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Visiting doctor_atomic
So the vacation last weekend was great. The train trips to and from New Jersey were uneventful, comfortable, and not overly long. I like the train.
It was so nice to spend a lot of non-thon time with
doctor_atomic, which I haven't really done since we were housemates four years ago. As she's usually completely consumed in her research, my arrival made her quite game-hungry, so we played plenty of games. Besides being fun, this had the additional effect of rekindling my interest in games. I hadn't noted it here, but it had been somewhat on the wane and needed a kick. It's less the games themselves as it is my approach to them that's been getting stale, but this is a blog for another time.
We played Cribbage twice, including once at a bar, which is pretty cool coz it was originally invented as a pub-friendly passtime, y'know, and I hadn't played in that sort of venue before. After I giddily toasted to the spirit of Sir John Suckling, its inventor, the bartender asked us what we were playing and I told her. Sadly. She let me get about four sentences in to excitedly explaining the game's English origins and American traditions before saying "Ha ha I'll have to learn that!" and then fleeing. I thought of so-and-so's comment of Ahh, I see, I am informing you against your will from last week's This American Life about the mystery hunt, but really she had drinks to pour too. She got a nice tip from me.
The doctor is slightly but consistently better than me at games. She beat me at both Cribbages, and we also played the Settlers card game once, which I fought like hell to just-barely win despite her never having played before. Uh, and we finished a game of Babel, a Kosmos two-player game that you haven't heard of because it's not necessarily all that good. It was significant to us personally because she bought it when we lived together and the one time we tried to play it she fell asleep, and it's sat inert in her game bin ever since. (I'd like to play it again, actually, but I doubt I'd want to buy it. It's neither broken nor particularly elegant.)
Other than that we made walking and driving treks around the New Brunswicky area to find interesting shops she'd heard about, and while we failed every time (Google maps WTF?) we succeeded in finding other interesting stuff. We ate and drank at various places. We took up no less than three tables when playing the Settlers card game at a cafe full of Rutgersians that we happened across. (I had forgotten the ridiculous amount of real estate that game demands.) I think people were looking sideways at us and wondering what we were doing, but we were gossiping most rudely about them too, so all was well.
And we ate approx. 400 cookies that the doctor made on my arrival. The end.
It was so nice to spend a lot of non-thon time with
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The doctor is slightly but consistently better than me at games. She beat me at both Cribbages, and we also played the Settlers card game once, which I fought like hell to just-barely win despite her never having played before. Uh, and we finished a game of Babel, a Kosmos two-player game that you haven't heard of because it's not necessarily all that good. It was significant to us personally because she bought it when we lived together and the one time we tried to play it she fell asleep, and it's sat inert in her game bin ever since. (I'd like to play it again, actually, but I doubt I'd want to buy it. It's neither broken nor particularly elegant.)
Other than that we made walking and driving treks around the New Brunswicky area to find interesting shops she'd heard about, and while we failed every time (Google maps WTF?) we succeeded in finding other interesting stuff. We ate and drank at various places. We took up no less than three tables when playing the Settlers card game at a cafe full of Rutgersians that we happened across. (I had forgotten the ridiculous amount of real estate that game demands.) I think people were looking sideways at us and wondering what we were doing, but we were gossiping most rudely about them too, so all was well.
And we ate approx. 400 cookies that the doctor made on my arrival. The end.
no subject
The most viable strategy we found after one game involves spreading out construction across the five spaces. Any temple that rose too tall generally got pulled down the next turn.
no subject
You say "if I didn't use one of those tiles myself", but the point is that you have exactly one chance to use one of these tiles. So yes, if you use Assyrians to knock down a large temple in a situation where you are able to use a 3 on the following turn, that can be useful. But that limits their power quite a bit.
I think that what happened is that the game didn't match your expectations; you expected the temples to grow steadily, where actually they fluctuate fairly radically. The thing that grows steadily is your workforce. If I have a larger and well-organized workforce (meaning one where it's easy to create and move 3's through migration), I can overcome a substantial deficit in temple levels, given time. The interesting decisions are whether to build a well-organized workforce, or to opportunistically grab the useful temple levels, which are a useful but transient gain. If you can quickly push your temple levels all the way to a win, you win; if not, my better workforce will eventually triumph.
As to imbalance, I'd happily play for high stakes where your starting hand had 2 Assyrians and 3 random cards while mine had 2 Sumerians and 3 random cards.