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Gaia
Gaïa is a 2-5 player game in which you create a world, instill life in it, build cities, try to satisfy their needs, and use godly powers to shape the world to your benefit.
Starship Captains
Welcome aboard and congrats on the promotion! Your "new" starship is ready to embark on its first big voyage. Just scrape off some of the rust, and she\'ll do fine. And that crew? Might look a little green around the edges, but they\'re your crew now. Make us proud.
Tiny Epic Dungeons: Extra Dice Set
12 Additional Dungeons Dice to support all player counts and do not have to pass the dice.
Birdwatcher
In this fast, competitive game players are rival wildlife photographers on a hunt to snap photos of the elusive and illustrious birds-of-paradise.
Wingspan: 100 Speckled Eggs
These 100 speckled eggs (10 egg tokens in 10 different color combinations) showcase some of the beautiful eggs created by birds of the world. They are are the same size, texture, and material as other Wingspan eggs.
Forest Shuffle: Woodland Edge
Immerse yourself in the serene beauty of nature with Forest Shuffle: Woodland Edge.
This expansion set for the beloved Forest Shuffle game introduces new flora and fauna, enhancing your strategic play with lush edge-of-the-forest habitats. Encounter diverse wildlife, discover hidden pathways, and manage your woodland resources to thrive.
Forest Shuffle
In Forest Shuffle, players compete to gather the most valuable trees, then attract species to these trees, thus creating an ecologically balanced habitat for flora and fauna.
To start, each player has six cards in hand, with cards depicting either a particular type of tree or two forest dwellers (animal, plant, mushroom, etc.), with these latter cards being divided in half, whether vertically or horizontally, with one dweller in each card half.
In the Footsteps of Darwin
Twenty years after his expedition around the world, Charles Darwin is writing On the Origins of Species. He wants to gather new information about animal life, particularly about continents he hardly explored. Who other than young naturalists, eager for discovery, could help the renowned scholar finish writing his most famous work?