Stranded on a Desert Island with Four Friends
These are the ten twelve fifteen games I'd keep from my collection if I were required to pare it down for some unholy reason. This is a desert island exercise (granted one that maroons friends and acquaintances in addition to myself) to build an affordable game collection that emphasizes versatility, replayability, games for all occassions and tastes.
- Ticket to Ride Europe w. India/Switzerland expansion
set collection - a gateway game with so much depth - Carcassonne: Hunters and Gatherers - tile laying - all ages, again with much depth
- Agricola - worker placement - infinite replay value, heavy, intricate
- Pandemic - the king of co-op's - for elegance of design, in my mind the Mona Lisa of game design
- Augustus - risk management - fast and light, slightly longer than a filler
- Heat - a quick and social card drafter (substitute Sushi Go for more traditional card drafting)
- Deep Sea Adventure - push your luck - quick, light but tactical (for an equally raucous dice chucker, substitute King of Tokyo)
- Firefly: The Game - ameritrash - long play, so much theme you forget it's pick-up and deliver
- Concordia - a thinky euro - smooth playing, sophisticated
- Ventura - 4X with a euro bent - underrated
- Mysterium - another co-op - for right-brained intuitive players intimidated by strategy games
- Garbage Day - a dexterity game with some game
- The Castles of Burgundy - another tight euro - excellent for two
- Love Letter - deduction – I was wrong, this is the Mona Lisa of gaming (Pandemic is The Last Supper), a quick filler
- The Resistance - bluffing - for large groups, highly social, for parties
Note, these are not my top 15 games. My fave list constantly evolves so I maintain it over at BoardGameGeek.com where I'm this guy:
Also note, this is not a shopping list. It's a meditation on my game collection, an examination of the classic categories of board games, and a jumping off point for others curious about the wide range of games out there now. Hop on over to BGG to learn more about these games and others similar to them to see if they'd suit you. I've also linked to my short reviews where they exist.
That being said, as of September 2015, this collection could be purchased from Amazon.com for approximately US$467.
If that sounds like a lot, remember how many plays come out of each game box, and how much fun each play involves. If one play of a game is equivalent to a night at the movies for four people (2 hours of fun for approximately $48 sans popcorn), this collection will pay for itself (in entertainment value) before you get a chance to play each game once. If you typically go to the movies once a month and decide to game instead of keeping up with the blockbusters, this collection will pay for itself (in actual money) in less than a year.
This collection is not only affordable, it's also compact — an often overlooked but important quality for any collection. It includes only 5 full sized boxes (if you re-box Augustus), 4 medium boxes, and 6 small (some very small) boxes. It could conceivably be packed in a couple pieces of luggage so that you'd actually have these games with you when your plane crashes and strands you in some deserted place!
In 2014, the Dice Tower, a popular collective of game reviewers, surveyed over 2000 of their viewers about their favourite games for their People's Choice Top 20 Games of All Time episode. I'm glad to report that 8 of those games are in the Zen 10. Here's that list:
- Pandemic
- King of Tokyo
- Ticket to Ride
- Dominion - deck builder - the granddaddy of that genre
- Lords of Waterdeep - worker placement - medium weight
- 7 Wonders - card drafting - fun but with little player interaction
- Agricola
- Eldritch Horror - ameritrash, co-op
- Small World - area control - refreshingly light for this category
- Carcassonne
- Cosmic Encounter - negotiation
- Power Grid - economic
- Love Letter
- The Castles of Burgundy
- Android: Netrunner - living card game
- The Resistance
- Robinson Crusoe - co-op - difficult to beat
- Race for the Galaxy - engine builder - has a steep learning curve
- Descent 2 - dungeon crawler
- Caverna - worker placement - Agricola 2.0
Irreplaceable Games
Here’s a twist on making a desert island game collection: boxing up your irreplaceable games. It’s 2023. A new reality where we live is preparing for evacuation every summer. We live in a wildfire zone.
The effects of global warming (don’t get me started) are no longer debated, they’re predictable. Every summer, our province burns.
We live in the southeast of British Columbia, which has had dozens of fires in recent years but has been largely spared most burning. The centre and north of BC have experienced the most, and the largest, fires. The kind that cause whole cities to be evacuated for weeks at a time. The kind that destroy whole neighbourhoods and towns.
How long will our luck hold? No one knows. Lightning strikes and stray cigarette butts are erratic. While we keep our fingers crossed each summer, we prepare for a possible evacuation order.
Each spring we box up irreplaceable items so that they can quickly be loaded into our car (along with camping gear and cat carriers) in the event the worst happens and we must leave our home.
The totes contain important documents, old photos, hard drives of newer photos, some books and DVDs that would be impossible to find again, a few sentimental keepsakes. And one tote contains board games.
When you collect games, you become familiar with the vagaries of game publishing. This is a polite way of saying, shit goes out of print quick. Lots of games get re-published, but the wait between editions can be long and editions can vary in quality. One can get attached to a particular edition for sentimental reasons.
Many of the games in our collection are out of print (OOP) but our car is small, so only beloved and rare titles that have gone out of print qualify for evacuation. Here’s the list:
Full Sized Boxes...
- Cinque Terre, Rio Grande Games, 2013 – beloved, medium weight euro, OOP, rare
- De Vulgari Eloquentia, Z-Man Games, 2010 – beloved, heavy euro dripping with theme, this 1st Edition is more compact, and OOP
- Condottiere, Euro Games multilingual, 1994 – area control, OOP edition with best art, rare, bought used at a premium
- Pandemic Iberia, Z-Man Games limited edition, 2016 – our favourite flavour of Pandemic, OOP although the 2022 Ed. is virtually identical **
- Carcassonne: Hunters and Gatherers, Rio Grande Games, 2002 – the tile laying classic, OOP for 18 yrs, recently republished, sentimental **
Small Boxes...
- Circus Flohcati, Grail Games, 2016 – a refined riff on Rummy with clever art, OOP, rare
- Coup: Guatemala 1954, La Mame Games, 2014 – bluffing, great art/theme, OOP, rare
- The Bottle Imp, Lautapelit/Stronghold Games, 2017 – trick taking, this beautiful edition now OOP
- Cockroach Poker, Drei Magier Spiele, 2013 – bluffing, great art, available but small so it easily fits in the tote
- Heat, Asmadi Games, 2015 – drafting & bluffing, OOP although available as a Print'n'Play **
- Eve of Destruction, self-published, 2013 – card-based tactical war game, Illuminati re-theme
Tiny...
- Firefly Fluxx, Looney Labs, 2016 – chaotic card game tied together by a great theme, OOP
- Court of the Medici, Z-Man Games, 2008 - area control card game, OOP & orphaned, bought used at a premium
- Deep Sea Adventure, Oink Games, 2014 – push your luck, beautifully designed, available but so tiny it couldn’t be left behind **
- High Society, Osprey Games, 2018 – bidding, gorgeous art, available, but for how long?
- The Mind, Nürnberger-Spielkarten-Verlag, 2018 – attention game, German 1st Ed.
- Slush Fund 2, Dr. Finn’s Games, 2016 – area control card game, vicious satirical theme, OOP
- Rory’s Story Cubes, The Creativity Hub, 2005,'11,'14 – imagination dice, some OOP
- Good Help Is Hard to Find, self-published, 2015 – deduction, Love Letter re-theme **
- Gen-X 80s 90s Pocket Trivia, Hoyle Products, 1999 – silly but sentimental
- Sabotage!, self-published, 2014 – social deduction, an implementation of The Resistance using two decks of playing cards, tiny, and hey, includes two good old decks of cards! **
- Ultra Tiny Epic Kingdoms, Gamelyn Games, 2016 – a 4X game the size of a pack of cards, available, but... tiny
Twenty-two games in one tote! A collection that could sustain play during a protracted exile. But it isn't a balanced collection. For some reason it skews towards bluffing games and area control. Interestingly, it includes six games (**) from my original desert island list.
Again, these are not the games that top our collection. It includes some of our faves, but many are missing. Where is The Quest for El Dorado? The Fox in the Forest? Cascadia, Istanbul, Concordia? Ra, or It’s a Wonderful World? Those games are evergreen, always in print. They’d be easy to buy again.
Would we replace all the games in our collection if they were lost? Interesting question. Let’s hope we never have to find out.