No products in the cart.
Active filters
Knitting Circle: Kickstarter Edition
Knitting Circle is a stand-alone follow up to the puzzle game Calico! In this tile-laying game for the whole family, players are knitters competing to create the coziest, most beautiful assortment of garments.
Battle Dentale
Working as a monster in an evil wizard\'s dungeon isn\'t easy. It\'s dark, damp, and your boss has a habit of turning employees into frogs during annual performance reviews.
But perhaps the worst thing is the boredom. Sure, it\'s exciting when the occasional hero stumbles past and you have a bit of a scuffle. However, most of the time you\'re just hanging about watching mould grow on the walls.
Kahuna
"Who will rule the South Seas? Two Kahuna - ancient sorcerers of the Pacific - compete for dominance on an archipelago consisting of twelve small islands. Using their magic and wisdom, they struggle for control of the islands. They anxiously await the cards handed to them by fate. But when the time is right, they move to capture one, two, or even more islands, trying to gain the upper hand. At the mercy of the magical powers of the South Seas, they quickly realize that even the best magic is no good without strategy."
Crack List
Town-country-river game meets Uno.
Players race to empty their hands. In turns, players attempt to play a card by giving a word starting with the letter on one of their hand cards matching the Crack List category.
The most difficult letters include some "take that" cards, and multiple Crack List cards are used during a single game, changing the categories of words to guess.
For Crown & Kingdom
The king lies weakened on his deathbed. His Majesty has but days to live, and has failed to produce an heir. Any of the local dukes or duchesses could be next in line, as long as they are able to gain the approval of the people. Each has set off on a heroic campaign around the kingdom. They vie for fame, for glory, and for the crown!
Ctrl
In Ctrl, players try to dominate a cube by crawling over it with their colored bricks, preferably covering other players\' bricks along the way.
In more detail, you start with a 3×3×3 cube that has one block of each player color stuck into one of the cube\'s holes. (In a two-player game, each player controls two colors, but at the start of play they secretly choose one of those colors to be their scoring color, with the other color serving only as a blocking mechanism.) Each player has a matching colored flag that sticks out of their block.