Die Burgen von Burgund

The latest Alea release arrived at Shire Games today so I took a diversion on the way home and picked up a copy. This is another Stefan Feld design that uses dice in an interesting way. Players are trying to develop their estates through trading, livestock farming, city building or scientific research. Players have two dice that they allocate to their choice of actions, the four choices being taking tiles from the gameboard into their storehouse, moving tiles from the storehouse to their estate, selling goods, or taking worker tiles to help manipulate the dice rolls in future. The game looks like an interesting game of forward planning and optimising choices based on the dice you roll.

This is number 14 in the large Alea box series and comes with German, French and English rules, so no need to wait for a Rio Grande version.

I also picked up a copy of A La Carte, as I’ve been meaning to get a copy for ages, and it was just sitting there next to Die Burgen von Burgund. Me…impulsive?

Counter #52

Issue 52 of Counter has just been published and runs to 84 pages this time. As is usual for the first issue of the year, several of the contributors run down their top 5 games of 2010: Lots of love shown for Navegador, 7 Wonders, London and Age of Industry but I was also quite pleased to see Greg Schloesser have Telestrations as one of his picks – not the usual Counter fare but an excellent game all the same.

There is also 45 pages worth of reviews including 20th Century, Alien Frontiers, Civilization, Rallyman, Troyes and Vinhos as well as many others. Also included are the usual letters pages, a summary of some Essen expansions and the Counter Guide to “Top and Tail Games”, otherwise known as fillers.