Tags / dice-rolling

"dice-rolling"

7 BuzzVerdicts

Cthulhu: Death May Die

4.0

2019 · 1-5 Players · ~90-120 min · Cooperative

Cthulhu: Death May Die takes a more action-oriented approach to Lovecraftian board gaming than most of its peers, and the combination of scenario variety, Elder God diversity, and investigator abilities creates a replayability engine that keeps the game fresh across dozens of plays. The dice-chucking combat is satisfying and fast, and the insanity system elegantly ties mechanical power to narrative risk. Cramped map tiles and fiddly damage tracking are real annoyances that the design never fully solves. But for groups that want their cosmic horror with more punching and less puzzle-solving, this hits the mark.

Stone Age

3.8

2008 · 2-4 Players · ~60-90 min · Competitive

Stone Age delivers one of the most accessible worker placement experiences available, wrapping resource gathering and civilization building in a forgiving framework that works for newcomers and experienced players alike. The dice add randomness that bothers competitive purists but keeps the game unpredictable and fun for mixed groups. It's a gateway into heavier strategy games that never stops being enjoyable on its own terms.

Mice and Mystics

3.5

2012 · 1-4 Players · ~90 min · Cooperative

Mice and Mystics is a storybook adventure that succeeds on charm and narrative more than mechanical depth. The writing carries the experience, turning a simple dice-and-combat framework into something families look forward to returning to each session. Repetitive encounters and heavy dice dependence limit its appeal for groups seeking tactical challenge. But as a shared storytelling experience that younger players can fully participate in, it fills a gap that very few games even attempt.

ISS Vanguard

3.5

2023 · 1-4 Players · ~90-120 min · Cooperative / Campaign

ISS Vanguard delivers one of the most ambitious campaign narratives in board gaming, with colorful alien worlds and branching storylines that keep you invested across dozens of sessions. The planetary exploration phase is thrilling when the dice cooperate, but the ship management phase drags, the randomness can snowball in frustrating directions, and the mechanical depth doesn't always match the narrative ambition. It's a game that will thrill you one session and test your patience the next, and whether that tradeoff works depends entirely on how much you value story over systems.

Zombicide

3.5

2012 · 1-6 Players · ~60 min · Cooperative Miniatures Game

Zombicide delivers exactly what the box promises: a fast, loud, cooperative zombie survival game that runs on dice and adrenaline. The miniatures look great, the difficulty escalates in satisfying ways, and the scenario variety keeps groups coming back for more. Randomness and rulebook issues hold it back from true greatness, but this is a game that knows what it wants to be and commits fully. If you want a zombie game night without hours of rules overhead, Zombicide earns its spot on the shelf.

King of Tokyo

3.5

2011 · 2-6 Players · ~30 min · Competitive / Dice Rolling

King of Tokyo is a fast, loud, dice-chucking brawl that works best when nobody at the table is looking for depth. Richard Garfield built a game that teaches in minutes, plays in thirty, and generates the kind of table moments that stick with families and casual groups for years. Luck runs the show more than most players would like, and the absence of unique monster abilities leaves the base game thinner than it could be. For groups who want a lightweight opener or a rowdy filler between heavier games, it delivers exactly what the box promises.