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Looot
In Looot, you need to gather resources and capture buildings to develop your fjord. Fill your longships and complete your construction sites in order to rack up your victory points. Store up the most riches, and you’ll be crowned Jarl of the Vikings!
Honey Buzz: Fall Flavors - Upgraded Player Pieces
Bring some autumn color to your Honey Buzz experience! Upgrade your copy of Honey Buzz with these fall-themed player pieces!
Honey Buzz
"The bees have discovered economics. The queens believe that if they sell honey to the bears, badgers, and woodland creatures, they will find peace and prosperity. "
Frutticola
Frutticola is a game for 2-4 players and lasts about 60 minutes. It\'s a modern style game, in which the many strategies and different options don\'t make the game last longer. Here you can purchase the English version of the game.
Fire & Stone
In Fire & Stone the players lead their tribe through the Stone Age. They scout new lands, harvest nuts and mushrooms and finally build villages. The aim of the game is to have the most successful tribe by exploring new lands, building huts and gathering resources. With the invention of new tools and techniques like ship building or pottery the expansion of the player’s tribe can even be accelerated.
Looot: New Longships and Shields
A set of 2 new longships and 4 new shields (1 per player) to add to the game.
During setup, the 2 longship tokens are added to the draw bag. Additionally, every player gets 1 of the new shield in their colour. During the game, players can now use this new shield power as well as the other 3 already found in the base game.
Honey Buzz: Fall Flavors
Sweetwater Grove is all a buzz, with honey on the lips and minds of all the woodland creatures. Thanks to the hard work of accountants like you, the Queen’s honey stand is up and running. But now fall has arrived, and winter is coming! Her Majesty has given Her workers new responsibilities: harvest and sell fruit from the fall crop, decorate the hive with colorful autumn leaves, cap and store nectar for winter, and send retiring workers to be honored at the harvest festival before the sun sets on Sweetwater Grove. So strike up the waggle dance, it’s time for business!
Stone Age
The "Stone Age" times were hard indeed. In their roles as hunters, collectors, farmers, and tool makers, our ancestors worked with their legs and backs straining against wooden plows in the stony earth. Of course, progress did not stop with the wooden plow. People always searched for better tools and more productive plants to make their work more effective.