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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.
A Message From the Stars
In A Message From the Stars, a team of scientists seeks to decipher cryptic messages from an extraterrestrial civilization.
Set against a backdrop of cosmic mystery, players take on the roles of brilliant scientists tasked with decoding a series of perplexing satellite transmissions. These transmissions are believed to contain vital messages from an alien race that could hold the key to the destiny of Earth. The catch? The messages are incomprehensible, written in an entirely unknown alien language.
Secret Box 1st Edition - Oathsworn: Into The Deepwood
Large 150x150x110mm Secret Box with unknown content (non-gameplay related).
Includes:
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After Us
2083. Humankind died out decades ago, leaving behind mere vestiges of its time on Earth. As time went by, nature reclaimed land all over. In this resurgent world, apes have kept evolving. They\'ve been gathering in tribes, growing, mastering human items, and advancing in their quest for knowledge. As the leader of such a tribe, you need to guide it towards collective intelligence.
Figure It
Figure It, a.k.a. Domemo or Code Mine, is a captivating game with simple rules that challenges players to discover their own set of numbers — numbers that other players can see, but not you — using probability and deductive reasoning.
Match Madness
Be the fastest to recreate with your blocks the pattern shown on a card to win the card. The player with the most cards at the end of the game is the winner.
Anomia
Anomia: [uh-NO-mee-uh] – Noun –
1) A problem with word finding or recall.
2) Chaos.
3) The game where common knowledge becomes uncommonly fun!
Bananagrams
The worldwide-hit word game that the whole family can enjoy! Build a grid of words using letter tiles and be the first one to use them all.
Rorschach
Rorschach, named after the Swiss psychiatrist Hermann Rorschach, uses some of his famous inkblot images (and many new ones) to put two teams to the test. The teams earn points by correctly guessing how their members paired randomly selected words with these inkblot images.