Tags / knizia

"knizia"

7 BuzzVerdicts

Modern Art

4.5

1992 · 3-5 Players · ~45 min · Competitive

Modern Art is the auction game stripped down to its purest, most engaging form. Reiner Knizia designed a system where the only thing determining value is what players collectively decide something is worth, and that single insight drives forty-five minutes of bluffing, calculation, and occasionally devastating miscalculation. The CMON edition gives the game the visual treatment it always deserved, with oversized cards featuring real contemporary artists. New players may stumble through a first game before the pricing logic clicks, but by the second play, the depth reveals itself. Three decades after its original release, Modern Art remains the benchmark for auction games because nothing else captures the thrill and peril of spending money you can't afford on things that might be worthless.

Battle Line

4.3

2000 · 2 Players · ~30 min · Competitive

Battle Line distills two-player card game competition down to its purest form, asking you to win five of nine flags by playing the strongest three-card formations. Knizia's genius is in how the simple poker-like combinations create agonizing decisions about commitment and timing. The optional tactics cards add variety but the base game alone provides enough tension and replayability to keep it on the table for years.

Tigris & Euphrates

4.3

1997 · 2-4 Players · ~60-90 min · Competitive

Tigris & Euphrates is Reiner Knizia's crowning design achievement, a game where civilizations rise and collapse through tile placement and two distinct conflict types that create some of the most dramatic swings in all of board gaming. The scoring system, which counts only your weakest color, forces balanced play in a way that's simple to explain and endlessly difficult to master. The teach takes patience and the board state can shift violently, but for players who want a strategy game where every tile placement carries genuine weight, this remains one of the greatest designs in the hobby's history.

Blue Lagoon

3.8

2018 · 2-4 Players · ~30-45 min · Competitive

Blue Lagoon is a lean, focused area control game that packs a surprising amount of tension into its compact runtime. The two-phase structure gives it a satisfying arc, and the multiple scoring paths keep every placement meaningful. Experienced Knizia fans will recognize the designer's fingerprints immediately, while newcomers will find a clean entry point into competitive abstract gaming. It doesn't overstay its welcome, and it rewards sharp positional play without drowning anyone in complexity.

Through the Desert

3.8

1998 · 2-5 Players · ~30-45 min · Competitive

Through the Desert is a clean, elegant spatial strategy game that packs meaningful decisions into every placement. The multiple scoring paths create constant trade-offs between claiming territory, reaching oases, and blocking opponents. It plays quickly, teaches easily, and rewards careful planning without punishing casual play. A Knizia classic that deserves its place in any collection that values strategic depth in a small package.

Ingenious

3.7

2004 · 1-4 Players · ~30-45 min · Competitive

Ingenious is an abstract classic that earns its longevity through one of the cleverest scoring rules in board gaming. The lowest-score-wins mechanism transforms what could be a simple tile-laying exercise into a constant balancing act that rewards adaptability over single-minded optimization. It plays fast, teaches in minutes, and scales well from solo to four players. The depth ceiling is real, and players hungry for complex strategy will eventually outgrow it, but as a game you can play with almost anyone and still find interesting decisions, Ingenious lives up to its name.

High Society

3.5

1995 · 3-5 Players · ~15-20 min · Competitive

High Society is a twenty-minute auction game that packs a surprising amount of tension into a tiny box. The Osprey Games edition is gorgeous, with Art Nouveau illustrations by Medusa Dollmaker that make the cards feel like collector's items. Knizia's signature twist, eliminating the biggest spender regardless of score, forces every bid into a double calculation that elevates the game above simple outbidding. The randomness of the card draw can override careful play, and the all-auction-all-the-time format will bore anyone who needs variety in their game mechanics. For a quick, elegant filler that punches above its weight, High Society delivers exactly what it promises.