Front Page

Content

Authors

Game Index

Forums

Site Tools

Submissions

About

KK
Kevin Klemme
March 09, 2020
35142 2
Hot
KK
Kevin Klemme
January 27, 2020
20818 0
Hot
KK
Kevin Klemme
August 12, 2019
7405 0
Hot
O
oliverkinne
December 19, 2023
3967 0
Hot
O
oliverkinne
December 14, 2023
3494 0
Hot

Mycelia Board Game Review

Board Game Reviews
O
oliverkinne
December 12, 2023
2074 0
O
oliverkinne
December 07, 2023
2582 0

River Wild Board Game Review

Board Game Reviews
O
oliverkinne
December 05, 2023
2250 0
O
oliverkinne
November 30, 2023
2494 0
J
Jackwraith
November 29, 2023
3014 0
Hot
O
oliverkinne
November 28, 2023
1971 0
S
Spitfireixa
October 24, 2023
3692 0
Hot
O
oliverkinne
October 17, 2023
2619 0
O
oliverkinne
October 10, 2023
2461 0
O
oliverkinne
October 09, 2023
2289 0
O
oliverkinne
October 06, 2023
2505 0

Outback Crossing Review

Board Game Reviews
×
Bugs: Recent Topics Paging, Uploading Images & Preview (11 Dec 2020)

Recent Topics paging, uploading images and preview bugs require a patch which has not yet been released.

× Use the stickied threads for short updates.

Please consider adding your quick impressions and your rating to the game entry in our Board Game Directory after you post your thoughts so others can find them!

Please start new threads in the appropriate category for mini-session reports, discussions of specific games or other discussion starting posts.

What are INNOVATIONS you would like to see in the board game industry?

More
22 Sep 2018 01:37 #282095 by Colorcrayons

Hex Sinister wrote: Cards, board game or CCG/LCG:

Get rid of black/white borders forever. Make font size bigger. Less words, more succinct. Never include flavor text.


I understand and agree with your statement about improvements, but may I ask why no flavor text?

I'm genuinely curious from the perspective of an end user, and from a person who is struggling to include flavor text on cards.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
22 Sep 2018 13:39 #282110 by Hex Sinister
I think the picture on the card should suffice. It's a personal thing but I just want game information on my cards and not more visual clutter. Can you think of one instance of flavor text that you can actually quote or remember?

To be clear, when I'm speaking of flavor text I'm referring to those little italic fictional quotes and background stuff that's on the bottom that have no effect on gameplay.

"You find a decapitated head with orange worms oozing out - make a sanity check", is NOT flavor text. That is story/adventure text in the game and is necessary and cool. I'm making this distinction because I've heard people refer to that as flavor text and disagree with that.

If you think FT adds to the experience please ignore me =)
The following user(s) said Thank You: Gary Sax, ChristopherMD, Colorcrayons

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
22 Sep 2018 13:46 #282111 by Hex Sinister
I'll revise what I said and change it to "Use flavor text sparingly and with consideration".
The following user(s) said Thank You: Colorcrayons, Erik Twice

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
22 Sep 2018 14:08 #282113 by ChristopherMD
I was on board with no flavor text. It's almost always not worth reading so it's just a distraction from the important information on the cards.

"Yippeee!!!"
-Wise Old Dog

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
22 Sep 2018 15:01 #282114 by Josh Look

Colorcrayons wrote:

Hex Sinister wrote: Cards, board game or CCG/LCG:

Get rid of black/white borders forever. Make font size bigger. Less words, more succinct. Never include flavor text.


I understand and agree with your statement about improvements, but may I ask why no flavor text?

I'm genuinely curious from the perspective of an end user, and from a person who is struggling to include flavor text on cards.


I’m also anti-flavor text, and why that is is simple: Show, don’t tell. If you don’t have a quirk in the gameplay to distinguish what makes one monster unique from every other monster in your game, you need to stop worrying about writing that description that I’m going to ignore anyway (ok, maybe I’ll read it once) and go back to designing. Especially with stuff where there’s a familiarity in the subject matter. I know what a giant spider is, shut up and show me how you managed to abstract it ensnaring me in its web before it eats my guts. Even without any familiarity, it’s doable. More challenging, but doable. Starship Samurai, a game I’ve really taken a liking to, manages to express what makes each of its 8 different mechs unique with no flavor text, just a power and how it looks.

Game worlds are rarely interesting. Don’t waste my time and don’t waste yours, just design.
The following user(s) said Thank You: Colorcrayons, SaMoKo

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
22 Sep 2018 16:36 - 22 Sep 2018 16:49 #282121 by Colorcrayons
Thanks guys. I agree on the show don't tell aspect.

The specific reason I was asking is my purpose in utlizing flavor text is because Wiz-War cards can be a bit wordy, and noobs quickly grasping what a card does can be a bit taxing.

I recall my first games of it, and while I could internalize each card quickly from game to game, staring at a hand of 5-7 card effects that take more than half the card real estate doesn't make for quick games. The quicker that the turns flow, the better.

I think relying on the image as not only a mnemonic, but as the flavor itself should suffice.

Perhaps I am overthinking it, and wasting my time. There are very few flavor text entries that I am genuinely proud of. The rest are just mediocre at best. They serve the purpose of briefly describing what the card does, but I am not Shakespeare.

To answer the question about memorable flavor text, I do know a few by heart because I think they were so metal.

Here is the flavor for the MTG card 'Seal of fire' (original print):

"I am the romancer, the passion that consumes the flesh.
~Seal inscription"

[Edit] I found an image of the card[/edit]


Appreciation is subjective, but to me, that has to be one of the best ever written.

The point made that they are largely unremarkable and unmemorable still stands, and I can't dispute it.

It confirms what I already suspected.

Thanks.
Last edit: 22 Sep 2018 16:49 by Colorcrayons. Reason: Added card image
The following user(s) said Thank You: Hex Sinister, Whoshim

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
24 Sep 2018 09:53 - 24 Sep 2018 11:47 #282156 by Cranberries


The flavor text on Pax Pamir cards is historically interesting, and much like this image, too small to read.

I would also like to see publishers take their game art seriously. Look at this comment by Cole Wehrle:

A quick note on the cover:

The image used on the cover was first drawn by the surgeon James Atkinson during his stay with the British troops during the brief restoration of the Durrani dynasty. The original illustration, along with many others, were compiled and redrawn as lithographs in London and were ultimately published in 1842 as a volume entitled Sketches in Afghanistan. A second volume was planned but the illustrations were regrettably lost at sea or in the confusion of the end of the first Anglo-Afghan war (there is some debate on this subject among historians).

In doing research for the second edition of Pax Pamir, I discovered that a small print run of Atkinson's book was produced in full color, with many details hand-painted. With a little sleuthing I discovered one such copy held by the at the Toppan Rare Books Library at the University of Wyoming. Thanks to the excellent staff there, I obtained beautiful high resolution scans of the entire volume. The scans from this copy are used in many of the cards in the game.

This image, however, is not featured on any tableau card or event card in the game. It didn't quite make sense on any particular card. But, it is an excellent image for the cover. What you are looking at is a view of Kabul in the period of the game as viewed from the ancient palace and fortress of the Bala Hissar. This vantage would have been all to familiar to the many people who attempted to govern the wider region over the tumultuous period covered by the game.

I should say too that one of the things I really admire about Atkinson's work is the respect with which he treats his subjects. This is true of his contemporary James Rattray, whose work is also featured prominently in the game. The work is specific and powerful in its specificity.

Of course his illustrations have political overtones--he is a solider [sic] of the East India Company after all! With this in mind the illustration might take on a more sinister tone, telling the story of a Brit painting a landscape of domination. This might be a perfectly reasonable argument to make in our own time, but when one pushes against it, I'm not sure it holds water. In his caption, Atkinson notes the location of both he former home of Dost Mohammad and the current home of Shah Shujah. The picture might then be said to be about the transition of power and the stakes of the region's turmoil. Of course, that isn't meant to erase the politics of Atkinson's drawing, only to complicate them. And, within that frame I think he remains an excellent observer of the events unfolding around him, and well suited to a game that attempts, in its own small way, to grapple with some of those same subjects.
Attachments:
Last edit: 24 Sep 2018 11:47 by Cranberries.
The following user(s) said Thank You: Whoshim

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
24 Sep 2018 10:28 #282159 by hotseatgames

ChristopherMD wrote: "Yippeee!!!"
-Wise Old Dog


Ha! That is SOOO Wise Old Dog.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
24 Sep 2018 12:28 #282170 by Space Ghost
The only flavor text I like is usually on MtG cards. Generally, I only play against one other guy (my best friend) and we always play Vintage decks.

Whenever one of us has a particularly good play, we often read the flavor text prior to revealing the card were going to play...for some reason, I find this funny. But, we have been playing against each other for 20+ years. If someone did that at a public tournament, I would want to punch them.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
24 Sep 2018 12:53 #282172 by SebastianBludd
MTG gets a flavor text exemption because reading it gives you something to do while you're mana screwed.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
24 Sep 2018 13:43 #282178 by SuperflyPete
1. Better use of components; I’d like to see more dual use cards to lower the card counts. Small Box Games is the master of this.

2. No plastic for plastic’s sake. I don’t need plastic models for every fucking thing in a game.

3. More pencil and paper, or “Clash of Cultures”’ type moving cube resource trackers. I don’t want 10,000 bits to track shit. Just give me a damned slider or something.

4. Lower parts count. Like #3, I don’t want a bunch of chits for the sake of chits.

5. Stacking cards. I want Mystic Vale type sleeves where you put your character in and then slide items or buffs and whatnot into the sleeve on top of the card so that I can look at one card to get all my info, not a huge tableau.

6. Smaller boards. Make 15mm miniatures and make the spaces smaller. There’s no reason for Elsritch Horror to have a massive board. Shrink that shit and make the pawns smaller!

7. Color blind friendliness. WTF, people have disabilities and color choices are largely irrelevant. Make color blind friendly shit!

8. THE BIG ONE: Fuck participation awards. Only publish great games. Not good ones, GREAT ones only.
The following user(s) said Thank You: Shellhead

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
24 Sep 2018 13:56 #282180 by Shellhead
Every game should have a decent box insert, so it's easier to set the game up and put it away afterwards.
The following user(s) said Thank You: Colorcrayons

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Moderators: Gary Sax
Time to create page: 0.226 seconds