Neil Gaimon’s short story, ‘A Study in Emerald’ is a
paradigm of literary precision whereas Martin Wallace took the 3,000 or so words and poured
in the anarchist history of the 19th century, the complete Cthulhu
Mythos , Vampires and Zombies. My first three plays had left me agreeing with
the question is the game a ‘Mess’ or ‘a glorious mess’? My fourth added the
option ‘Glorious’. A mix of deck
building, majorities, hidden objectives, take that and a bit of cosmic chaos
means that its not going to be a game for the control lover. You need to enter
the game and play the players not just the game. It was only in my 4th
outing that this clicked and just in time as one agent was converted to a
Vampire, a plague of Zombies was spreading across the board towards me and an
obvious 'Restorationist' was making his
bid for victory…and even though I was sure he was on my team I had to cap his
main agent. A little like last years 'Archipelago' you have to manage the board
and deduce the other players
intentions and lay false trails your self. Delicious and my choice as best game from 2013. 4 Plays. Rated 9/10
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