Tuesday 26 November 2013

Cloudy with a chance of meeples

Tonight’s GNN title comes courtesy of Sam who came up with it as we were driving to pick up Joe. Sam looked at the clouds in the sky and wondered if it would snow tonight. Hey presto, a mere three minutes later, we chuckling over Sam’s clever pun.

We three arrived at Adam’s in time to watch him finish cooking his supper, and while he ate his risotto, Sam, Joe and I played Biblios. It was an odd game, with plenty of church cards that allow you to adjust the values of dice. More often than not, we just readjust those dice that another player had just adjusted. Joe and I expressed our bemusement at how Sam could afford to discard cards to pick up money during the auction round.

It worked, though. Sam is still (mostly) Mr Biblios. My plan to win three dice had to be revised down to making do with one. Joe, too, ended with a soliatry cube in front of him. A sterling performance from Sam.

Sam 11
Joe 3
Andrew 2

By now, Adam had eaten, and we pondered our next game. We had a tower of seven or eight games to chose from, but our minds kept wandering back to Joe’s Railways of the World in Sam’s car boot. We couldn’t resist it, and in less time than it takes to feed a guinea pig, Sam had popped out and brought the game in.


We went for the UK map since it’s perfect for four players and for Adam’s table. The board was seeded with cubes for each city, and that’s when things started to go wrong. There were no sweet spots, no easy winnings around a particular city. The cubes couldn’t have been more awkward if we’d chosen them on purpose.


Joe began by taking the Hotel London card, hoping to pick up some points on other people’s shipments. Or did he? We all stayed well away and before long he was building his own South-East network, keeping the home counties, London and Kent all to himself. Maybe that was his plan all along.

Adam clearly had the baron that gave him the bonus for least amount of bonds. It’s either him or Joe who gets this whenever we play. No one knows why. He played like a skinflint all game, building small but profitable links in the Midlands. Sam started big on bonds, and I wondered if he was going back to his bad old ways of spend high, score low. But no, he was going for a network that included two point-scoring links.

I went for easy pickings, keeping my engine upgraded one more than I needed. You see, I had had Joe’s RotW for a week, and I’d played a couple of games solo (rules: no cards, but see how high you can score in ten rounds) and I’d also made a network and tried to work out exactly where I had been going wrong. I realised that it was foolish to spend too much time on low-scoring links, even if they were already built.


But surely the main appeal of Railways of the World Great Britain is the opportunities it affords each player to insult various parts of the country. Carlisle came in for some stick, as did Joe’s express route from Ipswich to Bournemouth.

Joe lagged in fourth from early on. I made a slight faux pas when, after Joe had completed a route for bonus points, I noticed how far behind he was. “Has anyone added on Joe’s bonus points?” I helpfully asked. They had. He really was that far behind.


I got a huge stroke of luck when a card came up with a bonus for delivering to Hull, since I had that city (City of Culture 2017, by the way) all to myself. I cut a swathe down through the spine of England towards Bristol to complete my baron’s bonus. Sam had Wales all to himself, and Adam exploited his network to it’s maximum.

At one point Adam fell into deep thought for a long time and, at the end, he shipped some goods using part of my network. That must have hurt. He did this twice, giving me two points. And the final scores were:

Andrew 57
Adam 55
Sam 49
Joe 44

My first win on RotW, and it felt good. I had tamed the beast! Although it was only 10.10 on the clock, the game had exhausted us. We finished up at an unusually sensible time, and we took Sam’s games back to his car and chucked them in the boot. Not Railways, though. That was privileged enough to share a back seat with Joe. As it should be.


On the form table, little changes







Points
Adam 2 2 2 1 3 10
Gonz1 1 3 5 2 12
Sam3 1 5 2 2 13
Chris1 1 3 4 5 14
Andrew1 3 3 3 4 14
Joe4 2 3 3 2 14
Quentin4 1 1 5 3 14
Hannah2 5 55 5 22
Steve2 5 55 5 22
Anja3 5 55 5 23

And on the mothly division, Adam still remains top of Points, Points Ratio and the Medal Table! He’s well on his way to the treble as we enter the final month.

10 comments:

  1. Well played everyone! Especially Andrew. And Adam, for his game-winning contribution! And me, for not finishing last! And Joe, for going Chuck Norris-style rail-building in Kent!

    I love this game. I keep thinking the Bracknell guys are missing out, but I don't want to encourage Chris to spend all that cash in case they don't like it.

    But how could that possibly happen?

    ReplyDelete
  2. If anyone on BGG sees how those games are piled into the car I'll be excommunicated

    ReplyDelete
  3. You are like that evil kid from toy story :-P

    ReplyDelete
  4. Why can't I win Biblios!? WHY!? Sam's only winning cos we aren't! Hey maybe that's the stupidest thing I've ever said.

    I've lost my Railways mojo, clearly. Both games we've played on the GB map I've been deliberately trying out new strategies, but they've been short-sighted and I've finished last or next to.

    Last night I should have embraced the bonds and got my upgrades and blue urbanisation sorted earlier than I did - get my infrastructure moving - I was holding out for a free urbanise card that never came. Instead I actively tried not to take bonds, one time taking the tunnel-building card simply to round out the turn without an extra bond - I never even used the card (I nearly did, until Sam pointed out it was only good for half-price building, not free).

    There seemed to be more shared shipping yesterday, which may be a result of the tighter game board.

    Still it remains a firm favourite; I would like to play Steam as a comparison, but it's not nearly as nice looking . . .

    Thanks chaps. Sorry if my deep thought slowed the game down - it was under two hours though . . .

    ReplyDelete
  5. I think we all spent a lot of time deep thinking, especially at the start. I keep looking at those photos from early in the game, and trying to work out what else I could've done.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Is the UK mapped version a complete game or an expansion?

    ReplyDelete
  7. It's an expansion. The basic game comes with a Mexico map (introductory game or 2-player version) and an Eastern America map. I think there's a Western America available too, and Andrew was saying the other night there are lots of fan-generated ones.

    ReplyDelete
  8. The Mexico map is great for three and four as well - bit of a squeeze with four maybe, but I think that was your intro Sam, wasn't it? Rails of Europe is another official map, which is supposed to be excellent. And along with this year's reprint of GB, the other new official one is Rails of North America, which is mostly Canada, strangely.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Ok, I kind of want to try before I buy. Maybe a Christmas games night visit is in order :)

    ReplyDelete