82 February 2019
PLAYED
truly bewildering iconography, and
before you graduate to its full setup
you’ll have to play a simplied training
game to get your head around its basic
structure. It’s a serious investment of
time and brainpower – if you’re looking
for a chewy, head-scratching, strategic
experience, there are plenty of other
options that will get you into the
action with far less preliminary hassle.
Finally, there’s the fact that for a
game with such lavish artwork and a
theme that purports to revolve around
emotion, Cerebria’s gameplay feels
decidedly dry and technical. You might
be playing cards representing joy, rage,
fear and fullment, but the only real
feelings you’re likely to have are head-
scratching confusion and a desire to go
and play something like Brass instead.
OWEN DUFFY
C
erebria is a beautiful game.
From its wonderfully
characterful artwork to its
dreamlike colour palette, its jewel-like
plastic tokens and its gigantic board
covered in psychedelic illustrations, it’s
one of the most visually striking tabletop
releases you’re likely to ever encounter.
It also comes with a novel theme;
a strategic, team-based game, it sees
you and your fellow players inhabit the
inner world of the human mind, using
dierent types of feelings to inuence a
person’s psyche. As you play you’ll push
them towards happiness and optimism,
or gloom and despair, aiming to claim
victory by having the greatest eect on
their psychological make-up.
It’s a bold and original proposition,
the over-the-top presentation of
which extends to a rotating turntable
contraption that slots into the centre of
the play area and a modular three-
dimensional monolith that you’ll
assemble over the course of the game
to mark your team’s score.
Yet, as physically gorgeous as it is,
it gets bogged down in a morass of
complexity, with rules and mechanical
subsystems piled one on top of one
another in a way that feels confusing,
disjointed and counterintuitive.
As you play, you’ll attempt to gain
control of dierent regions of the game’s
environment, playing emotion cards
to establish your inuence on dierent
regions of the brain. If you’re on the side
of happiness, you’ll employ feelings like
courage and excitement to stake your
claim on areas of the board. If you’re
controlling the forces of misery, you’ll
play cards like anger and jealousy. Over
time you’ll aim to intensify the eect
of your own cards while reducing the
power of your opponents’.
At the same time, you’ll aim to unlock
new actions and upgrade your abilities.
While this lets you make more powerful
plays, it forces you to discard some
of your emotion cards, and there’s a
tricky balance to nd between gaining
new powers and maintaining your
ability to inuence the conict playing
out across the board. On top of these
already complicated decisions, you’ll
attempt to full sets of objectives – some
public, some secret – to add pieces to
the central scoring tower and establish
a lead against your opponents.
It’s a lot to keep track of, but this
kind of complexity can often be very
rewarding in games. Where Cerebria
starts to fall apart is in the way it presents
its intricacies. It comes with some
Playing mind games with psychedelic psychology
CEREBRIA: THE INSIDE WORLD
1-2h 1-4 14+ £63
WHAT’S IN
THE BOX?
◗ Double-sided
game board
◗ 95 trade tokens
◗ 49 building tiles
◗ Five start
building tiles
◗ 42 asset cards
◗ Six governor cards
◗ Five player mats
◗ 175 population discs
◗ 20 status track cubes
◗ Start player crown
◗ Card glossary
◗ Score pad
◗ Four track extenders
◗ Exploit components
TRY THIS IF
YOU LIKED:
TWILIGHT
STRUGGLE
It may have a
completely different
theme, but the
process of battling
for influence across
different regions has
some similarities
to the revered Cold
War game. It’s just
nowhere near as
clean and refined.
PLAY IT? MAYBE
If you don’t mind sinking time and mental
bandwidth into reading the rulebook,
watching an explainer video on YouTube,
re-reading the rulebook and playing a
simplified learning game to ensure you’ve
got the hang of the basics, Cerebria has
some tough branching decisions and top-
notch presentation. If you don’t have the
luxury of unlimited time, though, there
are plenty of more appealing options.