After a brief but thorough run through the rules, we were thrown into the world of before-Christ light entertainment and our faltering tactics took a while to get going. Andrew tried to sow up the low end of the market with shows about the god of wine Bacchus, or about some woman’s revealed secrets. Meanwhile, Joe tried to appeal to those in power with Ceaser’s Triumphant March, or some similarly titled propaganda.
In the end, both of these populist tactics backfired on them, as Sam stole first place from Andrew in a closely fought final round by a single point: Sam 82, Andrew 81... I can’t remember what the others got, but Adam was third and Joe came fourth by a country mile; his final epic show stymied by a complete lack of actors. Maybe Sam’s victory was a result of the good karma he picked up for supplying mid-game cheese and crackers.
So Colosseum is an enjoyable, if lightweight game. Perhaps it needs a little more opportunity for ruining other people’s shows. Or perhaps it was that lack of double-crossing that left Adam and Joe in third and fourth, since that's usually when they flourish.
The evening ended with Joe regaining some pride (and £1.50) on a quick game of No Thanks, with everyone putting in 50p. Adam’s lack of chip management meant he ended up in last (threatening to break Andrew’s record high score of 118 points). An uncharacteristically bad night for Adam.
The Leaderboard
Played | Points | |
Joe | 14 | 28 |
Adam | 15 | 26 |
Sam | 9 | 19 |
Andrew | 17 | 18 |
Steve | 4 | 9 |
Jonny | 6 | 8 |
Will | 2 | 4 |
Quentin | 2 | 2 |
Hannah | 1 | 1 |
Jon | 1 | 1 |
Seems to me that having a poor third round set up my good fourth round (stealing something good from Joe which left him struggling in the last two rounds), while Sams poor fourth round allowed him to steal an actor and four-point bonus from me...
ReplyDeleteSo should we be trying to have great (money-making) shows in the first three rounds and then deliberately coming last in round four?
I got a lucky start, because the two shows I got at the beginning were both easy to put on, so rounds one and two got me decent money.
ReplyDeleteAnd people are still talking about my Cavalry of Spartacus — it was the defining spectacle of its era, so I make no apologies for putting it on two rounds running.
"Berger's Cavalry of Spartacus feels like falling into a diseased and overwrought phallic fantasy" — Lyn Gardner, the Guardian
And look how nice the blog is now!
ReplyDelete