I can't tell if I absolutely love the style of it, or if I hate it. Either way, it reminds me of a Gameboy game, which is pretty neat. Looks charming though, and I will check it out.
I played this once, and I found it quite puzzling. The game is a fun abstract game. The game is sorta weird in its rule, but it is not a hard-to-learn game.
I guess because it is an import, this is $75 Cndn at an online retailer. For me, that is too much compared to other games. Maybe it will eventually get a US publisher like Coffee Roaster did. However, even with Coffee Roaster, I bought the app first, which I really like, but I will stay with that rather than spending over $40 Cndn on a physical copy of a solo game.
Seems like a racing game disguised as a puzzle game. If I lay my tiles in an area first, I automatically confirm my locations first. Now the second player has to play around the tiles that the first player lay down. There doesn't seem to be a way to tell a player, "You're memory is wrong. Those building were not in that location." If you're the first player to "remember" a building in a location, you're automatically confirmed. Thematically, memory doesn't work that way. If I remember details of a vacation before my wife does, that doesn't automatically mean that my memory is correct. For this reason, I'm out.
@@wolflarson71 True, I just wish there was a way to "un-do" the work of a previous player. I have a feeling that if you have 2 experienced players, the win will most likely go to the first player.
You get the variety bonus for reviewing unique games. I appreciate it!
It looks interesting, but will it be interesting enough to keep in your collection? Anybody has a comment about this? hanks Zee.
Bus Route is solid so hope this is just as good if not better.
I can't tell if I absolutely love the style of it, or if I hate it. Either way, it reminds me of a Gameboy game, which is pretty neat. Looks charming though, and I will check it out.
I played this once, and I found it quite puzzling. The game is a fun abstract game. The game is sorta weird in its rule, but it is not a hard-to-learn game.
I guess because it is an import, this is $75 Cndn at an online retailer. For me, that is too much compared to other games. Maybe it will eventually get a US publisher like Coffee Roaster did. However, even with Coffee Roaster, I bought the app first, which I really like, but I will stay with that rather than spending over $40 Cndn on a physical copy of a solo game.
Seems like a racing game disguised as a puzzle game.
If I lay my tiles in an area first, I automatically confirm my locations first. Now the second player has to play around the tiles that the first player lay down.
There doesn't seem to be a way to tell a player, "You're memory is wrong. Those building were not in that location." If you're the first player to "remember" a building in a location, you're automatically confirmed. Thematically, memory doesn't work that way. If I remember details of a vacation before my wife does, that doesn't automatically mean that my memory is correct.
For this reason, I'm out.
This clearly isn't the type of game (more on the Euro side than role playing) that is focused on immersive and coherent story telling.
They do say that history is written by the victors...
@@wolflarson71
True, I just wish there was a way to "un-do" the work of a previous player. I have a feeling that if you have 2 experienced players, the win will most likely go to the first player.
This is interesting but seems like a nightmare to teach
Not at all. I took less than 10 mins to teach. Its actually rather intuitive once you have play and teach at the same time.
Oh, well, then I guess I should give it a shot if I can get my hands on a copy
That cover is unfortunate. It looks like they were so bored they fell asleep...