Tabletop Games:
There seemed to be fewer tabletop games, but that didn’t seem to translate to less excitement about them, as often the tabletop games were the hardest to get a chance to play with the crowds. Scoundrels @ The Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw. Scoundrels is a pirate-themed card game where you seek your fortune and fame on the high seas. Sail around to various islands to find treasure—or bury our own--or seek out other pirates to blunder their often ill-gotten gains. It’s an interestingly dynamic game where you’re encouraged to maximize risk for the greatest rewards. You can see more Scoundrels here. Bar Fight! @The Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw We ran into Foxbo Games at last year’s Playtest Party, where they were showing off Cursed, which took its inspiration from Bloodborne. This year, they were showing off Barfight!, a memorization-based card game that is exactly what it sounds like: a down-and-out bar brawl without the actual brawling. Instead you get a fast-paced, fun and unique game about drunken melee. You can see more about Barfight! and Foxbo’s other games at their website. Too Many Poops @ Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo courtesy Logan Theatre FB. This year's winner in the Tabletop division, who will have their own booth at C2E2, and who showed off their game prior to this at PAX 2018, was Too Many Poops, a sort of "cat management" game by Neat Games. The concept is simple--you have lots of cats, and they've got lots of poops. Your task is to make sure everyone's happy and healthy. The cats are color-coded, and even have rivals who will make them unhappy, if placed in the same home, and will reduce the amount of points you can score. Action cards allow you to play with cats, move them from house to house, add poops to your litter box, modify rules or negate other cards, "noping" them away. Gameplay looks well explained and thought out, and the version we saw at the Playtest Party looked ready for production. Too Many Poops is a game that's not only headed to C2E2, but also bound for Kickstarter. For now, find out more about the game on Neat Games' website. Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw.Video Games
This year’s video game entrants ran the gamut from mobile titles and sims to multiplayer battles. Onsen Master @ Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw Onsen Master is a customer management game set in Feudal Japan. Created by contemporary artist and game developer Derrick Fields of Waking Oni, it’s been a work in progress in the artist’s mind since 2014, and only this year saw some alpha builds being brought into the light, first at Chicago’s annual Japanese Matsuri in September and also making an appearance at the Harold Washington Library’s annual International Games Day event for 2018. Onsen has a bright, crisp feel to it visually and from what we saw of gameplay, an entertaining and culturally accurate world full of carefully created customers you’ll get to know as you continue playing. The Grate Cheesemancer @ Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw. One real standout for us was The Grate Cheesemancer. If the title hadn’t drawn us in with its humor the artwork certainly would have anyway. Though the lead artist on the game warned us that the game was still unfinished (as were most at the party) it had a polish and style to it that called back to Spyro and Crash, and gameplay was remarkably smooth. Gameplay is a mix of collecting and puzzle platforming and has the main character, Alexander the Grated, equipped with a magical fondue pot and some rudimentary knowledge of cheesemancing, takes a journey to find Landalf and become an even more powerful cheesemancer. Kakatte Koi Yo @ Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw Kakatte Koi Yo is an action filled multiplayer game by purpleninjalink where you play as a little cat and battle it out against up to three other feline friends to get collect fish. You can take quite a few approaches--sneaky, combative, or even explosive, dropping bombs to hurt your enemies’ progress, but in the end whoever collects seven fish first will be victorious. We saw a lot of groups of friends crowding the couch to get a chance to play this game, and all seemed to really enjoy the fracas. Project Lantern @ The Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Salsa Game Studios Project Lantern is a 2D puzzle platformer by Salsa Studios. It’s in an Alpha stage right now, so it’s a little rough around the edges, but we can tell it’s shaping up to be something interesting. As of right now, most mechanics revolve around pushing and pulling boxes, but Salsa Studios has put together some impressive visuals and an atmosphere that reminds us of (a very early build of) Limbo or similar side scrolling puzzlers. Check out more on their website, and see the game in action here. Dice Trek @ Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle ShawDice Trek is a mobile game that its creator billed as a sort of "action Yahtzee." In Dice Trek, you throw dice at other dice to advance play while attempting to keep your dice from getting pushed into the red zone. Collect cards along the way to help change the outcome of the game. It's an interesting combo, as the Action Yahtzee concept seems to work, and it's perfect for some quick action on the go.
Cold Calling @ Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw.
The winner of the C2E2 booth in the video game category was a title by CGE games called Cold Calling, which puts you in the operator's chair at the White House's switchboard during the Cold War. Stylistically, it reminded us of Papers, Please with an extra dose of added humor. You'll need to route calls from person to person using a color-coded system to ensure, for example, that the baddies don't get to listen in on the President's plans. There's a time limit, of course, before the call gets dropped and you get in trouble, and the difficulty ramps up pretty quickly, making it a fun and challenging game worth checking out.
The Logan Playtest Party 2018. Photo: Marielle Shaw.
Overall, as usual, though the space was tight and full of people, the mood was one of enthusiasm, and the games that developers brought to showcase were fun and well received by playtest attendees. We hope to see quite a few of these games make it to market, and maybe even review them here down the road.