

In November of 2020, I played the following:
![]() | ![]() Codenames (4) | ![]() Chess (3) | ![]() | ![]() Letter Tycoon (2) | ![]() Star Realms (2) |
![]() Alchemists (1) | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() Deus (1) | ![]() Dingo's Dreams (1) |
![]() Feudum: Big Box (1) | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() Islebound (1) | ![]() L.L.A.M.A. (1) | ![]() Las Vegas (1) |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() Santorini (1) | ![]() Stone Age (1) | ![]() Sushi Go! (1) |
![]() Tang Garden (1) | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() Welcome To... (1) | ![]() Yokohama (1) |
This Month's Winners
Trade on the Tigris - Honorable Mention
Trade on the Tigris does not hit the table enough because it encourages a level of player interaction my wife does not appreciate very much. Players draw a variable number of "goods" cards (e.g., fish, barley, clay, etc.) and then a 5-minute timer starts before everyone frantically tries to negotiate trades in hopes of obtaining larger sets or unloading unfavorable cards from your hand. Once the timer sounds, players sell their goods, resolve any good/bad effects on cards, and compare their level of culture as well as the number of barbarians that have plagued your area. This game does a lot of things really well from the real-time trading to the tableau-building that impacts your goods production and end-game scoring points. I love that it also accommodates player groups of 5 or 6. It is often hard to find anything but party games that can be played by a group that large so I think I'll keep it around!
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Yokohama - 3rd Place
Yokohama is a wonderful game with an overwhelmingly busy aesthetic that matches the sheer number of possible actions a player can take on their turn. Players will take turns building "routes" by placing their workers (i.e. little pawns) on tiles, allowing their president (i.e. big pawn) to travel across any tiles containing its worker(s) before taking the action associated with that location. Actions include gaining resources ex: fish, copper, raw silk, etc.), developing rule-bending technology, completing objective cards, expanding your own shops across different industries, etc. While the theme may sound incredibly boring to some, the mechanisms at play are excellent!
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Imperial Settlers - 2nd Place
Imperial Settlers is an excellent tableau building game where players control different factions of people (ex: amazons, barbarians, etc.), spending resources to add cards to your empire that provide resources, additional actions, ongoing bonus effects, and end-game scoring bonuses. My wife and I love this game and the numerous expansions that have been released by Portal Games. The most satisfying part of this game for me has to be the variable number of turns based on how well you optimize your resources to take as many actions as possible! |
Alchemists - 1st Place
Alchemists is a brilliant mash-up of worker placement and deduction mechanisms into a fun theme with excellent production value. Everything about this game is vibrant, colorful, and just a tad bit silly. There are oversized player screens that hide your information while holding tokens that document what you've learned about the mixing of various ingredients (ex: What do you get when you brew a bird claw with a screaming root?). The rulebook for this game is massive and we have never played beyond the "apprentice" version which is intended to serve as an introductory game. I haven't even had the courage to try the expansion content we have owned for a few years at this point. However, I love this game for what it accomplishes with the use of an app. Deduction games are too much fun!
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Wayne
This show was a pleasant surprise! I had only seen a trailer surface on Youtube and it did NOT do the show justice. In fact, the trailer's only selling point was that it mentions being by the writers of Deadpool. This encouraged me to read the trailer's viewer comments which revealed nothing but positive praise. The story is simple: Wayne meets a girl named Del and immediately invites her to travel from Massachusetts to Florida where he intends to steal back his father's car. Every episode offers a fair amount of action, mayhem, and interesting side characters. I love the cast and the writers do an excellent job with gradual character development. I watched this entire season in just two sessions. The closest comparison I can think of for people on the fence about watching Wayne would be... Shameless (the American remake since I've not seen the original UK version). Loved this one!
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The Queen's Gambit
I LOVED this show. I've never been very interested in chess beyond occasionally playing (badly) with a neighborhood kid when I was younger. This show did not shy away from the complexity of the game and I really appreciate how much time they devoted to the game without trying to over-sensationalize the gameplay. I've seen a lot of talk online about this show generating a ton of interest in the game and it is well-deserved. I've caught myself looking at chess sets online! I only hope that the buzz this show is creating translates to the larger hobby of tabletop games! Board games are not just for kids! |
Run
This was a pretty good movie about a mother (Sarah Paulson) with a pretty disturbing attachment to her daughter (Kiera Allen), going to extreme lengths to keep her daughter close to her. Kiera Allen is absolutely excellent in this film and deserves the spotlight despite Sarah Paulson's chilling performance. I can't say much more about this film because I don't want to spoil anything. If you like this movie, I highly recommend a similar film called The Harvest that I feel has an even more disturbing reveal.
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I Hate Suzie.
I liked this actress in Penny Dreadful so I was excited to see her front and center in a new show. Unfortunately I don't think this show is going to last as her character is an unlikeable actress caught up in a sex scandal with her director. Midway through the season they focus an entire episode on her trying to find an appropriate masturbatory fantasy. I'm just not sure who I'm supposed to like in this show. |
The Mandalorian: Season 2 This season has been a welcome distraction in the month of November. I only wish they had chosen to release the entire thing rather than doing a week-to-week release schedule. I really enjoy this show and think that Star Wars as a franchise may be served best as a long-form narrative for awhile. If anything, it's proven that we don't need a Skywalker to carry the franchise forward. |
In November of 2020, I read the following...
Aliens Omnibus - Volume 3 Labyrinth - This story is among my favorite in the series so far. It features a ton of action with xeno-slaying mech suits, research into the behavior and telepathic communication abilities of xenomorphs, and flashbacks concerning one scientist's time as a prisoner in a xeno hive. These flashbacks really offer a lot of info about the hive mentality of xenomorphs, the way they treat humans like cattle for food and breeding, and it even dives a bit into the way xenos use the "royal jelly" mentioned in previous issues and later seen in the films Prometheus and Alien: Covenant. There's a fair amount of body horror in this issue, including the birth of humanoid xeno fetuses! Salvation - I have read this story twice now, having previously read it digitally. Salvation is a fairly short story about a cook and ship captain who are stranded on a planet after a team's attempt to drop of a cargo of xenomorphs went horribly wrong. This story has strong religious undertones as the cook often narrates as if he is speaking directly to God. The cook discovers that the delivery of xenomorphs to this foreign plant was no accident as the planet is home to a race of fast-breeding primates that would perfectly supply the xenomorphs with an abundance of hosts for their own reproduction. The cook finds an android who reveals in her last moments of "life" that their employer had planned to create a reserve of xenomorphs on this planet for later use. The cook decides to eliminate the xenomorph infestation on the planet as a small kindness to the primate population. Not the best storyline. I really think they missed an opportunity to show the offspring of these xeno/primate hybrids. Although, I feel like I remember seeing something like these in another issue before. Advent/Terminus - I've read that this issue was the inspiration for the first Alien vs. Predator film, following an explorer into an Egyptian-style, alien-infested tomb. Not a super long story but I enjoyed seeing the early threads of the live-action adaptation. Reapers - This issue introduces a new species in the Aliens universe called reapers. These buff, green, humanoid creatures actually hunt and eat xenomorphs! This issue was rather short with no text. I like the idea behind it and would love to see the reapers in live-action form! Horror Show - I don't remember much about this issue other than scientist were doing something virtual-reality therapy AND, at one point, a woman puts on a xenomorph exoskeleton like armor similar to the concept art introducing Ripley in a similar suit for Neill Blomkamp's unrealized vision for the Alien franchise. |
Crossed: Volume 2 - Family Values
This series is seriously twisted. I was hooked after the first volume and Family Values just continues to deliver on the carnage that survivors of the Crossed virus endure. This volume focuses on a highly religious family of 9 and their close friends who are descended upon by hordes of the Crossed with the absolute worst of intentions. This story includes a disturbing amount of incest with the family's 7 children already exposed to horrors before they are even attacked. The authors of this volume do a great job pushing the narrative forward where Garth Ennis and Jacen Burrows left off with the first volume. Knowing that this series eventually commits to a 100+ year time jump, I'm looking forward to seeing if the newborns who manage to survive in these early storylines influence later stories! I would never recommend this book to anyone unless I knew they were fans of disturbing horror content... because that's exactly what this is! |
The Dark Tower - Fall of Gilead
This was one of the most memorable books in the series so far. I would compare Fall of Gilead to the Red Wedding from the show Game of Thrones because so... so many characters we've come to know over the first 3 books are taken out in pretty brutal fashion. Gilead is the city in which the Gunslingers are raised and they are forced to defend their home against a horde of mutants that does not end well for the main protagonist, Roland Deschain, and his friends due to the betrayal of someone within the city. I was so satisfied with this volume that I immediately dove into the next, Battle of Jericho Hill. |
The Dark Tower - Battle of Jericho Hill
Battle of Jericho Hill picks up 9 years after the Fall of Gilead storyline with the surviving Gunslingers forced to attack in a last ditch effort to hinder the Crimson King's minions. Despite reading this one more recently, I don't remember as much about the story. It felt very much like a dystopian wasteland-type story with a pretty heartbreaking conclusion to another prominent side character in the story. I believe this volume serves as the final chapter in young Roland Deschain's life as the next volume's cover features an older, more grizzled-looking Roland. I really appreciate having had these 5 volumes as a prequel of sorts for the character with whom I was first introduced in the Dark Tower live-action feature film.
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