outline some of the best British made board and card games on display at the UK Games Expo 2013.
Dreadball
He shoots, he fumbles, the ork kicks his head in. |
The first thing that took me by surprise was how compact the game is, the board is actually rather small but again I’m probably comparing things to Blood Bowl and my ancient polystyrene pitch. I played a cut down game but the rules are based on Mantic’s dice pool system which makes it easy to grasp the basics and the game plays fast, it was a cut down game but we managed to play in around twenty minutes.
I resisted a purchase of this game, not because I didn’t like it but because I wasn’t in the market for a two player game at the time but if a few of my friends, or members of my regular gaming group where to get into the game I can see myself picking up a team.
For more information, check out the Mantic’s game site and Dreadball.com.
Xi
Its four cards against one, bring it on. |
The artwork for Xi is quite simply stunning. It gives the game a very distinctive style that reminds me of some of the illustrations from Planescape. The gameplay though is a little disappointing. Okay that may be a bit harsh. Xi follows your normal card combat tropes of getting cards onto the battlefield to whack your opponent or anything that stands in the way but rather than using resources from your deck you have a number of points, called Time, which you can spend each turn to play your cards. These time points can be also be stored away for future use which gives the game a few more strategic options than first seem apparent. Cards are made up of your typical combat units and spells. In the demo game I played it came down to the wire, me playing a fast fire based deck and the demo player using a slow turtling stone based deck. I won but only just, as one more turn and I would have been obliterated. One aspect I did really like was that a lot of my fire attack cards where more than a little indiscriminate doing just as much damage to me as to my opponent.
Xi isn’t a bad game; it’s just lacking that spark to put it ahead in an already crowded marketplace. A lot of work has obviously been put into its development but I’m worried that it lacks the ‘oomph’ to take it to the mainstream. I’m also worried about the creators are attempting to make a traditional CCG purchasing model with starter sets and random booster packs. It’s going to be tough for the developers to break through but if Xi were released in something akin to FFG’s living card game format or as faction boxed sets I can see Xi having a much better chance of success.
For more information about Xi check out http://xicards.com or the Xi Facebook page.
Lords of War
Poisonous Lizrdmen are great and sneaky, and then get blatted by an orc. |
At first the game seems very similar to Summoner Wars, but I would suggest that this is what happens when you boil down Summoner Wars into its simplest form. There’s no dice, no magic to build, it’s just a simple tactical game.
At the moment the game only includes two factions, orcs and dwarves (available as a single boxed set). The lizards & elves boxed set is out soon and an iOS version is currently in development. I got very excited about this game so expect Polyhedron Collider to be tracking its progress and we’ll be running a review when the second boxed set is released.
For more information on Lords of War check out their website.
This concludes our reports on the UK Games Expo 2013, check out the review of the show and the showcase of the best miniatures games and see you at UK Games Expo 2014!
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