2025-05-20

alobear: (Default)
2025-05-20 09:52 am

New Games!

We had a great weekend, gaming at a youth hostel near Telford - and I played three games that were new to me.

Wyrmspan is a variant of Wingspan, only with dragons instead of birds - and it turns out theming makes a big difference to me when it comes to games. Or at least - I had it in my head that I didn't really like Wingspan, but my review from playing it for the first time in 2020 says otherwise... Anyway, I really enjoyed Wyrmspan, even though we didn't finish playing until after 1am... It's a game where you have to collect resources to obtain dragons and then place them in your caverns in such a way that they combine to provide you with more resources and points. It's a good combination of sort-of worker placement and pattern matching that really appeals to me - and the art is gorgeous!

I also played another game that's linked to one I know well - Quacks & Co: Quedlinberg Dash, which sits in the same universe as Quacks of Quedlinberg, but is a very different game. It's much simpler, as it's designed for kids and is a fairly straightforward racing game, rather than the push-your-luck style of the original. It's very cute, though, with great art, fun characters to play (I was the donkey) and a certain amount of strategy in building a bag of tokens that will work well to advance your piece in the race. Not very challenging, but a lot of fun.

But my favourite new game of the weekend was a card game dating back to the 1930s, called Plus and Minus. Each player has a mat with spaces for the numbers 1 to 25 and you have to get each of your four pieces from the top to the bottom in order to win the round. You do that by playing a card from your hand and adding its value to the one played by the person before you. If you end up moving a piece further than 25, it has to go back to the start. We played five rounds and I didn't do particularly well, but I really enjoyed it and would love to play again.
alobear: (Default)
2025-05-20 11:10 am

The Royal Correspondent

The Royal Correspondent by Alexandra Joel tells the story of Blaise Hill starting a job in journalism in Australia in the late 1950s but moving to the UK to cover a royal wedding, with a dangerous secret dogging her heels.
Started out really fun, though a lot more thriller-y than I was expecting, with organised crime and spies thrown in with the royal wedding and upper class events. I loved all the stuff about newspaper production in the late 50s and early 60s, as well as all the discussion of gender politics and class inequality. The main plot doesn’t start until a third of the way in, but I enjoyed all the build-up.
The romance aspect started to go badly awry in the second half, as well as the thriller aspects really ramping up. But once I stopped being annoyed that the book wasn’t what I’d expected and just leaned in, it was a lot of fun and the ending brings everything together pretty well.