BGTG 134 - A Look Back at 2012

Published: Feb. 24, 2013, 11:18 p.m.

b'Every year I like to look back over the previous one in boardgaming, and reflect on what happened. At the most basic level, this means reviewing my statistics, the number of distinct titles played, as well as the overall total of games played. For me that\'s typically about 100 titles, 300 total plays, but you\'ll hear how 2012 was a bit higher than normal. I\'m not entirely sure why that was, though I have some ideas. I also talk through my "nickels & dimes" list of games played at least five or ten times. However, those sort of stats aren\'t as meaningful for self-reflection as it is to remember some particularly notable games or individual plays. Some games just stand out, regardless of the number of times they were played. My games of\\xa0Olympia 2000 (v. Chr.)\\xa0and\\xa0Reiner Knizia\'s Decathlon, played during this summer\'s real Olympics in London are an example. So is my partnership game of\\xa0Mr. President, played during the last US Presidential campaign season is another. I often play games online, though Play-By-Web sites like\\xa0Yucata.de, Michael Schacht\'s\\xa0Boardgames Online, or\\xa0Brass Online. Not everyone agrees that these plays "count," but I do. More important, they let me keep playing games with friends I don\'t see during the week, or even friends that are in distant places like Houston or Afghanistan.\\xa0:-)\\xa0(For what it\'s worth, I don\'t log iOS plays, even if they\'re against a friend. As the games on that platform get better & better, that could change in the future.) Around the discussions about specific games are other observations about the recovery of my local gaming group, my rekindled interest in wargames, the undeniable impact of Kickstarter (not necessarily on me), solo boardgaming, and why I\'m sometimes reverting to the term German Games instead of euros. It has to do with my preference for a style of shorter, elegant game that\'s more at home in 2000 among Carcassonne, Africa, or Bohnanza rather than 2012\'s overburdened euros with their resource economies and player status boards. The criticism of my favorite style of boardgame is that they\'re "superfillers" that are just chasing the Spiel des Jahres for wide, family appeal. Even with a group of gamers over on Friday night, those are the sort of games I like.'