Literary Ales

Thoughts of a Reforming Pelagian

  • Home
  • Links
    • 0
      26 Feb 2009

      Meeple Mods

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost
      Carcassonne: The name evokes an idyllic beautiful pastoral French countryside. Or a bunch of tiles with people figurines confidently stradling roads, cities, and fields. Before I divulge my modification, let me explain a little about the game. Carcassonne is a German-style board game. (Often it is considered a "gateway game" to the style for its quick and simple play.) The game consists of several tiles with parts of a landscape printed on them — field, river, city, road, and monastery. To begin the game, one player places the start tile atop the table, and has the choice to play a meeple. Then play passes onto the next player, who picks up an unknown tile. He or she must place the tile to match the landscape pictures on the existing tile, and may also play a follower (affectionately known as a meeple) on a feature of the tile. No one may place a meeple on a feature already claimed if the feature extends across touching tiles. When features are completed the player with who has the most meeple on the feature scores points. We bought expansion pack which added new tiles and, more importantly, the capability to add a sixth player. However, the sixth player meeples were gray which we thought an unimaginative colour. Since the original colours were black, yellow, green, blue, and red, we decided purple would make a great addition to those colours. I bought some model paint and a brush and got to work. Surprisingly they required more coats of paint than expected.
      Media_httpcthallwordpresscomfiles200902img4469jpg_sbnibhponebsoau
      Media_httpcthallwordpresscomfiles200902img4471jpg_hciaapwintdrkbv
      Also included in the expansion pack were large meeple which counted as two meeple for the purposes of the game. Inexplicably, the large meeple are only 4 mm taller (sadly, I actually measured this) than a regular meeple. To help distinguish them, Heather used a silver Sharpie™ to mark a crescent on them, which resembles a small smile.
      Media_httpcthallwordpresscomfiles200902img4599jpg_hrfpgiayrnunfei
      • views
      • Tweet
    • 1
      3 Jan 2008

      Carcassonne and Puerto Rico

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost
      I recently received the board games Carcassonne and Puerto Rico. Both are quite enjoyable games, and plenty of fun to play. Both are German-style board games, meaning that they are themed games (not abstract like chess or draughts/chequers) where players are not eliminated during the course of the game. Carcassonne is a tile laying game (for 2-5 players) where players compete to have their followers score the most points. The game starts with one tile (or in a variant, players can build a river as a starting grid) already placed and players draw title and deploy followers 'meeple' to one of several features: roads, cities, cloisters, or fields. The tiles have to match with the tiles around it. When a feature is complete (except for fields), the player takes her follower off the board and scores the points; she may now use the follower for another feature later on. Meeple placed on fields become farmers which cannot be removed until the end of the game, when they are scored. Judicious placement or farms can swing the game several points at the end, and a person may win from behind. A nice thing about Carcassonne is that there are several expansion packs which allow for several variants. (I have not got any expansion packs yet, but I'm looking forward to purchasing some.) Puerto Rico (for 3 to 5 players) has a novel concept; players chose which 'role' to play each round. A governor (which rotates each round) chooses the first role and the associated actions are followed by the players, then the 2nd person chooses a role and all players follow the corresponding actions, etc. The player who chose that role gets some special advantage (e.g., the builder gets a reduced price for building an edifice). The roles let players produce goods, acquire settlers, and ship goods back to Spain, among others. My wife and I have been playing as two players each, but I just found a two-player variant online, that we'll have to try. All in all these are very good games and along with the Settlers of Catan (which is perhaps my favourite board game so far [We have all the expansions.]) serve as a good introduction to German-style board games, and I'm sure I'll be buying additional titles in the future. As a final note, I came across this war game, now I have to get it, but what a price tag!
      • views
      • Tweet
    • Search

    • My Other Blogs

      • The Halls of Tucson
      • Reformed Confessions Serialized
    • Blogroll

      • Cavman Considers
      • reformation 21
    • Websites

      • ESV Online
      • BoardGameGeek
      • Reformed Forum
      • Wikipedia
      • Westminster Bookstore
    • Books

      • Biblical Theology — Geerhardus Vos
      • Reformed Dogmatics — Herman Bavinck
      • Institutes of the Christian Religion — John Calvin
      • Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell — Susanna Clarke
      • Planet Narnia — Michael Ward
      • The Lord of the Rings — J.R.R. Tolkien
      • Reformation Study Bible (ESV)
      • Word of God in English: Criteria for Excellence in Bible Translation — Leland Ryken
      • The Valley of Vision — Arthur G. Bennett
    • Children's Books

      • The Jesus Storybook Bible: Every Story Whispers His Name — Sally Lloyd-Jones
      • The Big Picture Story Bible — David Helm
    • Tags

      • John Calvin
      • Basics of the Reformed Faith
      • Carl Trueman
      • Augustine
      • Bible
      • Confessions
      • baptism
      • covenant
      • grace
      • photography
      • Calvin
      • Martin Luther
      • Trinity
      • Tucson
      • justification
      • 16th century
      • Carcassonne
      • Christmas
      • God
      • Institutes of Christian Religion
      • Jesus
      • Philip Graham Ryken
      • Reformed
      • Thomas
      • Tolkien
      • beer
      • creation
      • evangelicalism
      • history
      • worldview
      • zeal
      • Eucharist
      • Lord’s Supper
      • Michael Ward
      • transubstantiation
      • Books
      • Bryan Chapell
      • C. S. Lewis
      • Christian Doctrine
      • Chronicles of Narnia
      • Church
      • Covenant Theology
      • Derek Thomas
      • Dispensationalism
      • Eschatology
      • Family
      • Glenn Beck
      • Graeme Goldsworthy
      • Heinrich Bullinger
      • Herman Bavinck
      • Incarnation
      • Israel
      • Jaroslav Pelikan
      • Jesus Seminar
      • Johann Tetzel
      • John
      • Kim Riddlebarger
      • Lord of the Rings
      • Luke
      • Macintosh
      • Mark
      • Matthew
      • Nativity
      • Pixar
      • Planet Earth
      • Robert Funk
      • Roy Hoover
      • Scotland
      • Stephen Smallman
      • Ten Commandments
      • The Five Gospels
      • Wages of Spin
      • Westminster Confession of Faith
      • abortion
      • amillennialism
      • atheism
      • backyard
      • church history
      • covenant children
      • death
      • environmentalism
      • faith
      • film review
      • hope
      • humour
      • iMac
      • infant baptism
      • joy
      • knowledge
      • organic
      • paedobaptism
      • piety
      • politics
      • preaching
      • providence
      • quotes
      • racism
      • redemption
      • sacrament
    • Archive

      • 2012 (5)
        • May (3)
        • January (2)
      • 2011 (47)
        • December (1)
        • November (1)
        • October (2)
        • September (3)
        • August (2)
        • June (2)
        • May (12)
        • April (10)
        • March (7)
        • February (4)
        • January (3)
      • 2010 (47)
        • December (4)
        • November (3)
        • September (3)
        • August (3)
        • July (5)
        • June (5)
        • May (5)
        • April (7)
        • March (6)
        • February (2)
        • January (4)
      • 2009 (27)
        • December (1)
        • November (2)
        • October (4)
        • September (3)
        • August (3)
        • July (3)
        • June (1)
        • April (3)
        • March (2)
        • February (2)
        • January (3)
      • 2008 (53)
        • December (6)
        • November (8)
        • October (4)
        • September (2)
        • August (5)
        • July (2)
        • June (2)
        • May (3)
        • April (3)
        • March (5)
        • February (7)
        • January (6)
      • 2007 (18)
        • December (7)
        • November (11)
    • Obox Design
  • Literary Ales

    A twenty-something confessional Presbyterian writing from Tucson, Az.

    14184 Views
  • Get Updates

    Subscribe via RSS
    TwitterFacebookTumblr