Tabletop_Gaming__April_2019

(singke) #1
tabletopgaming.co.uk 7

Happy Salmon... especially the
one time we played it in a limo...
switcheroo?!?
Lucy Mitchell

Coconuts is hands down my
favourite late-night party game.
Silly bounces, stealing cups, calling
your shots. It’s amazing.
@zach

Cockroach Poker! Never had a game
where we haven’t laughed out loud!!
Tom Gorner

Cards Against Humanity. It’s
sometimes much more entertaining
to play answers you KNOW they
hate saying aloud. The initial look on
their face – tightened lips, squinted
or bulging eyes, blushing. It’s like you
are watching their very soul grapple
with the effort to even speak.
@rbraxxo

Sheriff of Nottingham because of
our use of innuendo! We don’t call
them chickens...
Rob Jones

The Resistance... only because if
you don’t laugh, you cry.
Katie Ng

Mountains of Madness, when
everybody has three madness cards.
Steven de Graaf

For us, its Telestrations It’s that
moment when the penny drops, when
what their word prompt was versus
the monstrosity you just drew...!
@competitiveduo

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April Fools’ Day is upon
us! What are the games
that make you LOL and
ROFL around the table?
(Turn to p10 for our picks!)

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THE TABLETOP GAMING PODCAST
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Number-counting social card game The Mind and
app-enhanced mystery Detective have been named the
big winners at this year’s As d’Or awards – France’s
answer to the Spiel des Jahres.
The ‘all public’ As d’Or is the awards’ headline
trophy for a widely-accessible release. 2019’s award

was claimed by The Mind, which was also nominated
for the Spiel des Jahres. It beat Codenames-y, Dixit-y
deduction game Shadows: Amsterdam, Sébastien
Dujardin’s gorgeous Solenia and pirate scavenger hunt
Treasure Island (find our review on page 66).
The expert As d’Or was picked up by Detective: A
Modern Crime Board Game, which uses a companion
app to power along its interlinked tales of murder,
mystery and conspiracy.
The win meant Detective triumphed over
KeyForge: Call of the Archons, the ‘unique deck’
card game created by Magic: The Gathering
designer Richard Garfield. Also in the running in the
particularly heated category was subversive co-op
board gameSpirit Island.
Over in the children’s category, memory-based animal
challenge Where’s Mr. Wolf? came out on top, beating
self-proclaimed ‘first legacy game for children’ Zombie
Kidz Evolution, emotional dice game The Color Monster
and Who Did It? – a card game about working out which
animal crapped on the living room floor.

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A BEAUTIFUL MIND
The Mind and Detective triumph at
France’s game of the year awards

G e t a n e a r f u l o f t o p t a b l e t o p t a l k!
T T G A M I. N G / T T G P O D C A S T

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T A B L E T O P G A M I N G. C O. U K / P E R K S


The first tabletop Magic: The Gathering Mythic
Championship – the evolution of the card game’s long-
running high-level Pro Tour format – was one for the
history books.

The three-day tournament saw almost 500 players
compete for a prize pool of $500,000 in Cleveland,
Ohio, reportedly making it the second-biggest single
Pro Tour equivalent ever held behind last November’s
Guilds of Ravinca Pro Tour – the final event to use
that name.
It was a showcase of some of the best pro-level
play Magic had to offer, too. The last eight players
in the tournament shared more than 20 Pro Tour/
Mythic Championship Top Eight appearances
between them, with the final match seeing a
showdown between consecutive two-time English
national titleholder Autumn Burchett – playing
for the first time in a day three at a premiere
tournament – and Japan’s Yoshihiko Ikawa, who
claimed his second Top Eight placing.
As well as making Burchett the first winner of the
rebranded Mythic Championship format, the win
made them the first British winner of a Pro Tour-level
event. As a transfemme non-binary person, Burchett
is also the first non-male winner of a top-level Magic:
The Gathering competition.

MYTHICAL LEGEND
British winner makes history at
Magic: e Gathering tournament

tabletopgaming.co.uk/news


A BEAUTIFUL MIND

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