Tags / combat

"combat"

4 BuzzVerdicts across Books (2), Board Games (2)

Iron Prince: Warformed Stormweaver

4.2

2020 · Bryce O'Connor & Luke Chmilenko · 818 pages · Progression Sci-Fi

Iron Prince delivers one of the most satisfying underdog arcs in modern progression fantasy, wrapped in a sci-fi military academy setting that makes every fight feel earned. It demands a serious time commitment at over 800 pages, and some of those combat sequences run longer than they need to. But the payoff, watching a protagonist with the worst starting stats in his class claw his way upward through sheer refusal to quit, creates the kind of reading momentum that keeps people up until three in the morning.

Kemet

4.2

2012 · 2-5 Players · ~90 min · Aggressive Area Control

Kemet is area control at its most aggressive and rewarding, a game that tells you to stop turtling and start fighting from the very first round. The power tile system gives every game a different strategic texture, and the teleportation mechanics keep the action flowing without tedious movement phases. It stumbles with its iconography for new players and occasionally devolves into pile-on-the-leader dynamics, but these are growing pains that fade with experience. For groups that want a combat-heavy strategy game that stays tight and competitive from start to finish, Kemet is one of the best in the genre.

Andromeda's Edge

4.0

2024 · 1-5 Players · 80-160 min · Strategy / Engine Building

Andromeda's Edge is a dense, rewarding strategy game that asks a lot from its players and gives back generously for those willing to invest. The engine-building loop is among the best in the genre, with the recall mechanic creating moments of satisfaction every time your plans come together. Faction variety and a modular setup give it long legs for dedicated groups. It stumbles on accessibility, with a steep learning curve, heavy setup demands, and visual clutter that can overwhelm first-timers. For experienced gamers looking for their next big strategic commitment, it delivers something worth the shelf space.

Red Mage: Advent

3.5

2018 · Xander Boyce · 374 pages · LitRPG / Post-Apocalyptic

Red Mage: Advent delivers a solid system apocalypse LitRPG with a magic system that's more interesting than most of what the subgenre offers. The Xatherite mechanic gives the progression a strategic layer that goes beyond simple stat accumulation, and the dungeon-crawling core of the story is executed with enough skill to keep action-focused readers engaged. The secondary characters and early pacing need work, and the military protagonist falls into familiar territory, but the foundation is strong enough that fans of apocalyptic LitRPG should find it worth the read.