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Boonlake: Artifacts
In Boonlake: Artifacts, you send out your treasure hunters to find treasures and mysterious artifacts on a new map.
Have you always wondered about the vases scattered around Boonlake? Recent findings show that they are loaded to the brim with variable atomic system energy, or V.A.S.E. for short. Put your found vases into the new artifacts and secure an advantage toward victory.
Brazil: Imperial - Metal Action Token
Deluxe component for Brazil: Imperial. 12 metal action tokens, 3 per player
Brazil: Imperial - Automa
Challenge the automaton!
Get ready for a new challenge in Brazil: Imperial. The Automaton is a relentless adversary that will test all your experience as the leader of your nation.
The Automaton can be used in solo matches or added to maps with more players, helping to create new gameplay, with an unpredictable opponent that does not accept negotiations!
Horseless Carriage
"This year, we want the best, or nothing at all. We don\'t want tradition. We want to live in the present and the only history that is worth a tinker\'s damn is the history we make today."
Mint Delivery
Mint Delivery is a mint tin-sized, pick-up-and-deliver board game designed to be quick-to-play and easy-to-learn.
In the game, players take the role of a mint delivery truck driver, driving around the area taking orders for mints, then delivering them.
Corrosion
Corrosion is a sublime temporary engine builder by game designer Stefan Bauer which features stunning atmospheric artwork by Dennis Lohausen. A challenging gameplay including a solo mode awaits advanced and expert players as you are confronted with clever strategic planning along profound player interaction. Varying start conditions invite you to explore new ways of scoring each time you play.
Brazil: Imperial
Take on the role of one of the great monarchs of the past, and show your valor! You will arrive in a vast and rich territory, but the road to the prosperity is filled with challenges.
Food Chain Magnate
Food Chain Magnate is a heavy strategy game about building a fast food chain. The focus is on building your company using a card-driven (human) resource management system. Players compete on a variable city map through purchasing, marketing and sales, and on a job market for key staff members. The game can be played by 2-5 serious gamers in 2-4 hours.
Hallertau
Take a step into the world\'s biggest contiguous hop-growing region, Hallertau. A strategy game by Uwe Rosenberg where players are leaders of a small town, attempting to improve the craft workshops and to raise the town\'s wealth by growing hops.
The Castles of Tuscany
The beautiful Tuscany region, in the 15th century, is the home of the Italian Renaissance. As influential princes, the players make creative decisions to build their region into a flourishing domain.
Boonlake
With a group of pioneers, you have left civilization behind to settle along the shores of Boonlake, a long-forgotten region inhabited by humans long ago. This unexplored area beckons you! Become part of a new community and commit yourself to the common good. Explore the landscapes, build houses and settlements, raise cattle, produce raw materials, and develop an infrastructure. Do your best to automate these processes. Seize the opportunity to make the best of your new life in Boonlake.
Transatlantic
Transatlantic is a game for 2-4 players, ages 14 and up.
2 to 4 players lead their own shipping companies, which transport freight, mail, and passengers around the globe. They purchase new steamships from the market, each of them historical with their individual technical data (tons, knots etc.).
Le Havre
Manage a shipping company in the port of Le Havre in this weighty economic strategy game! Balance investments in goods and ships while taking care to feed your workers.
The Great Zimbabwe
The Great Zimbabwe is a game about building a trade based civilization in ancient Africa. It has been inspired by the old kingdoms surrounding the Great Zimbabwe, a world heritage site in Southern Africa. Far into the previous century, colonial governments denied that a civilization that produced such impressive monuments and beautiful artwork could have been African in origin. But of course, this civilization was African, and the country of Zimbabwe itself was proudly named after this impressive cultural heritage.