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CoraQuest
CoraQuest is an exciting and accessible co-operative dungeon crawling game for one to four people, aged six and up.
In CoraQuest the players work together to guide four adventurers exploring a dungeon, avoiding traps, finding treasure, fighting monsters, and sometimes rescuing a gnome called Kevin.
Zombie Princess and the Enchanted Maze
As a knight, you are bound by chivalry to rescue the trapped princess. However, this princess is a zombie! And she is roaming free in an enchanted maze. Get to the other side to grab a key and race to the castle — before becoming a zombie yourself!
Dungeon Decorators
From time beyond memory, a great evil overlord has plagued the land, his ruthless cruelty matched only by his ruthlessly poor decorating taste. That evil overlord has died, and numerous pretenders are vying to take over his throne. And everyone knows that the first step on the journey to becoming a legendary evil boss is to set up a nefarious lair.
Turf War
In this yard-building card game, you race to prove to your neighbors that your lawn is the best on the block – or destroy your rival in the process.
Burgle Bros
Burgle Bros. is a cooperative game for 1-4 players. Players are unique members of a crew trying to pull off a robbery of a highly secure building — without getting caught. The building has three floors (4x4 tiles), each with its own safe to crack. Players start on the first floor and have to escape to their helicopter waiting on the roof.
SecretS of the Tombs
You are an explorer making your way along the darkened passages of a pyramid in search of treasures from ancient Egypt. Unfortunately, no attention has been paid to the tales of Ammut. Ammut is also known as the “Eater of Hearts” or “The Devourer”.
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.
Welcome To The Moon
Welcome to the Moon uses the same flip-and-write game mechanisms as the earlier title Welcome To..., but now you can play in a campaign across eight adventure sheets. On a turn, you flip cards from three stacks to create three different combinations of a starship number and a corresponding action, then all players choose one of these three combinations. You use the number to fill a space in a zone on your adventure sheet in numerical order, and everyone is racing to be the first to complete common missions.