Trophies for everyone!

in Board Gaming4 years ago (edited)

Oh hey, look, it's me! V!

I review board games. Today, I'll be reviewing Trophies, by Facade Games.

Trophies is probably the lightest game I'll ever review, but for a first post, that's fitting. Essentially, it's an attempt to repackage the spirit of common word-based folkgames into a more organized and stylish form. If you're lucky, you grew up with some of these, like "Ghost", or "Countries". It's a long standing human tradition to play games with words, which makes sense - you already have all the pieces in your head. Adding physical components, then, could easily take these to the next level. Let's see if it does.

The presentation is lovely. When I ordered this game, I thought it would be in a mint tin, but it's more of a small biscuit tin, with lots of space inside for all the big cards. Upon reflection, I like this choice, since it catches the eye, and provides accessibility. Small cards probably wouldn't be able to keep the print size large enough for older players, and this is a family game. Why is it a tin at all, instead of a normal box? No idea. Looks nice, though.

When you open it up, you'll find cards, a rulebook, and a tiny metal trophy. That's it. They clearly went for quality over quantity, as the cards look great and the trophy weighs far more than you'd expect. If I had to guess, it's probably pewter.

Gameplay is simple. Each card has a letter on one side, and five categories on the other. Categories can be all sorts of fun things, from "Dog breed" to "Something sticky." When held in front of you with the letter facing outward, this allows the card you're looking at to provide the category, and an entirely random different card to represent the letter. Congratulations - you're already all set up to be The Judge. Just say a category. Your players must scramble to think of something within that category that starts with the letter you're showing them, and the first person to succeed wins the card. Rinse and repeat your way through the deck, and the person with the most cards at the end is encouraged to hold the tiny trophy in the air and gloat.

There are a lot of beautiful little mechanics to love about this game. I love how using the front of one card and the back of another provides endless combinations, so you never truly "solve" the game via memorization, no matter how much you play. I love how you can play it standing up. I love how The Judge is given supreme power to decide what words "count", which speeds the game past any petty Wikipedia battles, and makes the judge player feel special. Most of all, I love how the base game handles 3-30 players, but there's also a no-judge two player variant in the rulebook that's just as fun to play! That's a wide range of satisfied players. I haven't tested it with 30, mind you, and I doubt the game would still be coherent at that point, but it's perfectly possible.

Does this game succeed at its goal of making folkgame concepts even better by adding a few fancy components? Absolutely, no questions asked. It's the best example of something like this that I've ever seen, and I've seen quite a few.

Does this game have a space in a hobbyist board gamer's collection? My overall answer is yes, absolutely! It's got pretty universal appeal. I'll personally be keeping it and playing it a lot, since my whole group loved it, myself included. That said, no game is for everyone.

Only like sinking your teeth into complex games, and see no value in something this basic? You should definitely pass on it. Maybe try Anomia instead, as that's very similar, but slightly more complicated. Likewise, if you get easily overwhelmed or otherwise dislike time pressure, this game has a lot of that, so maybe look for a simple word game with no time elements, like SHH. Finally, I should mention that if all players aren't at similar levels of English comprehension, you won't get the full enjoyment this game can provide.

All that aside, holy heck, this game is perfect for non-gamers and families. It's cheap, it's beautiful, it requires no table or official gathering, the rules take ten seconds, and it makes you laugh the whole game straight. I will put this in every stocking I possibly can, come Christmas. It should just barely fit.

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Do tell me if I'm doing anything incorrect, of course. Like, for example, I'm not really sure why I'm supposed to use those tags, the person who introduced me to this place just told me to use them 🤷‍♀️
And... I'm not sure why this post isn't showing up on my profile, that's really weird.

When you create a post on a community, Right beside it you will see "Include also in my blog: yes" and slide "Yes" Then It will show on your blog.
🙂

Hi @viy,

Tags are a funny thing, and if you are posting to a community they don't really matter that much. Although using some tags - like palnet and neoxian mean you get awarded Hive Engine tokens too, if the people voting you have any (I do). At some point check out Hive Engine (you don't need to do it yet, because you won't earn any tokens until the post pays out). You log on using your hive id and password (you can use keychain to log in). There may be a token that is specific to gaming on there, I'm not sure.

Some tags (linked to tokens in Hive Engine) are protected and you can get downvoted if you misuse them. But palnet and neoxian are great because they are general tags with no specific content rules (some are linked to specific communities like Leo - leofinance - is related to financial matters).

When you post to a community the posts don't automatically go to "blog" but you'll find them in "all posts". If you use peakd to post to hive there is an option to post to blog at the same time. I don't bother using that, but some people do.

Whatever, even though it isn't shown in "blog" (which is a collection of post you reblog as well as posts you make that aren't posted to a specific community) they will show up in the feeds of people who follow you, and also the specific community.

I hope that helps.

Have a good day.

Tags seem fine, though I did notice you posted via Hive Condenser rather than Ecency.

Ecency has a point system that you get rewarded using for creating posts, you can use the points to promote your posts or boost them. Additionally, others can't spend points on your post to boost it if your post isn't made using Ecency. There's also an Ecency mobile app available, although it can feel a little slow at times.

Also, Ecency has a weekly reward that goes out based on engagement, if you're in the top 30 users who have posted or commented that week, you'll receive bonus points. However, I don't think you have enough Hive Power right now to be able to make that many posts as you only have enough to make ~3 a day. That probably won't be the case anymore in 10-14 days if you continue to post content like this.

@felt.buzz already answered your question as to why this post didn't show up under blog. However, in most interfaces there's an "All Posts" button you can press to see all posts someone's made.

Maybe @themarkymark will notice you've made the first post in the Board Gaming community.

As for Hive Engine, you currently have ~10.375 NEOXAG, ~5.58 BPC, and ~1.225 PAL in pending payments. To my knowledge, all three of which you've been using in your post tags will accept pretty much any kind of post.

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