Tags / trading

"trading"

6 BuzzVerdicts

Jaipur

4.2

2009 · 2 Players · ~30 min · Competitive Trading

Jaipur is one of the best dedicated two-player games in the hobby, packing a surprising amount of tension and decision-making into a 30-minute card game about trading goods in a bustling market. The push and pull between selling early for top value and holding out for set bonuses creates a compelling rhythm that stays fresh across dozens of sessions. Its strict two-player limit narrows the audience, and experienced players will consistently dominate newcomers. For couples and duos looking for something fast, portable, and endlessly replayable, though, this one earns its reputation.

Chinatown

4.0

1999 · 3-5 Players · ~60 min · Competitive

Chinatown is pure negotiation distilled into a board game. Every round opens with a frenzy of deal-making where anything can be traded, and the game gives players just enough structure to make those deals meaningful without constraining them. The math behind property values is transparent enough that skilled negotiators can calculate fair trades, but the social dynamics of convincing someone to accept your terms keep every session unpredictable. Component quality is basic, the first couple of rounds can feel slow, and the game needs players who are willing to haggle enthusiastically. When you have the right group, Chinatown creates game night stories that last far longer than its sixty-minute playtime.

Amsterdam

3.8

2022 · 1-4 Players · ~75-120 min · Competitive

Amsterdam takes the celebrated resource-timing mechanism from Macao and refines it with improved card balance, expanded gameplay options, and quality-of-life fixes that smooth out the original's rougher edges. The windrose remains one of the most compelling planning puzzles in euro gaming, forcing players to balance immediate needs against future turns in ways that create constant tension. Production delays and occasional graphic design missteps have dampened enthusiasm, but the mechanical core delivers a satisfying experience for players who enjoy games that reward long-term planning and punish overcommitment.

Bohnanza

3.8

1997 · 2-7 Players · ~45 min · Competitive / Negotiation

Bohnanza takes a deck of bean cards and a single clever constraint and builds one of the best trading games ever designed. The negotiation is lively, the rules are minimal, and the right group will generate stories you'll reference for years. It falls apart with quiet or indecisive players, and the two-player variant barely resembles the real game. Bring it to a group that likes to talk, haggle, and occasionally betray each other over coffee beans, and you'll understand why it's lasted nearly three decades.

Catan

3.5

1995 · 3-4 Players · 60-90 min · Competitive / Trading / Resource Management

Catan remains one of the most important board games ever published, a gateway that brought millions of players into the hobby and still works well at a casual table with the right group. Dice luck and a shallow strategic ceiling keep it from competing with the best modern designs, and experienced gamers have largely moved on. But for families, newcomers, and anyone looking for an accessible game built around negotiation and trading, few titles have proven themselves over thirty years the way this one has. It earned its place in gaming history, even if it no longer sits at the top of the shelf.