The game plays on a modular board made up of hexagonal tiles, each representing various bodies of land and sea. Unlike Monopoly where the board is singular piece of cardboard, you can assemble an entire new game board every time you play the game. The board starts with a single tile, and the very act of exploration is a mechanic in the game that carries it's own form of risk and reward.The Eupho Guy said:OT: I have a question. In the images you posted there seems not much landmass in the pictures and a stack of what appears to be land tiles to the side. Was that for demonstration purposes, or are the map expansion mechanics in the game?
Sounds interesting. So, its something like Settlers of Catan, but instead of the board being randomly generated at the start of the game, its generated as the game progresses... I can kinda see how that works, although I will check out the video you posted to get a better idea of how it all works. Thanks for that!Hannibal942 said:The game plays on a modular board made up of hexagonal tiles, each representing various bodies of land and sea. Unlike Monopoly where the board is singular piece of cardboard, you can assemble an entire new game board every time you play the game. The board starts with a single tile, and the very act of exploration is a mechanic in the game that carries it's own form of risk and reward.The Eupho Guy said:OT: I have a question. In the images you posted there seems not much landmass in the pictures and a stack of what appears to be land tiles to the side. Was that for demonstration purposes, or are the map expansion mechanics in the game?
I really dislike having animate gifs scattered around the place. They don't add any useful information to the article and are nothing other than an irritating distraction. You use your hand to move things? Yeah, couldn't possibly have understood that from a still picture. Or no picture at all. There's a reason people hate having animated adverts all over pages they're trying to read, and these gifs have exactly the same effect.JonB said:We're very interested to hear what people have to say about this, from format to writing to design! Let us know.
It's 2-5. I've found it plays best with 4, but my wife and I had a lot of fun with two player games. I'd totally recommend it if you and your wife both like complex economy and management!Antsh said:What is the recommended number of players in Archipelago?
I've been looking for games that my wife and I can enjoy by ourselves. At least until my 4 month old develops higher cognitive functions and basic motor skills.