What Are Your Favorite Board Games and Card Games?

Submitted by xtramelanin on March 31st, 2020 at 6:39 PM

Mates,

Given that we're on Shelter-in-place status, it seems like this might be a good time to talk about what your favorite board games and card games are.  What's good for adults (Hatter, do not suggest strip poker), what would be fun for the kids and/or the family in general.   If what you suggest isn't very well known, please give a sentence or two about what the game is about.

As mentioned, the question is:  What are your favorite board games and card games?

Be safe everyone, we'll get through this,

XM

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

March 31st, 2020 at 6:46 PM ^

I'm a stone cold killer at Settlers of Catan.  The universe has to cheat-code to stop me.  There's a well-known phenomenon when I play Settlers where, if I place a hut on a 5, then 5's are rolled roughly about as often as 13's.  But if I don't place a hut on a 5, they come fast and furious, like downvotes on a Section 1 post.  This is documented fact.  5's are straight-up evil.

I usually win regardless.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

March 31st, 2020 at 6:56 PM ^

The board is made of hexagons which are each a resource, grain for example.  Each hexagon also has a randomly assigned number from 2 to 12 (excluding 7).  You place your huts and eventually cities at points where three hexagons meet and connect them with roads on the borders where two meet.  Every roll of the dice gives everyone a resource (or two, for cities) for each hex whose number matches the roll, if they have a hut or city on that hex.  (Unless it's a 7, then you move the robber to whatever hex you want - the robber prevents that hex from generating any resources.)  You use the resources to build more stuff or to trade for different ones that you need.  Huts and cities are worth points, there are other ways to earn points, you win if you're first to 10.

Family game for sure.  But, probably difficult for small ones to understand.  8 or 9 and up kind of game.

borninAnnArbor

April 1st, 2020 at 7:27 AM ^

This is a good summery.  I would also include that there are expansion packs worth buying once you have decided you like the game enough.  My family enjoys the Cities and Knights expansion.  

 

I agree about the numbers.  We once played a game where everyone had an 11 but me and 11 was the most rolled number in the game.  I am still not sure how that is possible.

Todder21

March 31st, 2020 at 8:44 PM ^

I was going to say resurrect the art of pinochle and get the next generation to bring it back, Wahoo beat me to it. 

Mexican Train is a great game for all family members. Don't let the name scare you, it has NOTHING to do with heroin, just dominoes. If you have baseball lovers in the household, nerd out and teach them Strat-O-Matic baseball. 

Been playing a ton of cribbage and Words with Friends while attempting to teach middle school kids online. It's a daily grind, but we're all going to make it work.  

 

DualThreat

March 31st, 2020 at 8:38 PM ^

Cosmic Encounter is one of the best board games of all time IMO.  Every single game will be totally different from the last.  I've played hundreds of board games and I've never played a game with more replay value than this one.  Not the greatest ever, but it's top 10.  Worth a google if you've never heard of it!

Tunneler

March 31st, 2020 at 7:11 PM ^

There will never be another board game as great as chess.  My dad bought me a chess book when I was little & I learned a math lesson.  The game could be reduced to numbers & I loved it.  Won a tournament when I was 13.  My youngest son has beat me every game we have played for the last 8 years.  But I will get him.

I'll go with euchre as the best card game also.  But the first game I watched (at a redneck bar in Madison Heights), everybody passed, & then passed again, & then all mucked their cards to the middle of the table.  I thought it was the dumbest game ever.  Screw the dealer is a good rule.

Sam1863

April 1st, 2020 at 5:53 AM ^

I also suck at euchre, for the simple reason that while I can remember the rules, I can't seem to understand the strategy. So the trick is to play with three other people who also suck. Somebody will fuck up, they will realize their mistake with an anguished cry of "Oh shit, why did I do that!", and the rest of the table will berate them mercilessly for their stupidity. Then we all have another beer.

It's very similar to the way I play golf. I'll never be good at it, so the important thing is to have fun.

My best euchre story: Years ago we were playing with a married couple who would constantly talk trash to each other. (I think it was their version of foreplay.) During the game. Wife made a particularly inept move which cost them the trick. Husband said to her, "Honey, it's not that you suck at this game ... it's that you suck so bad!"

Without missing a beat she replied, "Yeah, and that'll be the last thing I'll be sucking for a while."

I laughed so hard I almost snarfed my beer all over the table. Good times, man.

ZooWolverine

March 31st, 2020 at 9:06 PM ^

I played it for the first time several years ago with my sister-in-law who at the time was working for the CDC chasing down epidemics. Very fun game, but it is definitely vulnerable to alpha-gamers. Ironically, that was not her--even as the only one of us five who had played it before and as the clear expert in the room, she did a great job letting us decide on strategy. However, as someone who wants to solve the challenge myself, I prefer to just play the iPad version on my own, as all the people.

4godkingandwol…

March 31st, 2020 at 6:53 PM ^

I’m unbeatable at connect four in a best of 7 format. 
 

I enjoy chess but I’m terrible at it. 
 

my kids are loving “don’t step in it”.  But I imagine it’s going to get old soon. 

MrOrange

March 31st, 2020 at 6:54 PM ^

Cards Against Humanity should have some timely surprises.  You can edit out any extreme cards for a PG13 version

Sopwith

March 31st, 2020 at 6:57 PM ^

Chess and Risk.

Also, despite the fact I grew up in the age of video gaming, the Avalon-Hill bookcase WWII games were amazing. I had Panzer Leader, Panzer Blitz, Afrika Corps, at least one or two others. The problem was finding someone to play against who liked wargaming as much as I did. 

Eventually the strategy computer games caught up, but there was something so fun about moving all those little chits around a map that was irreplaceable in a computer sim.

Cruzcontrol75

March 31st, 2020 at 8:44 PM ^

Taught my boys Risk and they are 9, 6 & 6.  Interesting to see their individual game play especially the differences in risk taking and strategies between the twins.  It’s a classic.   Love stratego too.  In about 4 years they’ll all be ready for Axis & Allies.  
 

Jack Hammer

March 31st, 2020 at 7:03 PM ^

Sammamish Rules Euchre

- Hybrid Canadian and Michigan developed over a couple decades and through endless arguing.  Played just east of Seattle.  

Jack Hammer

March 31st, 2020 at 11:57 PM ^

Hard to say since it can depend where in Michigan you’ve played.  We tried to make the game harder.  Dealer must go alone if they pick it up.  No three 9s three 10s or ace no face.  Must have natural to call.  To some those are standard.  The game I learned in high school we used all of the tricks to make it more interesting.  Also reneging and stealing the deal in HS was common but in Sammamish it could result in a fist fight.  

Go Blue in MN

March 31st, 2020 at 7:13 PM ^

My kids and I have already played Clue, Uno, Exploding Kittens, and Stratego during the past couple weeks.  Exploding Kittens is a relatively new card game; the others are classic games from my childhood.