
Peter Shephard (2822 KP) rated Terraforming Mars: Venus Next in Tabletop Games
May 25, 2019
Venus itself isn't a game changer, and it is absolutely viable to completely ignore Venus - remember, Venus itself it supposed to be the next challenge for Humanity after Terraforming Mars (hence "Venus Next..."!). I have had a couple of games where Venus' terrforming didn't get beyond a couple of percent (but there were plenty of Floater cards!) but equally I've had a couple of games where Venus was developed as far as the Board would allow, before Mars was even half-way completed.
It is a very good expansion, but personal opinion it would be one to get after the other expansions - some of the others offer much more

Stephanie (4 KP) rated Monopoly Deal in Tabletop Games
Jun 24, 2018

Unmatched: Cobble & Fog
Tabletop Game
In battle, there are no equals. Unmatched: Cobble & Fog features four new heroes for the...

Attack Balls - New Bubble Shooter Game (Best Cool & Funny Games For Girls & Kids - Touch Top Fun)
Games and Entertainment
App
THIS IS A NEW WAY BALL-SHOOTING-GAME OF YEAR 2017 FEATURED BY APPLE *Over 6,000,000 downloads! See...

RPGMP3
1 member Orb
Dungeon ON! RPGMP3 is the great great granddaddy of Actual Play Gaming. We were one of the first...
rpgmp3 roleplaying tabletop game board game dice

Charterstone
Tabletop Game
The prosperous Kingdom of Greengully, ruled for centuries by the Forever King, has issued a decree...

BioShock Infinite: The Siege of Columbia
Tabletop Game
From Plaid Hat Games' website: BioShock Infinite: The Siege of Columbia board game, based on the...

BBC CBeebies Playtime Island
Games and Entertainment
App
CBeebies Playtime Island app is now even better! You can choose and change the games you want and...

Matthew Krueger (10051 KP) rated Mario Party in Video Games
Nov 5, 2019
Lets talk more about it...
Mario Party is a party video game with six playable characters: Mario, Luigi, Princess Peach, Yoshi, Wario, or Donkey Kong. In the game's storyline, Mario and his friends argue about which of them is the Super Star. To settle their dispute, they set out for adventure to determine which of them is best.
Upon starting a board, players each hit a dice block to determine turn order, with the highest number going first on each turn and the lowest number going last.
Blue spaces give three coins to any player who lands on them, and red spaces take away three coins (both increased to six coins during the last five turns). Bowser also has his own spaces on the board map which hinder the players' progress.
Each player's goal is to collect the most stars. Purchasing stars requires coins, which can be earned through mini-games that are played once at the end of each turn. Each mini-game is chosen randomly. Mario Party features more than 50 mini-games, divided into several categories:
1. 4-player mini-game: each player competes against one another
2. 1 vs. 3 mini-game: a team of three players competes against a lone competitor.
3. 2 vs. 2 mini-game: competing teams of two against two.
4. 1-player mini-game: a lone player works toward a goal to win the mini-game.
Several characters appear throughout each board map, and each character can have an effect on players who reach them. Stars can be purchased from Toad for 20 coins. Boo can steal coins or a star from another player on behalf of anyone who requests it; stealing coins is free, but stealing a star costs 50 coins. Koopa Troopa appears at the starting point on board maps and will give 10 coins to each player who passes him. Bowser tries to foil the efforts of any player who passes him by taking coins.
Three bonus stars are awarded at the end of each board map: two are given to the player(s) who collected the most coins in mini-games and throughout the board map game, and the third is given to the player(s) who landed on the most "?" spaces.
In Mario Party, certain minigames required players to rotate the Nintendo 64 controller's analog stick as fast as they can. Some players reportedly got blisters, friction burns and lacerations from rotating the analog stick using the palms of their hands instead of using their thumb.
complaints were received by New York's attorney general's office and Nintendo of America eventually agreed to a settlement, which included providing gloves for anyone who had hurt their hand(s) while playing the game and paying the state's $75,000 legal fees. At the time, providing gloves for the estimated 1.2 million users of the game who might have been affected could have cost Nintendo up to $80 million.
The analog stick rotation has been used sparingly since Mario Party 2. Despite Nintendo's current analog sticks being better suited to play these games than the hard plastic of the N64 controller, Mario Party has not been re-released for the Virtual Console. For the Wii Virtual Console, Nintendo skipped it and instead re-released Mario Party 2, which was later also made available for the Wii U Virtual Console.
Mario Party is a must play game, like i said before its fun, enteraining, fustrating and you can either play with your friends or your family.

Dinos Not Assembled
Tabletop Game
In Dinos Not Assembled, you and your fellow players are paleontologists compete for a contract by a...