TTG'S Top 10: GAMES AT UK GAMES EXPO 2019


12 June 2019
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wings-of-glory-tripods-and-triplanes-50562.jpg game - Wings of Glory: Tripods & Triplanes
The must-play games from the UK Games Expo 2019..

The Birmingham convention is back in the NEC for another year, bringing with it hundreds of games to play on the show floor. Here are the ones you shouldn’t miss.

Chosen by Matt Jarvis


 

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1. Sanctum

After bringing the speed and thrill of first-person shooters to the tabletop in Adrenaline, designer Filip Neduk has turned to another staple of video games for his next board game. Sanctum pays tribute to hack-and-slash looters such as Diablo as a group of players cleaves their way through hordes of monsters to defeat a Demon Lord together. The players will also be working against each other, though, picking up powerful equipment to make their dice rolls even more efficient at dispatching baddies. Due out this October, you’ll be able to try the game at the Expo.

 

Find it: Stand 2-148


2.Shadows of Kilforth

A sequel to designer Tristan Hall’s ‘fantasy quest game’ Gloom of Kilforth – which we named as one of our favourite Games of the Year in 2017 – Shadows of Kilforth once again pits players’ heroes against a world brimming with dark malice. With similar but expanded gameplay compared to Gloom, Shadows can be played by itself, or combined with the first game to add new characters, places and features into the mix.

 

Find it: Stand 1-1016


3.Rome & Roll

Dàvis Turczi, creator of the time-bending Anachrony, jumps even further back in history to 64 AD with this dice-drafting take on the reconstruction of the Italian capital following the Great Fire of Rome. The players are tasked with adding buildings to the city, drawing on the map itself as they collect and spend the necessary resources by picking from the pool of custom cubes. The asymmetric nature of the players' abilities help them on their way, with Emperor Nero also commanding them to gather legionnaires, retake settlements and construct roads to bring Rome back to greatness. Plus, there's always the opportunity to impress the pantheon and use the favour of the gods to your advantage. A heavier roll-and-write that still plays in around an hour tops, Turczi's multiplayer design is supplemented by his collaboration with single-player specialists Nick Shaw for a solo mode.

Find it: Stand 1-252 

 


4.Sub Terra II: Inferno’s Edge

Tim Pinder’s original dungeon-delving co-op combined the claustrophobia of finding your way out of pitch-black caverns with the terror of being pursued by a mysterious danger. Sub Terra’s sequel escapes the caves but is no less dangerous, as the players find themselves entering a volcano temple to steal a fabled artefact. They’ll need to work their way to the centre, surviving traps, lava and the temple’s guardians, before making it out before they run out of time. Pinder’s design will be once again brought to life by illustrator Diana Franco Campos, with Inferno’s Edge making an appearance at the Expo before a Kickstarter campaign this autumn.

 

Find it: Stand 1-714


5. Bosk

Dice-drafting beauty Sagrada casts a long and colourful shadow, so we have high hopes for Bosk, which sees Sagrada co-designer Daryl Andrews reunite with both his Roar: King of the Pride co-creator Erica Bouyouris and studio Floodgate Games for a perfectly pastoral game about growing trees in a national park. Players nurture their saplings during spring to score points by pleasing passing walkers, before attempting to spread their trees’ shedding leaves across as much ground as possible during the autumn to increase their final standing. Helped by the gorgeous visuals of artists Matt Paquette and Kwanchai Moriya, Bosk has the promise to be a gently competitive tussle that lives up to the beauty of its natural theme.

 

Find it: Stand 2-336


6. Super Fantasy Brawl

Mythic Battles: Pantheon and Time of Legends: Joan of Arc maker Mythic has made a name for itself with big, bold action board games stuffed to the brim with miniatures, and Super Fantasy Brawl seems to follow that trend of going OTT with an all-out team-battler. Driving the action is the ability to create a custom squad of three champions, bringing together their individual action cards to create a unique force to be reckoned with. Champions who defeat a rival character level up and gain power, but getting knocked out means returning to your starting state, making the pursuit of victory points – which are only scored at the start of a player’s turn – a back-and-forth of tactics and strategy. Its title might be as subtle as a punch in the face, but Super Fantasy Brawl might just be a total knockout.

 

Find it: Stand 1-902


7. Tribes: Dawn of Humanity

A completely revamped remake of Rustan Håkansson’s compact civ-building game Tribes: Early Civilization, Dawn of Humanity crams 30,000 years of humanity’s progression – from the first emergence of civilisation to the Bronze Age – into under an hour. Players’ tribes start out small, gradually exploring the land and gaining the resources needed to invent new technology and grow their presence on the map. The risk of natural disasters and need to lead humanity to a new era bring in complexity to a streamlined action system, where extra actions cost increasing amounts. Released in German last year, this will be the first time Dawn of Humanity has been available in English.

 

Find it: Stand 1-602


8. Letter Jam

What do you get if you mix Scrabble and Hanabi? Probably something close to Letter Jam, the next clever word game from Codenames and Trapwords label Czech Games Edition. Designer Ondra Skoupý’s juicy co-op game gives players a hand of letters – like in Scrabble, although they’re cards rather than tiles – and challenges them to spell a word together. The twist is that, like Hanabi, you can’t see your own cards, but your teammates can, so clever clues and hints about what you’re holding and what to place down is key to spelling out the hidden word by the end of the game. The game lets one clue-giving player choose a word or use a companion app to automatically choose one based on the cards being used. Playing in under an hour and costing under £20, could Letter Jam be the next ingenious word game to follow in Codenames’ footsteps?

 

Find it: Stand 2-418


10. Wings of Glory: Tripods & Triplanes

A standalone spin-off from historical aerial combat game Wings of Glory, Tripods & Triplanes brings the extraterrestrial threat of Martian invaders from H.G. Wells’ seminal story The War of the Worlds to the end of World War I. Players take control of either the human pilots battling against the alien threat, or the Martians wreaking chaos across the globe. Although Tripods & Triplanes can be played by itself, the gameplay system is fully compatible with Wings of Glory, meaning that aircraft from the long-running dogfighting miniatures game can join the fray.

 

Find it: Stand 1-302


This article was featured in the June 2019 issue of Tabletop Gaming. Pick up the latest issue of the UK's fastest-growing gaming magazine in print or digital here – or subscribe to make sure you never miss another issue.

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