Wednesday 23 January 2019

No Peking

This week's GNN started with trauma. I arrived to find Joe receiving some first aid due to a nasty burn on the back of his hand caused by scalding hot oil and water. Ouch. He played through the pain, though, with his hand smothered in ointment, wrapped in clingfilm and then topped off with a single glove.


As for the games night, we were six in number: Joe, Ian, Martin, Sam, Adam and me. Martin had brought Ticket To Ride Asia, the team version of Alan R Moon's cash cow. I wasn't keen at first, having only recently played Ticket To Ride New York but the general consensus was favourable, so it was chosen.


The teams were Ian and Sam versus Martin and Joe versus Adam and me. The rules do not allow collaboration between the two players, only a little 'light chat' while you play. This rule was somewhat stretched when Martin pointedly asked Joe if a card he had just picked up was going into the communal card between them.


Ian and Sam raced into an early lead after Ian completed a six link route. And he also brought along  thematically appropriate crisps, too. He looked like a strong contender. Adam refused to give any information regarding what he wanted to his opponents (or indeed, to me) by almost always choosing two face down cards from the deck.

Ian and Sam's lead was slowly whittled away and there was a lovely moment when we were all on 49 points. If only it could have stayed that way as Martin and Joe's gambling on route tickets paid off.

Martin checks the scores with lightning speed while Joe's
single white glove shines in the dark.

Joe and Martin 207
Adam and Andrew 130
Ian and Sam 124

Then we split into two groups. Sam, Ian and Martin played Dragon Castle.


Sam 40
Ian 38
Martin 37

Meanwhile, Joe, Adam and I chose Twenty One after I said I was in the mood for a roll and write game. What a fool I was. Twenty One is a game where everyone uses the same dice values to mark off dice on their differing score sheets. Ideally, you want to match exact values of the dice with the ones on the sheet. Unfortunately, my attempt at rerolling my dice because they were beneficial to Joe usually ended in them being even more beneficial to Joe.


Joe 106
Adam 94
Andrew 82

After this, we were back together as a six. Ian was tempted to stay for one more game with For Sale. In the property round, I spent all my money, Ian played it cagey at first before picking up the 30 for just 10 chips. Then in the cheque round, Joe was sunk by a zero dollar cheque when he'd bid a 15 on it. He never recovered. Sam, though, picked up his third For Sale win in a row!


Sam 50
Adam 47
Martin 46
Ian 45
Andrew 42
Joe 37

After this Ian and Adam set off home while the remaining four played Troika. It's such a simple game that Joe and Martin had no difficulties with it and it seems like a winning strategy came to them quite easily, too.


Martin 3
Sam 2
Joe 2
Andrew -1

And that was that. Thanks to Joe for hosting through the pain (or at least, some discomfort) and well done to everyone for just being you.

2 comments:

  1. Thanks all for indulging my Team Asia craving - Joe and I did get quite lucky with our ticket draws!

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  2. I enjoyed Team Asia - nice blend of TtR with Hab & Gut. I felt Ian deserved more with his two bids to build tunnels - a proper GNN blend of speculative optimism and crestfallen realisation.

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