May 2025 Gaming

25 - BG Stats - May 2025 - Grid

I wasn’t expecting too much out of my May gaming period, mainly because of Mother’s Day and two Vancouver marathons meaning that we didn’t have our usual Sunday gaming place for three straight weeks.

Suddenly, though, the light appeared and we had an alternate location for two of those three Sundays!

Granted, one of those days there was no way I could really get out of downtown Vancouver so even an alternate venue didn’t work.

Combine this with me going to another game night on two Fridays, a month at the office where we played a fair number of games, and me doing a few quick online Boardgame Arena games with strangers to pad my stats, and I ended up with playing 20 games a total of 25 times!

There also ended up being seven new to me games, which I’ll talk about next week.

This beat April by a wide margin (16 games 20 times).

I thought my gaming might be lacking a little bit, so thought I would try some Boardgame Arena games, mainly those I’ve played before (so they wouldn’t show up as a “new to me” game) and games that don’t take very long, especially playing them online.

That ended up being four games (Point Salad, Gizmos, Castle Combo, and Go Nuts for Donuts), so factor that into the stats above.

What pleased me is the BGA games (along with one other one) hadn’t been played in quite a long time!

So let’s get to the meat of what happened in May.

Here’s what I played last month.

25 - BG Stats - May 2025 - Games

And here that is in grid format.

25 - BG Stats - May 2025 - Grid

Many thanks to the wonderful BG Stats app for getting these beautiful pictures and allowing me to keep these stats for at least 10 years!

Along with the new to me games, there were some definite other highlights as well.

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Friday Night Shots – Games & Changed Opinions

clank-board

Can I really go a month combining drinking and posting?

Yes, I can!

It’s been a month of posts, and thankfully you’ve managed to find your way back to the bar each week, even though historically I’ve been having trouble meeting this quota.

That says a lot about you as a customer.

You're awesome gif

Yes, it’s another Friday night, with comfortable drinks (both alcoholic and non-alcoholic) and lots of great conversation!

Because obviously I don’t have any other customers to deal with.

One would wonder how this bar stays open when you’re the only customer.

I always enjoy these boardgame conversations with you, especially when we’re spared from the jukebox that spews endless Free Bird because it appears to be broken yet again.

I’ll just unplug it.

Have a seat and let’s talk about games that maybe you’ve changed your opinion about, and why that might be?

Because I have a few.

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Clank Under the Sea – Clank: Sunken Treasures app expansion review

Clank - Sunken Treasures - Mermaid

I keep saying this, but Dire Wolf Digital is putting out some amazing boardgame apps, even though sometimes a new app has a couple of faults that were present (and fixed) in previous apps, so I’m not sure what’s going on there.

They do fix them fairly quickly, though.

The recent Clank app has to be one of my favourite apps.

I typically don’t play apps solo very often. Only enough to maybe review them or learn the game.

My main method of playing is asynchronous online multiplayer.

However, Clank is one of the rare exceptions, as I play solo games against the AI all the time.

So when Dire Wolf Digital announced that the first (of quite a few, I believe) expansion for the boardgame was coming to the app, I was very enthusiastic.

Clank: Sunken Treasures adds a bunch of new cards, two new maps, and a couple different mechanics, none of which add too much complexity but do add a lot of entertainment value to an already great app.

Clank - Sunken Treasures - Box

(This review will be for both the app and the expansion itself, so stay with me if you’re only interested in the board game).

As with the base game, players are adventurers delving into the depths of a dragon’s lair, though this time it’s a sea dragon and players are exploring a shipwreck and under a seaside castle.

Journey into the depths, find an artifact, and bring it up to the top!

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Dune Imperium – Immortality Digital Expansion Coming Soon

immortality_webannouncement_header

(Edit 6/4/25): Wow, that was quick. They’ve now announced it will be available on all platforms on June 10!

Two posts in a day, but this one excites me and I’ve just had time to actually write it up after a few days.

Hence why the “news” here is more “what excites me” and not “breaking and you must read it here first!”

Dire Wolf Digital is knocking it out of the park recently in the digital realm.

Wednesday is going to have a review of the latest Clank digital expansion (check it out when it drops!), but last Friday, news was released about a new digital expansion for their other hugely popular boardgame adaptation, Dune Imperium.

immortality_webannouncement_header

Yes, after the wonderful Rise of Ix expansion, the other Dune Imperium expansion is going to be dropping sometime in the next few months.

See their announcement here.

Dune Imperium – Immortality adds the Bene Tleilax and genetic modification, letting you move along the Tleilax track for important benefits, as well as graft certain cards to other cards, enhancing their effects.

The expansion adds 48 new cards, 30 of which are new Imperium cards.

Many of these have the “grafting” mechanic, where you have combine the effects of both cards.

From the announcement page:

“Graft cards can’t be played alone; they must be combined with another card. But once grafted together, both cards act as one, granting you access to both of their Agent icons and card effects for the turn. “

immortality_webannouncement_articleimage_1

Why you would want to trash the Sardaukar Legion, I don’t know? But this illustrates the effects of grafting nicely.

immortality-tleilaxu-board

It also introduces two new tracks, a Research track and a Tleilax track. The latter is actually similar to the other faction tracks, except you can’t gain an alliance with them.

They will work with anybody.

worm_immortality_webannouncement_articleimage_2-e1745969125607

Tleilax cards can be purchased separately using “specimens” rather than the usual cost.

These go into your deck just like regular Imperium cards, but they just have a different way of getting them.

Finally, it adds “Family Atomics,” which basically allows you to, once per game, wipe the Imperium row if you don’t like the cards that are available for purchase.

On the table, this should be used no matter whether you’re playing with Immortality or not, but in the app I assume you have to be playing with that expansion before it’s implemented.

It works nicely with Rise of Ix, but you’ll also be able to pick and choose which expansion you play with.

Best of all, when you decide to just play with one, you won’t have to go through the entire deck and remove the cards you’re not using!

I have both expansions in my table copy of the game, but I haven’t played with them yet.

I’ve played with Rise of Ix on the app a lot, however.

I’m really looking forward to when this one drops.

Wishlist it on Steam today!

Though it will probably come out on all platforms at the same time like the new Clank expansion did.

However, there are no guarantees.

Also, check out the announcement for more because I didn’t mention everything!

I wanted to leave something for their article.

The Eternal Artifacts – Vale of Eternity: Artifacts Review

Vale of Eternity - Artifacts - Banshee

Sometimes game expansions add some much-needed variety to a game that enhances it, maybe fixing something that players have found wrong or missing in the base game.

Other times, an expansion adds some unnecessary junk that makes a game more complicated or less enjoyable due to more and more things you need to keep track of.

The Vale of Eternity: Artifacts expansion is a little bit of both (without the “things found wrong in the base game” aspect, which didn’t really need fixing).

Vale of Eternity - Artifacts box

The Artifacts expansion for The Vale of Eternity was designed by Eric Hong and Mathieu Rivero, with artwork by Jacqui Davis, Jiahui Eva Gao, Gautier Maia, Stefano Martinuz and Erica Tormen. It was published by Mandoo Games in 2024.

It adds a load of new cards to the game, enhancing that “building your tableau” feeling to even greater heights.

But it also adds valuable artifacts to the game, items that you can use during your turn (or at the beginning of it) to enhance your play.

It also bumps the endgame threshold to 80 points instead of 60, something that I’m not sure is needed though more plays may help determine that.

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Combat Commander – After Action Report – Scenario 118 – No. 4 Commando

Combat Commander 118 - setup

Combat Commander can be a weird duck sometimes.

One day, luck is swinging wildly like a drunk pool player swinging his stick around because he scratched on an easy 8-ball shot.

The next day, things pretty much go in a straight line, from one end to the other with no deviation, like Johnny Fever after a few drinks.

(10,000 points if you get that reference in full, not just the name)

Today’s ladder game was one of the latter.

In other words, welcome to another tale from the Combat Commander ladder, that monthly tournament of one of the best games out there.

Run by the miraculous Patrick Pence (he of Patrick’s Tactics & Tutorials on Youtube), the ladder gives you a chance to test your mettle against over a hundred different possible opponents on a monthly basis (that’s one a month, not hundreds all at one time. We’re not Rambo or anything).

This month’s mission is from a series of scenarios published in the C3i magazine.

And it is also my 4 -year anniversary on the ladder! I started playing this great game regularly in May 2021.

It’s been a wonderful 4 years.

My opponent this month was Frank E, another eastern opponent so we made a Saturday morning work for our game.

The scenario takes place during the Dieppe commando raids on the coast of France in 1942. A group of intrepid Brit commandos (and one US consultant team) face off against a small group of German defenders.

Here’s the initial setup.

Combat Commander 118 - setup

Don’t forget that you can click on a picture to blow it up.

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Friday Night Shots – Cooperative Games

Flash Point - Fire Rescue - Burning House

No, you’re not drunk or stoned or just seeing things.

Yes, this is the third week in a row for a Friday Night Shots post.

The bar is now open weekly!

At least for now.

Maybe not next week.

I’m glad you happened to be walking by noticed me working in here.

I’m not sure why nobody else is?

Oh, maybe it’s because the Open sign is malfunctioning.

Bar is open - neon sign

That could do it.

That’s what it’s supposed to look like! The contractors told me they fixed it and I guess I never checked.

Probably might have had some customers this week if not for that.

Anyway, why don’t you have a seat and we’ll talk about some boardgames.

Don’t worry about the lack of music. It was still stuck on Justin Bieber’s Greatest Hits so I took a hammer to it.

Jukebox smashed

It’ll get better.

Just like last week’s post, I can’t believe that I haven’t talked about this one yet.

What are your opinions on cooperative games?

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Friday Night Shots – How Important is Art?

Has it been five weeks yet?

No, it hasn’t!

Welcome back to the bar, only a week later.

You must have seen the lights on in the window, or maybe the fire that’s in the corner.

We should probably put that out.

Anyway, it’s good to have you back. Have a seat and I’ll get you something to drink.

Anything you want.

Except Dr. Pepper, because while I like the other 22 flavours, I’m morally opposed to prickly ash.

Dr Pepper

(Thanks, AJ!)

So now that you’re here, and we literally have no other customers, let’s talk about board games!

I can’t believe we haven’t talked about this before, but just how important is good art to you in a boardgame?

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The Beauty of Northwest Tiles – Cascadia App Review

Cascadia Digital - Tiles

(this is going to be a review of both the game and the app, since I’ve played the tabletop game a bunch too)

There’s something peaceful about a good tile-laying game where everybody is creating their own habitat for God’s natural wonders, both flora and fauna.

It’s especially peaceful when it can also be done in a lunch time at the office!

Or, in digital form, in about 15 minutes.

Cascadia recently came out in app form for iOS/Android/Steam.

Cascadia - Box

Published by Dire Wolf Digital (with the boardgame itself published by Flatout Games and Alderac Entertainment Group), the game was designed by Randy Flynn with excellent artwork by Beth Sobel (said artwork looking gorgeous on the iPad as well).

The game plays 1-4 players, as does the app!

The app just came out a couple of months ago while the game itself was published in 2022.

What can be bad about laying out a bunch of tiles until you have a large, beautiful panorama with a bunch of animals on it?

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Salty Origami – Sea Salt & Paper Review

Sea Salt & Paper - Cards

As I spoke about on Saturday, the word “filler” for a game is often seen as derogatory, when it really shouldn’t be.

Some fillers are really great!

Many card games are filler games, and one really juicy one (though it does feel a bit papery for some reason) is Sea Salt & Paper (oh, that’s why it feels that way!) published by Bombyx Games (and Pandasaurus Games over here in North America) in 2022.

Sea Salt & Paper - box

The game was designed by Bruno Cathala and Théo Rivière with artwork by Lucien Derainne, Pierre-Yves Gallard and plays 2-4 players.

And it’s cute as hell, if you like origami.

Sea Salt & Paper is a simple set-collecting card game that adds a bit of a push your luck element.

Well, maybe not push your luck.

More like “do I declare now and risk the others being ahead of me? Or do I wait to see if I can score more points but they may jump ahead of me and I don’t know how many points anybody has right now?”

Ok, that was long-winded.

Heavy Breathing - gif (Spongebob Squarepants)

Let me catch my breath.

The rules of the game are simple to teach and you will be be done in 20-30 minutes.

The perfect filler!

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