No products in the cart.
Active filters
Lamborghini: The Official Race Game
The Lamborghini official board game is a fascinating economic management of a racing Lamborghini team: sign the best driver, buy your car and its components and equip it at your best to face the qualification session. Then drive your Lamborghini Murciélago at 350 Km/h on the Monza or Hockenheim straights. The game is both managing and racing. The 5 miniatures in the box (scale 1/87) are also a toy for adults and kids. Lamborghini is the official boardgame which will drive the sports cars fans mad.
Cavemen: The Quest for Fire
Cavemen: The Quest for Fire is a card-drafting game in which players take the role of tribal leaders. The tribes compete for opportunities to hunt dinosaurs, recruit tribesmen, and discover new technologies, vying to be the first with enough knowledge and prestige to invent fire and usher in the age of modern humanity!
Fürstenfeld
Furstenfeld is an economic game for 2-5 players.
The players are princes and own their own “Fürstenfeld”, where they produce hops, barley, and spring water. They sell their harvest to different breweries, which have different demands for the 3 goods.
Darjeeling
In 1835, the British East India Company leased the region around the location of the modern-day city of Darjeeling.
The British strategically placed the trading post to build a sanatorium there as well!
Mammoth Hunters
Imagine a cold and windy autumn day about 30,000 years ago. For hours the hunters have shadowed the mammoth herd. Will they succeed? Will they be able to bring down one of the huge beasts? If they succeed, the beast will feed the tribe for many weeks
Yeti Slalom
The players have teams of downhill snowboard racers and are competing with each other for the coveted Yeti cup. Movement is managed by playing cards to move their racers. Players also have cards which cause the Yetis, watching from the hills on each side of the race course, to throw snowballs at the racers, trying to knock them out of the race.
Cape Horn
Before the opening of the Panama Canal, ships sailed from the east coast to the west coast of North or South America via Cape Horn. They held races from New York to San Francisco for those daring enough to test their skills against the elements.