

- #Boardgamegeek wits and wagers questions movie#
- #Boardgamegeek wits and wagers questions professional#
And they’ll probably pick something stupid like PIE, FISH, and JACK, because they were thinking of “Monterey Jack”, and they all somehow were thinking MUG meant like a robbery, and basically they’re all stupid. And then my team has to loudly and miserably argue out all the possibilities of what I meant and try to figure out the right ones to pick.

For example, if I’m the Spymaster, and I’m trying to get you to touch MUG, PIE, and FISH, I might say: “DINNER: 3”. The Spymaster has to try to get their team to touch specific words, but they can only communicate to their team using a single word and a number. Together, everybody faces this random 5×5 grid of words: (Or, if you want a more structured experience for your bullshitting, try Coup (E): a slick, fast, sharp little bluffing game where everybody has two secret roles with special powers, but you can try to claim any kind of special power, unless somebody calls bullshit on you.)Ĭodenames (E): Team party game, where one big group takes on another big group. And then you just talk. What follows is a delicate dance of subtle questioning, concealment, bullshittery, and passing hidden information in plain sight, and it has never failed to reduce a group of grown adults into hysterical fits of laughter. Everybody else wins together if they figure out who the spy. The spy wins if they figure out the location. Only nobody else knows who the spy is, and the spy doesn’t know the location. The assignments are all random and secret. One of you is the SPY, who is the only person that doesn’t know the collective location. You are secretly assigned a single location together: like, you’re all at the Opera together, or in a Submarine, or at an Amusement Park. All but one players are on a team together. Spyfall (E): Hysterical ultra-simple game of bullshit and bullshit detection, that is possibly the hardest I’ve ever laughed in a game. If you play it ten times, then you’re already into one of the great entertainment bargains.


#Boardgamegeek wits and wagers questions movie#
Fifty bucks for a boardgame? But let me suggest the following calculation: if you play such a boardgames only once, and 5 people have two hours of fun together, that’s already cheaper than going out to a movie together, or even a modest dinner out together. May involve 20 page rulebooks, war-games with thousands of exceptions, actual spreadsheets)Ī brief word on pricing: some people here may not have dipped their toes into modern boardgames before, and might be shocked at the prices, especially for some of the more esoteric games. Long rule-books, complex and emergent play) Some mild effort to learn, but not too intimidating for the average moderately intelligent adult. M = Medium (Your average modern Euro boardgames. (If you want to see what I think about hundreds and hundreds of game, I have an account at Boardgamegeek where I’ve been reviewing games for like a decade.)Į = Easy (Simple family games not much harder than Monopoly. Sadly, a majority of my favorite games are currently out of print and painfully expensive. Here’s my recommendations for people putting their first or second feet into the modern boardgames pond, tilted towards the accessible, the crucial, and the still in-print or easy to find used. Or maybe it’s because I have so many damn boardgames that I actually have to keep a spreadsheet to remember where they all are. (Here’s my new book on games as an art form.) The main change in my life is that everybody now asks me for board game recommendations at Christmas.
#Boardgamegeek wits and wagers questions professional#
After a recent professional pivot, I am now literally an academic specialist in the philosophy of games.
