(Edit 6/10/20: And it’s out in Beta! I’m enjoying it. See my thoughts here)
Wasn’t going to do a post today, but then received some great and urgent news in my mailbox from Temple Gates Games.

Yes, that’s right. Roll for the Galaxy, the dice version of the great Race for the Galaxy, is finally entering the beta stage for the new app that’s coming out!
What does the app have?
So I can get this out quickly, let’s do a blurb:
You can join the beta for Steam, iOS or Android

Temple Gates did a simply amazing job on the Race for the Galaxy app, a game that came out a couple of years ago and I still play religiously.
Can they keep that track record going?
Sign up for the beta and see what you think?
It’s December! The last month of the year, the Christmas (or whatever end-of-year holiday you celebrate) season is upon us, but before we look forward to all of those presents sitting under the tree (or sitting under whatever your end-of-year holiday object is), it’s time to reflect back to a time long ago.
Two days is long, right?
Yes, that’s right. It’s the new to me games played in November! Even with Christmas coming soon, the leader of the Cult of the New to Me has responsibilities to the time before.
There is always an undercurrent of unrest in the cult, especially when I play a lot of brand new games in a month. They think I’m a sellout to the Cult of the New or something like that.
I don’t know where they would get that idea.

But it’s not true!
Hell, I even played a game from 1997 in November.
It was a nice bunch of games, seven in total which is amazing since I actually skipped a week. They were all fun in their own way, but some definitely better than others.
Amazingly enough, for somebody who’s not a big fan of word games, two of the new games are word games! One incredibly fun and one…not so much.
I’m looking forward to a December that’s also chock full of new to me games.
So without further adieu (all of my adieu was eaten by a giant worm anyway), let’s get this thing started!
Since I’m in full-blooded GMT Fanboy Mode (can I trademark that? I think I should trademark that) with trying to get The Barracks Emperors over the P500 line (and having successfully done so with Flashpoint: South China Sea and I will not listen to anybody who says I didn’t have a part in that one), you know what I said to myself?
I said “Self” (because I always call myself “Self,” as opposed to naming the other voices in my head), “why don’t you see if you can succeed with some of the other games that you’ve ordered on the P500 list that haven’t quite made the cut yet?”
I then patted myself on the head (and rubbed my tummy at the same time) for such a great idea, and quickly went to my GMT Games account page to see what else could use some help.

Ancient Civilizations of the Middle East is the companion (not a sequel or expansion, but a standalone) game to the recently released Ancient Civilizations of the Inner Sea, a game I tried at Dragonflight this year and was a bit sorry that I hadn’t ordered it before it shipped.
Both games are designed by Christopher Vorder Bruegge and Mark McLaughlin with developer Fred Schachter. Inner Sea was really cool and this one looks like it’s going to be just as cool.
Being as much of a Smash Up fan as I am, you know I couldn’t pass up commenting on this one.
Alderac Entertainment Group (AEG) and The Op (formerly USAopoly) are teaming up to bring new licensed factions to the hit card game (and one of my most-played) Smash Up.
Typically, factions in Smash Up are themed but a bit more generic, like Ninjas or Samurai or Truckers, maybe Time Travellers.

With this agreement, that will change for next year.
From the post:
“In joining forces with The Op, who celebrates 25 years of co-branded products and partnerships this year, Smash Up designer Paul Peterson is confident that fans will embrace what is to come of the collaboration. “The Op has consistently put out some of the highest quality games in the industry,” says Peterson, known best for his work on Pokémon and Magic: The Gathering. “By pairing with the design team from AEG, the Smash Up game we are building together is going knock the fans’ socks off!””
I’m not familiar with most of The Op’s catalog, so I’m not quite sure what those factions might be.
Looking at their site, I see Dungeons & Dragons Clue and a bunch of Disney games. There’s Harry Potter (though I would think it would be hard to differentiate that from the already-existing Wizards faction, since a lot of the cards in that faction are basically a parody of Harry Potter).
There’s Game of Thrones (also already parodied), but there’s also Bob’s Burgers, The Simpsons, IT (now *that* would be an interesting idea), Rick & Morty, and Super Mario, and that’s just the first three pages of their “All Games” page!
This could be extremely fun or it could be a disaster. We’ll have to see what happens in 2020.
However, I’m of two minds about the whole thing.
The licensed properties could be very good assuming they all are done in the Smash Up vein, with Smash Up art and all of that. I hope the licensing doesn’t go to their head.
On the other hand, I will miss the more generic imaginative factions that Peterson and crew have been coming up with over the past few years. The new World Tour: Culture Shock expansion factions (review coming once I play with it some more) just shows that ingenuity and I hope that the licensing doesn’t affect that.
I trust Peterson and the others at AEG that make Smash Up possible.
Yet I’m still holding my breath a little bit.
Here’s looking at 2020 and some more craziness!
It’s no secret that Architects of the West Kingdom is a fantastic game. It’s my #4 game played of all time!
Designed by Shem Phillips and S J MacDonald and published by both Garphill Games and Renegade Game Studios, this wonderful worker-placement game about building a city in Medieval France has very few flaws in my opinion.
Recently, Shem announced a new expansion for it, Age of the Artisans.

At the time, we didn’t have a whole lot of information about it.
Now we do, and this looks so sweet!
Today, Shem posted the rulebook to BGG and also announced this week that pre-orders would open on November 19 from Garphill Games.
I’m probably one of the few people who remembers the “new” War of the Worlds TV series that came out in the 1980s. It was a “sequel” series to the 1950’s movie.

It was campy, but I really did enjoy it. The aliens had been kept in “hibernation” rather than being destroyed, and now radiation has destroyed the infecting bacteria that had originally stopped them. Now they were trying once again to take over the planet, and this time they could somehow inhabit human bodies! (that kept the SFX budget down).
Why do I bring this up?
I recently received my Kickstarter copy of War of the Worlds: The New Wave published by Grey Fox Games. It brought back a few memories.
Not that they have anything to do with each other, as the game, designed by Denis Plastinin with art by Igor Savechenko, is a sequel to the book rather than the movie. It takes place “several years” after the original H.G. Wells story, so probably in the early 1900s.

In the game, the Aliens are back! I’m not sure exactly how they solved that whole “I have a cold, ugh I’m dead!!!!” problem, but somehow they did.
And they’re pissed.
They’re determined to wipe out Great Britain (I guess the British are the ones who gave them the colds?) and they’ve brought the firepower to do it!
The game is a 2-player deckbuilding game where one side plays the evil Aliens trying to wipe out all of humanity (at least on the island) while the other player takes the part of the brave human resistance fighters, pinging away at these monstrosities until they do enough damage that the Aliens just say “you know what? Screw this planet. The weather’s terrible, they have Con Crud, and I’d rather go to the beach on Europa anyway.”
How does it work?
Let’s take a look.
I’ve been a big fan of the Fallout video game series since Fallout 3 all those many years ago (I missed the buzz when the first two came out).
I love the series so much that I was really happy to hear about the board game version of Fallout. Sadly, for me anyway, finally playing it didn’t live up to the hype.
But that hasn’t stopped Fantasy Flight Games (FFG)!
Yesterday they announced a game based on the popular Fallout app that took the world by storm prior to Fallout 4 being released a couple of years ago.
This news is so hot that there isn’t even a BoardgameGeek listing for the game yet!

Yes, Fallout Shelter: the Board Game (based on the Bethesda app) will be coming out in early 2020, and this one isn’t an adventure game. It’s actually a worker placement game that plays 2-4 players, where you are trying to increase the happiness of the denizens of your Vault-Tec vault as well as keeping them safe and making them be productive.
I’m not big on the concept of legacy games.
I just don’t play a game enough times in a row to actually sit down with the same group of players and work our way through it.
Want to get me to try a legacy game?
Put it on digital.
I told Acram Digital that very thing, and they obviously listened to me since they are now working on Charterstone from Stonemaier Games, the immensely popular legacy game that was all the rage in 2017.
I take full credit for this! You can thank me with cookies.
(Editor – I want to come visit the fantasy land you apparently live in)
Here’s the game blurb just so you know what this game actually is:
“The prosperous Kingdom of Greengully, ruled for centuries by the Forever King, has issued a decree to its citizens to colonize the vast lands beyond its borders. In an effort to start a new village, the Forever King has selected six citizens for the task, each of whom has a unique set of skills they use to build their charter.”
And today, Acram Digital released the story trailer for the digital version of the game that’s coming out in 2020.
It looks pretty cool, and it’s nice to know that it’s coming out on Steam (you can put it on your wishlist now!), iOS, Android and Switch.
It will be nice to see what all the hype was about without actually having to dedicate 10-15 game days to the game.
I don’t know how people find the time to do that, but they must.
Is this something that’s intriguing to you?
Let me know in the comments!
I know I will probably be there on Day 1.
Sometimes for dinner you just want a big, juicy steak grilled to perfection with a mashed potato, something that you can savor for a long time while you’re enjoying good company and a glass of wine.
And sometimes you just want a few White Castle sliders that you can shove into your mouth that you can enjoy like the typical college student.

Both are enjoyable, in their own way and at their own time.
(Sorry, I don’t have enough knowledge to make a similar vegetarian analogy, but I’m sure you can think of one!)
While your typical Vital Lacerda game can be an example of the former, Fantasy Realms is a perfect example of the latter.
Quick, not very filling but yet incredibly delicious to eat play two or three times in quick succession.

Fantasy Realms is a card game designed by Bruce Glassco with art by Octographics. It’s published by Wizkids in North America and plays 3-6 players. It was published in 2017.