• I'm a huge board games fan here are the 7 best ones to help you

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Wed Jan 1 10:15:05 2025
    I'm a huge board games fan here are the 7 best ones to help you survive January 2025

    Date:
    Wed, 01 Jan 2025 10:00:00 +0000

    Description:
    Looking for a no-tech way to spend your evenings? Here are my 7 favorite
    board games of 2025.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    Last year, as the winter months rolled in here in the UK, and in the US, I gave you my list of seven board games that were guaranteed to help you
    survive the long, dark evenings without needing to reach for your phone, boot up your PC, or turn to a screen of any kind.

    It proved super-popular with TechRadar readers, so Im back this year with six new board game recommendations and one returning entry thats so good I had
    to give it another shout-out for you to sink your teeth into.

    As before, my suggestions take into account a range of group sizes, play styles, and experience levels, so you can be sure that youll find something that will entertain you and your friends, family, or flatmates this January. If youre looking for more recommendations than you can also read through the seven games I recommended last year .

    You'll find links under each entry to online stores where you can buy these games, though if you have an independent board game shop local to you, Id recommend that you shop there. These stores are an excellent resource for finding games in a way a faceless monolith like Amazon never can be, and if they have an in-store play space you might be able to try a game before you buy it and the staff can also usually help you parse any rules you might be unsure about. Arcs (Image credit: Future / Leder Games)

    For Black Friday the TechRadar team in the UK congregate in Bath in
    south-west England so we can all work together to coordinate our coverage of the event, and while Im there I always try to make the short train journey to Bristol so I can visit Excelsior, a comic and board game store.

    While browsing its shelves, searching for a new game to take home, I asked a couple of the assistants for a recommendation, and no sooner had the words left my lips than they replied Arcs and I think their enthusiasm convinced a few other patrons to buy the game too.

    From the team behind Root the hit cutesy woodland fantasy game Arcs takes
    us to the stars with a sci-fi strategy game for two to four players thats probably the most complex title on this list, but which is well worth your time.

    Using Arcs variation of typical playing cards you simultaneously take
    actions, vie for Initiative (going first, which is very important tactically) and declare ambitions (how you score points). The result is that this chunky game is filled with variety and a little controlled luck courtesy of the battle dice, and it feels like every action really counts either because you're claiming domination, or positioning yourself to blow your foes away in a round or two provided your opponents don't scupper your plans.

    There are also additional Lore and Leaders cards which add new mechanics to the base game if youre looking to spice things up once you're used to Arcs challenges.

    It's not a game for 5pm on Christmas Day when everyone is a little tipsy or falling asleep in front of the TV, but Arcs is sure to excite board game aficionados looking to devour a new game that will easily make an evening fly by. Check out Arcs on Amazon Railroad Ink (Image credit: Future)

    Yes, I recommended this game last year, but as I said then, if I could only play one board game for the rest of my life Id pick Railroad Ink .

    Starting with identical blank boards ready to be filled in with dry-erase markers, players are tasked with creating the best network of roads and railway tracks they can to score the most points at the end of seven rounds (six if you use bonus dice).

    The design and shape of the railroads you can draw is determined by dice; one player rolls the four (or six) of them at the beginning of each round, but everyone shares their results to draw the same pieces of road or railway. Theoretically this means every player could score an identical amount of points if they draw the same pattern, but in all my games Ive never seen this happen. And it becomes even harder to just copy everyone when you use
    optional bonus dice or the limited-use four-way junctions players can rely on at any time.

    Railroad Ink is easy to learn, games are fairly quick, and with its many expansions you can mix things up with rivers, forests, and meteor strikes (to name a few) in a package that I simply adore.

    When it comes to which base game box to buy, the Deep Blue or Blazing Red editions are best because they can support six players, while Yellow and
    Green only support four (though they do include extra rules and bits to make up for it). Each box includes custom dice, which makes purchasing all four worthwhile, but the best standalone option is the Underground expansion pack, which adds a whole extra network of tunnels to work around if you have
    enough boards you can play using the underground and overground layers simultaneously, bringing a level of complexity thats perfect for players
    whove spent a lot of hours with this game. Check out Railroad Ink on Amazon Carcassonne (Image credit: Future / Klaus-Jrgen Wrede)

    This years oldie-but-goodie is Carcassonne (named after the medieval
    fortified town from which the game also draws some stylistic inspiration in its setting), which I affectionately describe as a competitive jigsaw puzzle. Its an excellent option for newcomers to the world of proper board games, yet still a delight for veterans, making it an excellent alternative to the (lets face it) drab games of Monopoly some families will force themselves to endure over the holidays.

    Players take it in turns to draw tiles from a randomized stack, with each one featuring some combination of city walls, roads, fields or other structures (if youre playing with expansions), and place them into the map of
    Carcassonne that youre collectively creating. When you place a tile you can choose to also place one of your Meeple (a wooden cutout in a humanoid shape) onto a feature shown on the tile, and once the feature is complete say your road has a start and an end, or your city wall completes an unbroken loop
    (and the space inside is filled in) you collect your Meeple and score
    points.

    When you run out of tiles the player with the most points wins.

    By carefully placing tiles in tactical ways you can attempt to steal
    features, and their associated points, from another player, or you can form alliances by working with your opponents to inflate the size of a feature, so that you can claim an equal share of the massive point total it amasses.

    This relaxed friction between players leads to some light-hearted competition that doesnt feel quite as cut-throat as other games out there though if you prefer that more cut throat edge, or simply want to expand your Carcassonne experience, Id highly recommend The Princess & The Dragon , The Tower , and the Traders & Builders expansions from the games long list of options.

    The Princess can distract your opponents Meeples and remove them from a feature, while the Dragon can eat them, making it easy to yoink unfinished features from your foes; similarly, the Tower lets you arrest Meeples with
    the goal of ruining your opponents plans. Traders & Builders invites a little more cooperation, with Goods that you can earn for completing a city (even if another player owns it), or a Builder who lets you take a second turn if you add a tile to the feature they are scoring on. Check out Carcassonne on
    Amazon Magic: The Gathering (Image credit: Future / Wizards of the Coast)

    The first of two suggestions on this list which push the concept of board game, Magic: The Gathering is far and away my favorite TCG (trading card game), and its recently launched Foundations set has made it much more accessible for newcomers.

    Magic pits you against other players in a battle of spell-casting where you hurl bolts of lightning, summon powerful creatures, and wield incredible artifacts all represented by cards you draw from your deck, or library as
    the game calls it. If you can make your opponent run out of life, run out of cards in their library, or achieve one of a few other more niche win conditions, you emerge victorious.

    While Magic has a consistent set of underlying rules, it has different
    formats which mix up the card pool and impose different deck-building restrictions. The main one I play is Commander, Magic s most popular and casual format. Instead of a one-on-one match its a three-or-more-player free-for-all (four is the ideal amount, five is doable, six or more is too chaotic). Commander players each rely on a 99-card deck of unique cards, ignoring Basic Lands ( Magic s resource system, kinda like Energy in
    Pokemon). Your 100th card is your Commander, a Legendary creature who you can always call upon to aid you, and who defines the theme and colors of your deck.

    Wizards of the Coast has made preconstructed Commander decks for several
    years that you can play with right out of the box, and some of its 2023 and 2024 releases are actually quite powerful Ive even seen someone open one of these premade decks, shuffle it up, and then run away with a game against decks which cost several times more. Now, Foundations is bringing some newfound accessibility to Magic s more competitive formats with a Beginner
    Box designed to teach players the game, and a 350-card Starter Collection which will give you an excellent starting point for a Standard deck (60
    cards, four copies of a spell maximum), a Pauper deck (like Standard but with only Common cards), or your own custom Commander deck.

    Thats not to mention Magic s Universes Beyond sets decks and packs
    containing cards from non- Magic IP like Assassin's Creed , Fallout , Lord of the Rings , Doctor Who , and in 2025 Spider-Man and Final Fantasy which you might find make the game more enjoyable, as youre getting to play as Edward Kenway or Frodo Baggins or The Tenth Doctor rather than someone from Magic s unfamiliar cast.

    Grabbing the Beginner Box as an entry point to play with your partner, or a handful of Commander decks and learning to play with a group of friends, will be an excellent way to spend the winter months. And if you do want to venture outside Im sure your local game shop will be able to help you get to grips with the game, and theyll likely host regular events at which you can meet other players if you ever attend an event at Brightons Dice Saloon you might even play a game against me. Check out the Magic The Gathering store at
    Amazon Dungeons & Dragons (Image credit: Future / Wizards of the Coast)

    My second pick for a board game which slightly bends the definition, Dungeons & Dragons is excellent every year, but in 2024 its latest book releases make it a better time than ever to finally try the legendary tabletop RPG.

    If youve somehow never heard of this game, Dungeons & Dragons is the fantasy tabletop game, and sees players take on the role of elvish warriors, dwarven spell casters, and human rogues (or whatever class and species combination
    you want) to face off against monsters in an adventure controlled by a
    Dungeon Master (DM).

    What is so special about 2024 though? Well, the new Players Handbook and Dungeon Masters Guide have been released. I have both, and while they dont change a massive amount rules-wise (but what they do tweak does seem to be
    for the better based on my experience from my campaign so far) they boast clearer and more beginner-friendly explanations of Fifth-Editons core rules and concepts. Whether youre a new player or a new DM, these books are a more solid foundation to build your knowledge on compared to the 2014 releases.

    Additionally, one of my favorite adventure books ever has been released this year: Quests from the Infinite Staircase . Not only is it a love letter to
    D&D s history, with a collection of adventures inspired by classic books released in the 80s; I feel its perfect for so many different kinds of campaigns, which makes it an easy pick up for any kind of DM.

    Im using the Infinite Staircase as inspiration for my current game relying
    on this sprawling mass of doorways to other worlds as the glue for a collection of loosely connected one-shots, as Ive found my groups session cadence doesnt suit a more typical campaign adventure.

    That said, it could also slot into a more grand narrative which develops over time perhaps one arc of your campaign has your heroes accidentally end up on the staircase and face one of the books adventures or maybe you could build upon an adventure to craft a campaign as while the main quests are aimed at levels 1 to 13, their conclusions and some additional details pave the way
    for quests and combats that would better suit more seasoned heroes.

    Or if youre new and just want a simple place to start, the books stories work as phenomenal one-shots short one or two session-long games that are ideal for new DMs and players who want to get a taste of D&D without over
    committing right away.

    I could write so much more, but know that over this holiday period, whether youre gathering together in-person or online over Discord to play a game, you couldnt do much better than Dungeons & Dragons . Check out the Dungeons and Dragons store at Amazon 13 Beavers (Image credit: Future / Format Games)

    I always like to recommend a more dedicated family-friendly game on this annual list, one thats easy to grasp for younger players, or inebriated
    adults whove enjoyed a bit too much mulled wine (remember folks, drink responsibly).

    This year Im recommending 13 Beavers .

    You are in a race to reach Beaver Paradise, and to move forward you must correctly guess if the next card in the deck is higher or lower than the last card revealed (with numbers ranging from 1 to 13). Guess correctly and you take a step forward; guess incorrectly and you must float all the way back to your dam. You can reposition your dam by choosing to end your turn early before drawing the next card, or if the card is the same as the previous one (i.e., you draw a five and the card before that was also a five) your turn ends and you build a dam where you are. @norollsbarred

    original sound - NoRollsBarred

    There are a few luck-based twists and challenges youll face along the way,
    but by far my favorite is the Tempting Tunnel (which is highlighted in the No Rolls Barred clip above). Found near the beginning of the boards map, this shortcut takes you to practically the end of the river, mere spaces from Beaver Paradise. All you need to do to pass through is correctly guess the exact number on the next card (a roughly 1-in-13 chance), but if youre incorrect not only is your turn over, but your dam breaks and you return to square one.

    Is 13 Beavers the worlds perfect board game? Nope. But it is ridiculously fun and silly, and sometimes thats all you need from a game to have a great time. Check out 13 Beavers on Amazon Sheriff of Nottingham (Image credit: Future / CMON)

    Last but by no means least is Sheriff of Nottingham . You and your fellow players are all merchants of Nottingham, attempting to bring your wares into the city in order to sell them and make the most money. However the Sheriff (who players take it in turns to take the role of) is keeping a close eye on everyone to make sure they arent smuggling any contraband amongst their
    apples or wheels of cheese.

    Each round has the merchants stashing cards in their pouches, which the Sheriff can choose to inspect or let through unchallenged. If they search the bags and find anything they shouldn't, the Sheriff discards any contraband
    and collects a fine, but they must pay a fine if the merchant was telling the truth. Merchants can try to convince the Sheriff to leave them alone in exchange for money, or offers to be more lenient when they're the Sheriff in
    a few turns.

    This game is at its best when players lean into the role-play aspect, and offer more interesting bribes than merely Ill give you two coins to leave my produce alone. Instead, try offering the Sheriff a bribe to open someone
    elses pack to spoil their game plan (or trick the Sheriff into paying a hefty fine), or blatantly admit that you have contraband, but offer the Sheriff their pick of something youve smuggled in exchange for them turning a blind eye. Heck, even double-cross the sheriff to up the stakes.

    If you always think hyper-tactically and take the risk-averse or
    non-emotional approach it can sap the enjoyment out of the Sheriff of Nottingham experience. Instead, lean into your Sheriff and Merchant persona, and see how your gameplan fares you might not end up winning, but youll have a much more enjoyable time. Check out Sheriff of Nottingham on Amazon



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/gaming/im-a-huge-board-games-fan-here-are-the-7-best -ones-to-help-you-survive-january-2025


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  • From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Sun Jan 4 15:15:10 2026
    I'm a huge board games fan here are the 7 best ones to help you survive January 2026

    Date:
    Sun, 04 Jan 2026 15:00:00 +0000

    Description:
    Here's 7 more games to help you survive January without always needing your tech.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    Guess whos back? For the last two years, I have offered up 7 board game recommendations to help prevent you and your loved one from dying of boredom in the cold, dark winter months. Im back again this year to do jit again, and as always, I guarantee youll find something to love among my picks.

    I have six new entries and a returning favorite from my 2025 list because its simply too perfect not to recommend twice. If youre looking for more options, you can also look at my suggestions from January 2024 or January 2025 there are some phenomenal picks among them, including Catan, Muffin Time, Dungeons
    & Dragons, and 13 Beavers.

    So tell a friend you have a new game to play, grab one of these seven picks, and get ready to enjoy a fantastic, fun-filled evening. Whether youre a board game nerd too or more of a novice, I have something for you. 1. Railroad
    Tiles (Image credit: Horrible Guild)

    For the past couple of years, I have recommended one of my all-time favorite board games in Railroad Ink , but this year Ive picked its sequel: Railroad Tiles .

    The core concept is much the same create an interconnected network of train tracks and streets (rails and roads) to score points. Tiles mixes things up
    in several ways, however, adding new game pieces, new ways to score points, and, importantly, the tiles.

    Railroad Ink hits the spot for me because it uses randomness to determine which new patterns of rails and roads you can draw each turn, but everyone shares this random pool avoiding the unfairness that can come from other games reliant on chance. Tiles keeps the randomness determined by the order tiles are drawn but adds a new layer of skill.

    Each turn, tiles are dealt into piles of different sizes. You take it in
    turns to choose tile piles, and then in the following round, the order is rearranged based on which pile you took take a larger pile, and youll go later in the order, while smaller pile takers will go earlier.

    The skill is knowing when to go all out and gun for the largest pile, and
    when to play more conservatively to create your travellers paradise. Best of all it doesn't feel like this new element raises the skill floor by much; the puzzle-like gameplay of assembling your board with pieces is as approachable as ever, and it just means theres more to master if you end up playing this game over and over.

    Plus, there are extra rules and expansions to add into the mix as you
    improve, which is always a great way to keep these games fresh after many plays. Find Railroad Tiles at Amazon 2. Sounds Fishy (Image credit: Big
    Potato Games)

    Winter is the perfect time to be with family, but finding a game you can all enjoy and be good at can be a struggle thats where Sounds Fishy comes in.

    This trivia game is simple enough. On their turn, each player reads aloud a question from the deck, while showing every other player the answer on the back of the card. Those other players are then secretly dealt a fish tile, which is either red or blue dont show the question asker your color, though.

    They must then either make up an answer to the question, or if theyre the
    blue fish, say the correct answer with the red fish hoping to get picked and the blue fish hoping to stay hidden.

    What I love about this game is that it inspires creativity from the red fish players, and while there is some trivia element, the questions are usually so random that you almost certainly wont know the answer when reading the question, so theres no disadvantage for younger players, something which I remember made me not love Trivial Pursuit as a kid. Its much more of a game about finding out liars, and using your intuition something everyone can be good at. 3. Flip 7 (Image credit: The Op Games)

    The problem with being a board game nerd is that while I love games with a bajillion rules and pieces, not everyone is in my boat and these more
    complex picks can be impossible to get a good group for (looking at you, Cosmic Encounters, I love it, but no one will play it with me).

    Flip 7 is the total opposite. Its probably the easiest game Ive played in some time, and also the best.

    The goal is simple: score 200 points. You do that over many rounds by being dealt cards and choosing to stick or twist kinda like Blackjack. If you stick, you bank the total youve been dealt; if you play on, you can potentially score more or go bust by being dealt a card youve already been dealt.

    The unique deck is made up of 12 twelves, 11 elevens, 10 tens, and so on down to one 1, and one 0. So the higher value cards are a double-edged sword you score more, but are more likely to go bust with them.

    There are also special cards that give you a second chance, or force any player to Flip Three in a row, and theres the Flip 7 of it all if you Flip over 7 unique number cards in a round, it instantly ends, you score every
    card youve been dealt, plus some bonus points for your troubles.

    Every person Ive played Flip 7 with has loved it. Its accessible to younger and older players, people who love board games, and people who usually struggle with them. If I could only recommend one game this year, it would be Flip 7 ; thats how much I love it. Find Flip 7 at Amazon 4. Riftbound (Image credit: Riot)

    Ive written about Riftbound a few times now, and Im as in love with the
    League of Legends TCG as when I first played it and I say that as someone with only minimal experience with the MOBA its inspired by. So if you know nothing about League , you can still love this game.

    Its pretty simple to play. You choose your Champion and Legend some cool character who represents your deck and head into battle against one or more opponents, depending on which format youre playing. Using cards representing spells and units (anything from pirates to robots to strange, gremlin-like cuties), you fight over locations in a king-of-the-hill style game as you try to rack up points by winning and holding these special spaces. The first to eight points wins.

    There are a few other rules to follow, but as someone who has played many
    TCGs Id argue Riftbound is one of the most fun and accessible Ive experienced in a while. I mean, I went from having played casually a few times to making the Top 8 at a local competitive event and I wasnt the only player there who did the same. Every match I played was a blast, even the two I lost
    (including the one that eliminated me from the tournament).

    While not technically a board game, there is a product called Proving
    Grounds, which basically is one it comes with game pieces and four
    reasonably powerful decks that play well against each other, and its super accessible to complete newcomers.

    The only issue is availability. Proving grounds is (at the time of writing) essentially impossible to buy a combination of over demand and under
    printing and regular packs are tough to find too. Riot the team behind Riftbound has, however, promised to print a lot more of this game, and so Id highly recommend keeping your eyes out for this one in 2026 because it is simply so excellent. Find out where you can play Riftbound near you 5. Herd Mentality (Image credit: Big Potato Games)

    My second party game of this list, Herd Mentality, encourages groupthink and is the perfect game to get to know people better or test how well you really know your friends and family.

    Each round, you'll be given a subjective topic like What's the best kind of soda? Or Whats the first thing you do in the morning? Your goal isn't to necessarily give a truthful answer. Instead, you want to say what you think other people will say as you score points for thinking like the herd.

    If you think too individually, you're also at risk of being declared the pink cow, which sees you being given a pink cow figure to hold onto and while holding it, you cant win.

    This and Flip 7 are also easy games to play when you arent sober. As always, please drink responsibly, but sometimes, after having a few, you want a game to play that is fun yet simple. These two picks are the ones you're after. 6. Pandemic (Image credit: Z-Man Games)

    Im sure some folks wish this word died in 2021, but Pandemic is an all-time great co-op game perfect for groups that would rather work together than
    tear each other apart during their next board game night.

    You work as a team of two to four players to stop the spread of four deadly diseases taking on various randomized roles in the medical expert field to develop and distribute a cure to each before the world collapses.

    I picked Pandemic up in 2020, like a lot of other people actually, and I
    still enjoy playing it years later. Winning can be quite challenging, with
    the situation spiralling out of control if you arent careful, but that only lends to the satisfaction of winning when you do eventually win your first game.

    Much like Railroad Tiles and other games out there, you can also add extra rules and purchase expansions to up the difficulty and replayability of Pandemic if you play it as much as I expect you will.

    My personal favorite house rule is that players can only communicate with the person who moved before them or a player they share a space with. This adds to the sense of global chaos and helps stop one leader from emerging and telling every other player how to act perfectly on their turn. You might win less, but Ive found it makes playing more fun. 7. Arcs (Image credit: Leder Games)

    Lets round things off with the returning entrant from last years best board games list: Arcs.

    This strategy game is just incredible. You and up to three other players take on the role of warring space factions out to colonize planets and conquer the galaxy. You do so over five chapters made up of multiple turns, where you
    play a card to perform its assigned actions. There are four suits, each with
    a unique collection of abilities like Battle, Tax, Move, or Build.

    Each suit is also numbered 1 to 7, with lower numbers letting you take more actions and bigger numbers giving you a greater chance to go first in the
    next round.

    Going first is important for two reasons: you get to control what the rest of the group can do that turn, and you can decide what you're scoring for that chapter. That second part is why I love Arcs , because it isnt always about simply fighting; sometimes it's about who has mined the most of a resource,
    or captured the most spies.

    This means you have to keep track of several different things at once, but it does also give players some chance to catch up from behind if future chapters require win conditions they're better prepared for.

    The only downside is this complexity, while a delight, makes Arcs less accessible to non-gamery folks. People who don't mind tracking all the
    various moving pieces, however, are in for a treat.

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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/tech/im-a-huge-board-games-fan-here-are-the-7-best-o nes-to-help-you-survive-january-2026


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