A few Sundays ago I
played a board game called Last Will. Here is an excerpt from BGG
that explains the theme of the game:
“In his last will,
your rich uncle stated that all of his millions will go to the nephew
who can enjoy money the most. How to find out which nephew should be
rich? You will each be given a large amount of money and whoever can
spend it first will be the rightful heir. Visit the most exclusive
theaters or eat in the most expensive restaurants. Buy old properties
for the price of new ones and sell them as ruins. Host a huge party
in your mansion or on your private boat. Spend like your life would
depend on it. Spend to become rich! If you're the first to run
through the money on hand, you'll receive the rest of his inheritance
– oh, and win the game.”
Sounds fun doesn't it?
I sure found it to be quite well designed and a lot of fun.
For starters the art in
the game is very well done and a theme that I particularly enjoy.
I'd call it Victorian or Dickensian I guess. You know top hats and
corsets, gaslights and horse drawn carriages. There are quite a few
cards in this game and pretty much every one of them has something
nice to look at on it.
The board exhibits good
graphic design, with an appealing look, nice, easy to understand
layout, and plenty of space for what is there. The individual player
boards are nicely arranged as well, and heck there are even little
wooden top hat meeples!
The game rules were, in
my opinion, fairly easy to learn and understand, and the strategies
seem both deep and varied. This is obviously a very good thing.
The game is played out
until the end of seven turns or someone spends all their money,
whichever happens first. If no one wins before the end of seven
rounds, then the winner is the player with the least money and
property values. If someone goes bankrupt on a previous round, then
you play out that round and whoever is furthest in debt by the end of
the round wins.
A turn takes place in
five distinct phases. The first phase is setup, and is nice and
quick. Basically fill the 8 card slots on the main game board with
the designated type of card; and there are icons on the board to tell
you which type goes where.
Next up is planning.
There are eight different planning options on the board in a 4 player
game, I think there are less with less players. Each option has four
components to it: Card Draws, Errand Boys, Actions, and Turn Order.
Each plan has different combinations of the first three, i.e. Four
card draws, one errand boy, and two actions. The turn order portion
is determined by how far to the left in the line up of planning
spaces you place your token. The plans to the left go before the
plans to the right; but the plans to the right have the advantage of
getting you more stuff. You pick a plan and place your token on it,
and then immediately draw the designated number of cards from any of
the four main card decks (more on them later).
After that you, in turn
order as determined by the planning track placement, place your
Errand Boy tokens (the awesome little wooden top hats). You will
have either one or two errand boys on a given turn, and each player
takes turns placing one at a time until everyone has placed all of
theirs. You have a good selection of options for what to do with
them. First, the biggest variety of options are the various face up
cards that you dealt onto the board during setup. You can place an
errand boy on one of them to immediately take it into your hand.
These cards range from being exactly the same type of cards you get
from draws, to special more powerful version that you can only get
this way, or even wild cards. There is one spot for getting an
expansion to your player board. Your player board starts with five
slots for cards, and this allows you to add more slots. Each player
has a color coded space that allows them to just draw a card from a
deck. There is the real estate market, where you can go manipulate
the price modifiers for the four different types of buildings. And
one person, if they don't really want to do anything else, can just
go to the opera and spend $2.
The next phase is the
Action Phase. Remember back when you got actions from your chosen
plan? Here is where you spend them. You can play cards from your
hand or activate cards that are already on your player board. Most
cards will take at least one action to perform, and many will have an
option to spend more actions to get more benefits out of the card
play. Each card will explain what type of actions are needed and
what you get from spending them on the card itself. This phase looks
fairly straight forward, but the majority of the strategy and
planning is in this phase. The other two are mostly just worker
placement. Here you have to plan out the use of the limited
resources of Actions and Cards in order to move towards your goal as
quickly and efficiently as possible. Lots of interesting approaches
can be taken.
Finally you have an End
of Round Phase. Here you discard down to two hand cards, depreciate
properties (more on that later), reset any activated cards on your
player board, clear unclaimed cards from the main board, reclaim
figures, move the turn marker, and pass the first player marker to
the left.
Now, to understand all
the things you can and might want to do during a given turn you need
to know about the different types of cards in the game. There are
four main types of cards, in four main decks: Events, Companions,
Helpers and Expenses, and Properties.
Events are white
bordered cards that represent one time expenses and experiences.
They will be things like going to the theater, taking a sailing trip,
going on a carriage ride, having a fine dinner, etc. Each will take
one or more actions to play, and are played directly from your hand.
Almost all will result in your being able to spend a certain amount
of money. Many of them can be enhanced by either spending more
actions to cause the expense to go up, or by attaching companion
cards to the event to also make the expense go up. The card will
have the details as to what particular companions can come along, and
how many actions are necessary to bring them. These cards ended up
being a huge portion of my strategy, and one of my favorite ways to
spend money.
Helpers, Expenses, and
Properties all are black bordered cards. To play them you have to
have an open space on your player board. Most will take an action to
play down to the board, and can then be activated for further effects
later on, usually by spending more actions. Expenses work like
events, except they stay in play and can cost you money each turn.
Some will just drain money without having to spend actions, and some
will require one or more actions to activate. I also really found
that I'm a fan of non-action costing Expenses.
Helpers give you cool
bonuses and advantages. Some of them also cost you money, which is
nice, but even if they don't you will always get something cool; like
extra actions, or being able to activate things without spending
actions, or giving bonuses on buying or selling properties; stuff
like that. The one that gives extra actions is VERY nice.
Properties are one of
the main ways that you can get rid of large chunks of money. You're
best case scenario is to buy the property at a high price, then sell
it again later at a much lower one; losing as much money as possible
on the deal. You can affect the prices via the real estate market
and by special abilities from cards. Also, as long as you don't pay
the maintenance cost on property, most of them will depreciate in
value at the end of each turn; further adding to your loses. Which
remember is a good thing. The other thing you can do instead of
letting the property depreciate, or on the ones that don't
depreciate, is to activate the property and pay the maintenance
costs. This is another good way to spend money each turn, and you
can enhance the amount spent with extra actions and companions, just
like with events.
Properties are however
a double edged sword. Sure you can lose a good amount of money on
them, via depreciation or maintenance, but you also have to sell off
all of them before you can declare bankruptcy, go into debt, and win.
So if you are getting near the end of the game; you should probably
start ditching those properties. Also, because of the short number
of turns, you won't get to pay those maintenance costs very many
times, or allow is to depreciate naturally for every long if you want
to ditch it before the game ends. When I played I was the only one
not to have any properties when the game ended (in round six with me
winning btw :) ). I think properties CAN be good, you just have to
avoid the temptation to hold on to them for too long. And remember,
when you sell that property you are probably going to get a decent
amount of money back, even if you sell at quite a loss, and you will
have to plan for getting rid of that money quickly if you want to
win.
The last type of cards
are slate (blueish color) bordered, and these are the companions.
There are four types: Dog, Horse, Guest, and Chef. There are also a
couple of wild cards that can be any of them; and these are available
face up on the board, not from drawing. As I've stated in the
descriptions of the other cards, these are used to enhance the amount
of money you spend on events, expenses, etc.
Technically there is
one more deck of cards, the special cards, but they can't be drawn up
the way the other ones can. You can only get them by claiming them
off the main board with errand boys. These cards will be both white
and black bordered; and will tend to be slightly better versions of
the same type of cards from those respective decks.
I'll wrap up with my
thoughts on the game in general. I've already stated how I loved it
aesthetically, and that I found it to be well designed and have deep
strategy possibilities. All very good accolades in the games
metaphorical cap (or top hat). Properties are a double-edged sword
and may or may not be worth it. Events seem to be where it is at, at
least in my opinion. I loved that there are lots of different paths
to victory that you can take though; and none is really the right
way.
I think that you don't
have to be too caught up in picking the right plan during the
planning phase, both because you can always get something good no
matter what order you go in the turn; and because everyone gets to be
first player once or twice.
Top hat meeples rock!
Overall this was a
great games, that was tons of fun, and I look forward to playing it
some more. I will probably buy it at some point in the future, and
that is about as strong a recommendation as I can give I guess.
Awesome write-up! I'm super-stoked that you liked it this much, and we will definitely get it to the table enough to make it worth the buy. It helps if players have played eurogames before; it uses some "typical" eurogame mechanics and has a very traditional Catan-esque eurogame feel.
ReplyDeleteThat game we played had made me admire the game quite a bit more - one half competitive worker placement, one half (simultaneous) resource management. Unlike Agricola, however, those are two very distinct halves of each turn, meaning you get some wonderful interaction and then some personal strategerizing, all with next to no downtime.
Yes, the combination of the two different styles in each turn was very nice.
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