Tags / territory

"territory"

4 BuzzVerdicts across Board Games (3), Mobile Games (1)

Terra Mystica

4.2

2012 · 2-5 Players · ~60-150 min · Competitive

Terra Mystica is a heavyweight euro where 14 asymmetric factions compete to terraform and build across a shared landscape, and the puzzle of managing four different resources while expanding your network is as compelling today as it was in 2012. Faction balance isn't perfect, the production looks dated, and the learning curve will eat your first game alive. But the depth of its interlocking systems and the tension of competing for territory on a tight map have earned it a permanent spot among the best strategy games ever made.

Bunny Kingdom

3.8

2017 · 2-4 Players · ~45-60 min · Competitive

Bunny Kingdom is a smart, satisfying drafting game wrapped in an unexpectedly charming bunny theme. The card drafting and area control combination creates deeply strategic decisions without drowning anyone in complexity, and the game shines brightest at three and four players where the board tension hits its peak. Scoring can be a chore, and the two-player game falls flat, but for groups looking for a mid-weight game that offers more than it initially appears, this one delivers.

Blokus

3.7

2000 · 2-4 Players · ~20-30 min · Competitive

Blokus is a clever spatial strategy game that creates surprising depth from a single placement rule. The corner-connection constraint forces players to think several moves ahead while navigating a shared board that grows more contested with every turn. It's at its best with exactly four players, where the board becomes a tight, competitive battlefield, but it loses much of that tension at lower player counts. As a family game that rewards spatial thinking without requiring a rulebook, Blokus has earned its place as a modern classic.

Paper.io 2

3.3

2018 · Arcade

Paper.io 2 takes a simple concept, claim territory by drawing shapes on a map, and turns it into something that's instantly compelling and deeply frustrating in equal measure. The joystick controls are a clear upgrade over the original, the 3D visual overhaul looks sharp, and the risk-reward loop of expanding your territory while exposing your trail keeps every round tense. Ads are relentless, the AI opponents feel inconsistent, and the game offers almost nothing beyond its core loop. For a quick burst of competitive territorial claiming, it's hard to beat. For anything more than that, you'll need to look elsewhere.