Close

Login

Lost Password     Register
Close

Register

    Lost Password
Close

Lost Password

    Register
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Väruld on Kickstarter
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

Has it been two weeks already? Elliott reviews Consensus Movie Edition from Mindlogic Inc, and Legions of Darkness from Victory Point Games, while Jeff reviews Lock ‘n Load Forgotten Heroes Vietnam from Lock ‘n Load Publishing and Fast Action Battles: Sicily from GMT. All this plus the latest table top gaming news and our usual sprinkling of random nonsense…

Download the show to take on the go right here.

And don’t forget, The Gaming Gang podcast and daily news are available in one feed on iTunes.

Also add the news and podcast feed to your favorite aggregator or app with this link.

4 Comments

  1. Please, please, please, join me in stopping the use of the word “Fiddly”. Michael Jackson was fiddly. I don’t think the adjective should be applied to boardgames. It sounds totally nerdy and reminds me of a sex molester or and uncoordinated person fumbling with counters, or just not smart enough to comprehend the rules (not that all rules are well written). There are many other ways to describe a game, its rules or its mechanics other than by just saying it’s “fiddly”. I know I’m not the only one who cringes when they hear this word applied to boardgames. I know it was an English term originally but seems to have been brought into the boardgaming world and is used very extensively mainly by Eurogamers when describing wargames. Only YOU can prevent forest fiddlys. Other than that, I really enjoy your show.
    Please help.
    Thank you!
    Wade (wargamer for over 40 years)

    Reply
  2. Actually I use the turn fiddly to describe rules that will be interpreted differently by different players. I mainly used the word in the FABS review simply because the previous Fast Action Battles title, Bulge, had an unofficial name given to it by players: Fiddly Action Battles.

    I’d say we probably say wonky (as in we’re not sure why the rule was written the way it was) much more frequently than fiddly. That said I think wonky pops up every couple of shows or so.

    Reply
  3. Ha! Your remarks about the wooden cube, farming/building/job assignment Euro-games are spot on. What a bunch of brown dreck most of those games are. Great podcast again, gents. Hermann

    Reply
  4. Gosh Hermann, why not tell us how you really feel? 😉 There are plenty of Euros out there that I like but, unfortunately, about 85% of the titles I’ve run across have left me cold. One aspect of many that doesn’t thrill me is the lack of interaction with other players at the table. What’s the point of getting together with friends if everyone is just going to be a drone?

    Also, I normally find what the Euro designer likes to call “elegant” is actually “simplistic” in my book.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Thanks for submitting your comment!