Kempeth

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 11 points 9 months ago

You definitely should turn her on before you start stirring...

[–] [email protected] 5 points 9 months ago

Basically if you need the same logic in two places instead of copying it to the second place you make it into a function and use that function in both places.

That way if you need that logic to change you only need to make that edit once regardless of whether you use it one time or one thousand times.

 

Über das Versor-Gen!

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Tuesday our group met. First we played some weird memory game about being an orchestra conductor which was really bad. Then we tried the 5th mission in Port Royal Big Box... twice.. in vain. We ended the evening early because:

On Wednesday we met again to play DnD. My character had an emotional reunion with a lost family member and we encountered our first gelatinous monster.

On Friday there was a public game night in town which I attended. The group I landed with first played two rounds of Frantic - a domestic UNO alternative but for some of them it was too chaotic so we cut the game short. We then played Ricochet Robots and the ladies at the table completely trunced me out of the gate. But after about 4 rounds I got up to speed and managed to race ahead after all. From this we moved on to X-Code where we managed to win the 4 basic missions and the first mission of the blue box. At this point we believed that the evening would wind down soon so we snuck in a quick game of Shark Attacks - where I finally did not come in in last place! Only to then learn that the game night would go on a bit longer this time. So picked up Las Vegas as well. I hadn't played so many different games in one setting in ages and really enjoyed it. The evening also served as a nice way to cap off the organizer's 5 year run in hosting these game nights.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Glad to see Terraforming Mars getting some love...

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

The size can make it a bit intimidating but there's literally something for everyone. There are kids games, family games, party games, advanced games, super heavy games, roleplaying games, wargames and probably some I'm forgetting now. There are toys, accessories, fan stuff, everything.

I went alone for many years, I've gone with my GF, I've gone with friends. Every experience is a bit different but I've never not had fun. The only negative thing I've ever experienced was some people hogging a table for a game I really wanted to try but most booths now are pretty good about queueing up.

One thing you have to understand though is that Essen is a fair not a convention. While you can play games, you won't necessarily get to finish them. Some booths have time slots and will tell you to wrap it up when yours is over. And if you play with strangers some might only be looking to "get a taste" for it and then move on. But if you're "stationed" in Essen for the night there are several hotspots where you can go to play properly.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

we also got out at midnight to watch the Perseids. We've been doing this for a few years now and never seen such an intense shower. Like you said, we also saw some fat ribbons across the sky. Not a whole lot but very impressive one. We also had a lightning storm on the other side of the valley.

I never considered using normal binos to look for Andromeda. What magnification do you have?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

Regular boardgame nights returned from summer hiatus. The full group assembled for 5 player coop Great Wall. The game has amazing table presence and pretty interesting mechanics but absolutely no balance.

  • Some leaders are just vastly better than others (pay a chi to make one additional damage vs get a massive discount when you recruit.)
  • Missions have massively different difficulty levels and some are nigh on impossible for 5 players.
  • Events are just ridiculous. Their immediate effects are ok but their ongoing effects are just way too punishing. Still the basic gameplay loop is compelling and we're probably gonna play this on occasion.

On the weekend my sister also hopped over for a visit and we played:

  • Thanos Rising - I basically had one decent turn, the rest was all a wash and with only two players pulling we had no chance.
  • Earth - First time for my sister but she quickly took to it. This was the first game where I dared to take one of those terrains that forbids you from taking a particular action (growth) and I got by quite decently. Getting another card on every plant action was well worth the tradeoff. With enough card draws, I could fuel a lot of compost actions and on top of it I got lucky and drew the terrain that gives VP based on composted cards. All in all I won with a commanding lead. But after initial confusion over the common scoring cards (fauna) it was nice to see that everyone ultimately got the hang of it and scored at least 3 of them.
  • Würfel Ligretto - Early morning we decided to wake ourselves up with someting frantic. So frantic in fact that one of the dice tumbled off the table and somehow into the kitchen installation. But we were ultimately able to find and retrieve the bugger and complete the game.
  • Moving on from that we played Shark Attacks - a push your luck game where I consistently have less luck than everyone else. At least this time I lost to my sister instead of my GF.
  • Pharaon - We capped the visit off with this game that I had kind shelved for a while. GF wasn't in the mood for something heavy and just watched leaving it at a 2p setup. I must say I vastly preferr this game with less players. While I apprciate that it does go to 5 players and works it just becomes soooo much thighter. Spots per player are 7.5, 5, 6.25, 5 (from 2 to 4 players) and more importantly with 5 you might not even have the opportunity to go in a particular sector if everyone else prioritizes it.
 

How was it? What can you recommend? Or not?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

I can't blame you. It literally took us pretty much weekly sessions for over a year to reach the final scenario. That's a daunting comittment. I actually low key burned out on the game a few times during that period. But it always pulled me back in again.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I grew up with the Ravensburger box of classics so, board games were always a part of my childhood. They quickly captured my imagination and I began to draw roll and move boards, explaining to my mom what should happen on each space.

When I got older the whole family got into games and that turned into a nice sunday tradition.

Eventually I got sucked into BGG and never financially recovered...

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

The discovery texts in the book just broke up the pace so much. Spliting the party made the down time insufferable and the "combat/diplomacy" mechanic was horrible.

We're a group of 5 so someone would had to sit out every time and after one play I told everyone I would be happy to be that person...

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yeah. It got recommended to me as an easier Tzolkin. Well, it IS easier but not anywhere near as interesting and every game feels sooo samey.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Hoping to borrow Ares Expedition from a friend soon. Played it once in Essen and wasn't wowed. Gonna be tough beating TFM after that...

 

Krautfunding

 

After picking up the recipe on the site that shall not be named we finally got around to making it and absolutely love it!

Credit goes to ameliaisnotachef for the recipe:
Garlic Confit

  • 1.5 heads of garlic
  • 1 cup or so of olive oil- enough to cover the garlic cloves

Add olive oil to small sauce pan and heat on medium. Once oil is hot, add garlic cloves and reduce to low and cook for about an hour. Set aside

Harissa Chicken

  • 3.5 oz harissa paste
  • 1 tablespoon gently crushed coriander seeds
  • 3 large cloves garlic, grated
  • 1 tablespoon ginger, grated
  • 1.5 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • 0.25 cup olive oil
  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
  • 0.5 teaspoon cumin
  • 3.5 lbs boneless skinless chicken thighs, trimmed and cut into 1 inch pieces

Step 1
Add all ingredients except for chicken in a medium bowl and mix

Step 2
In a large bowl, add chicken and marinade and toss thoroughly. Chill for 2 hours or longer - overnight is ideal.

Cucumber Salad

  • 6 Persian cucumbers, halved and sliced
  • 0.5 cup diced red onion
  • 0.5 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 0.25 cup water
  • 0.5 cup sugar

Step 1
Add apple cider vinegar, water, and sugar to a medium bowl and mix to combine until sugar is dissolved.

Step 2
Add cucumbers and red onion to bowl and toss. Refrigerate for 30 minutes and then drain- serve immediately! (Meh, it was entirely fine sitting like this in the fridge for a day)

Garlic Herbed Yogurt

  • 1.5 cups plain greek yogurt
  • 3 tablespoons chopped dill
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1.5 tablespoons lemon juice
  • as many garlic confit cloves as you’d like (since they are cooked, they are milder)

Add all ingredients to a bowl and mix. Set aside

Final Assembly
When chicken is ready to be grilled, skewer all pieces of chicken and grill on medium high for about 6 minutes, flip and another 6 minutes. Cook until internal temperature reaches 170°F

Warm a piece of naan- I like to dampen paper towels and wrap the naan and stick in the microwave for about 30 seconds.

Spread a decent amount of garlic yogurt on naan, add a chicken skewer, and then top with cucumber salad.

Personal Notes
Yoghurt was too salty for my taste and the meat not salty enough. Overall the amount was good but I would probably move about half the salt from the Yoghurt to the meat.

Also this is a huge batch! Probably something like 6-8 portions depending on how much of an eater you are. The naans also add quite a bit of bulk.

 

I'm tinkering with a framework to implement board games in c# (similar to boardgame.io in JS) part of that is getting a handle on turn structures. (What is a round? what is a turn? who gets to go when? etc)

So I've gone through all my games and looked for recurring patterns and exceptions to them and here's what I've collected so far:

  • There's always at least one structure that handles how player act or "take turns"
    • the vast majority of games do traditional turns - one player does things, then then another,
      • usually in a fixed order maybe going forward some times and backward other times.
      • sometimes the order can change
      • also possible are:
        • turn order decks (you don't know who goes next but know that everyone gets a turn)
        • action tracks (where whoever is furthest back gets to go next, possibly resulting in an uneven number of turns)
        • the next player is dependent on an action of the previous player
    • it's also possible that players can play simultaneously
      • a complete free for all is pretty common
      • it's also possible that players can act freely to some point, then have to wait for everyone else to catch up
    • another consideration, both for concurrent and sequential play is that sometimes some players are excluded (Codenames for example lets all guessers on a given team act concurrently but not the leaders or the other team)
    • there can be different rules at different times (like first picking a tile in sequence then everyone can place it simultaneously)
    • and there can be nested rules (like every player gets to run an auction but in every auction each player get's to bid as well)
    • one relatively common special case is where certain actions on a player's turn result in decisions being needed from other players (trades, attacks, "each player ..." effects)
  • there are often structures that simply subdivide another structure
    • they can occur at any level. A game may be divided into "setup" and "play", a round could be divided into different phases but a single player's turn might also be divided into smaller steps.
    • these subdivision usually restrict / specify which actions are allowed in them
    • these subdivision often come with limits like: you can only do N actions
    • sometimes a player can "pass" sometimes they cannot

I'm wondering if anyone can think of an instance that is not covered by these "rules".

 

dpunked seems to be sleeping in... So, what did you folks play last week?

 

und mein Tatenvolumen ist auch schon aufgebraucht.

 

Aber ich kann sie nicht aufheben. Ich hab kein Urheberrecht.

 

While I like the concept of the game, I find the amount of key words and rules to juggle cumbersome and my GF was unable to get a handle on what to do.

What's your experience with sticking with the game? Any tipps that helped you internalize the gameplay?

PS I've already tried in solo but it's even more fiddly that way.

 

Ein Kugelschreibär

 

Ein Kaminchen

 

your healing spells are more effective. Whenever you use a spell of 1st level or higher to restore hit points to a creature, the creature regains additional hit points equal to 2 + the spell's level.

What happens when I cast a level 1 spell using a level 2 spell slot?

Literal reading would suggest that the spell slot is irrelevant only the inherent level of the spell but I have seen statements to the contrary.

It's not a huge difference. But I'd still like to know.

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