Tags / point-salad

"point-salad"

3 BuzzVerdicts

Trajan

4.1

2011 · 2-4 Players · ~90-120 min · Competitive

Trajan uses a mancala-based action selection mechanism that is unlike anything else in board gaming, creating a planning puzzle where the sequence of your moves matters as much as the moves themselves. Six distinct scoring paths compete for your attention every round, and the interplay between short-term optimization and long-term positioning gives the game a depth that rewards dozens of plays. It's one of Stefan Feld's most demanding designs, with a learning curve that takes multiple sessions to climb and a theme that barely registers. But for players who want a pure strategic puzzle that makes their brain work in unfamiliar ways, Trajan remains one of the best in the genre.

Marrakesh

4.0

2022 · 2-4 Players · ~120 min · Competitive / Euro Strategy

Marrakesh represents Stefan Feld at his most cohesive, weaving multiple scoring paths into a game where every action connects logically to the next. The cube tower adds just enough randomness to keep the planning dynamic without undermining strategic depth. Table space and playtime are significant commitments, but players who want a meaty euro with genuine replayability will find one of Feld's strongest designs waiting in the souks.

Bora Bora

3.5

2013 · 2-4 Players · 60-120 min · Competitive / Euro / Dice Placement

Bora Bora is Stefan Feld at peak density, cramming dice placement, area expansion, set collection, and task completion into a game that never runs out of things to do. The central dice mechanism creates clever tactical puzzles at every turn, and experienced euro gamers will find a lot to chew on across its multiple scoring paths. But the complexity hits hard, the theme barely registers, and the fiddliness can make setup and early sessions feel like a chore. For Feld fans and heavy euro enthusiasts who want a game where every die roll opens a new set of difficult decisions, Bora Bora delivers. Everyone else will probably wish it tried a little harder to meet them halfway.