Medieval Games
Browse all Medieval board games in the Meeple Pulse database.
Styles
Themes
AbstractAdventureAncientAnimalsArtBusinessCard GameCo-operativeComic BookCooperativeCrimeEconomicEnvironmentalismExplorationFantasyHistoricalHorrorHumorIntrigueLiteraryMagicMarvelMedievalModernMuseumMysteryMythologyNatureNauticalPoliticalPress Your LuckSatireSci-FiSocial CommentarySocial InteractionSpaceSuperheroesThematicTravelWarWesternWord-Guessing
Mechanics
3D PlacementActingAction / DexterityAction DraftingAction Point AllowanceAction Point Allowance SystemAction Point SystemAction PointsAction ProgrammingAction QueueAction RetrievalAction SelectionAction/EventAlliancesAlternate ActivationApp-AssistedApp-DrivenArea ControlArea InfluenceArea MajorityArea Majority / InfluenceArea MovementArgumentationAsymmetricAsymmetric FactionsAsymmetric GameAsymmetric PowersAsymmetrical PowersAuction & BiddingAuction/BiddingAuctioningBag BuildingBettingBetting and BluffingBetting and WageringBetting and WagersBiddingBingoBlind BiddingBluffingCampaign / Battle Card DrivenCampaign / LegacyCampaign / Legacy GameCampaign / Mission-basedCampaign / ScenariosCampaign GameCampaign PlayCard DraftingCard DrawingCard DrivenCard Driven ActionCard Driven CombatCard Driven Dice AllocationCard Driven MovementCard ManagementCard PlayCard Play / Hand ManagementCard Play Conflict ResolutionCard SheddingCard-Driven MovementCharacter CreationCharacter ProgressionChit-Pull SystemCo-op PlayCo-operative GameCo-operative PlayCode-breakingCombat ResolutionCombo ChainCommand CardsCommodity SpeculationCommunication LimitsContract FulfillmentContractsCooperative GameCooperative GameplayCooperative PlayCooperative Trick-takingDebateDeck BuildingDeck ConstructionDeck, Bag, and Pool BuildingDeck-BuildingDeductionDexterityDice DraftingDice PlacementDice RollingDiplomatic InfluenceDraftingDynamic Battle SystemEnclosureEnd Game BonusesEngine BuildingEngine-BuildingEscape RoomEvent DrivenExplorationFarmingFlip and WriteFollowFollow ActionGrid CoverageGrid MovementHand ManagementHex-and-CounterHexagon GridHidden MovementHidden RolesI Cut You ChooseIncomeInfluence / Area MajorityLadder ClimbingLegacyLegacy ElementsLegacy GameLegacy SystemLimited CommunicationLine DrawingLine of SightMancalaMap MovementMarketMarket DraftingMarket ManipulationMarket MechanicMarket SpeculationMatchingMeasurement MovementMemoryMission ObjectivesModular BoardModular Board ConstructionMovement TemplatesMulti-Use CardsMulti-use CardsMultiple ScenariosMust FollowNarrative ChoiceNarrative Choice / ParagraphNegotiationNegotiation MechanicsNetwork & Route BuildingNetwork BuildingNetwork and Route BuildingOne vs ManyOne vs. ManyOpen DraftingPaper-and-PencilPartnershipsPattern BuildingPattern RecognitionPick-up and DeliverPlayer EliminationPlayer InteractionPlayer JudgePoint SaladPoint to Point MovementPolyominoesPush Your LuckPush-Your-LuckPuzzlePuzzle-LikePuzzle-SolvingRaceReal-TimeRecipe FulfillmentResource ManagementRole PlayingRole SelectionRoll / Spin and MoveRondelRoute BuildingRoute-BuildingRoute/Network BuildingSanity SystemScenario / Campaign PlayScenario / Mission / Campaign GameScenario / Mission FunctionSecret Unit DeploymentSemi-Cooperative GameSet CollectionSheddingSimulationSimultaneous ActionSimultaneous Action SelectionSimultaneous Hidden AllocationSocial DeductionSocial InteractionSolo / Solitaire GameSpace ExplorationStat Check / Skill CheckStock HoldingStorytellingStrategic PlanningTableau BuildingTactical Decision-MakingTake ThatTargeted CluesTeam PlayTeam-Based GameTeam-Based GuessingTeamworkTech TreesTech Trees / Tech TracksTechnology & Armament TracksTechnology TreeTension & Aggression TracksTile DraftingTile LayingTile PlacementTime TrackTime TravelTower DefenseTrack MovementTradingTrick-takingTug of WarTurn Order: PassTurn Order: Stat-BasedUnit PlacementVariable Phase OrderVariable Player PowersVariable Set-upVariable SetupVictory Point TracksVotingWord AssociationWord GameWord GuessingWord-GuessingWord-guessingWordplayWorker Placement

RANK #132
Keyflower
2012Keyflower is a celebrated strategic eurogame where players guide their fledgling settlements through four distinct seasons, from the promise of spring to the final scoring in winter. The ultimate goal is to amass the most victory points by building a prosperous and efficient village. This is achieved by strategically bidding on and acquiring new hexagonal village tiles, generating valuable resources like wood, stone, and iron, and expanding your workforce of colorful 'keyples'. Each player begins with a home tile and a small group of workers, but through clever play, they will expand their domain, upgrade buildings, and fulfill the scoring conditions presented by the lucrative winter tiles, which are only revealed at the game's outset, forcing players to plan their long-term strategy from the very first turn.
The game's brilliance lies in its seamless integration of several core mechanics, most notably worker placement and auctioning. The keyples are a dual-use component: they serve as both the currency for bidding on new tiles and the workers needed to activate the special abilities of those tiles. This creates a wonderfully tense decision space each turn. Do you commit your workers to a high-stakes bid for a powerful tile your opponent wants, or do you use them to activate buildings in your village—or even an opponent's village—to gather crucial resources? Actions are color-dependent; placing a worker on a tile requires matching its color if it's the first one there, after which any player can add more workers of that same color to take the same action, creating a dynamic and highly interactive system where timing and worker management are paramount.
Keyflower is beloved by strategy gamers for its depth, high player interaction, and immense replayability. The tension of the auction system, where bids are made publicly behind a player's screen, is a constant source of excitement and bluffing. The ability to use tiles in your opponents' villages (by sending one of your keyples to them, which they then get to keep) ensures that players are always engaged with what others are doing. No two games feel the same, as the selection and order of tiles that appear each season are randomized. This variability demands flexible thinking and rewards players who can build a synergistic engine to capitalize on the opportunities presented, making each journey from spring to winter a unique and deeply satisfying puzzle to solve.
2-6 105m⚖️ 3.4

RANK #230
In "Castles of Mad King Ludwig," players enter the whimsical world of 19th-century Bavaria, tasked with building a magnificent castle for the eccentric King Ludwig II. As master architects, you compete to design the most impressive and valuable structure. This tile-laying game is a clever blend of spatial reasoning and economic management, where the ultimate goal is to earn the most victory points. Points are awarded for constructing specific room types, fulfilling the king's public demands, known as 'King's Favors', and achieving personal, secret objectives. Each player will finish the game with a completely unique, sprawling castle, a physical representation of their strategic decisions and architectural vision, all in the service of pleasing a very particular monarch.
The game's central pillar is its innovative 'Master Builder' mechanic. Each round, one player takes on this role, drawing a selection of room tiles and individually pricing them for the other players. In turn, opponents may purchase one room tile, paying the cost directly to the Master Builder. This creates a tense and engaging pricing dilemma: ask too much, and you'll earn nothing; ask too little, and your rivals will get a steal. The Master Builder takes the last available room but must pay their own listed price to the bank. Once a room is acquired, it's immediately added to the player's personal castle layout, connecting to other rooms via doorways. Judicious placement is key, as rooms can grant or cost points based on what they're adjacent to. Furthermore, completing a room by connecting all its entrances triggers a valuable bonus based on its type, which could be anything from extra cash to an immediate second turn.
The enduring appeal of "Castles of Mad King Ludwig" lies in this constant, engaging player interaction driven by the market and the deeply satisfying spatial puzzle of castle construction. The Master Builder system ensures every player is invested in every turn, evaluating prices and anticipating others' needs. The challenge of optimizing your layout—placing a Dining Room near a Kitchen for bonus points while avoiding placing an Activity Room near a Sleeping Room—is a delightful puzzle. With variable public goals, a huge stack of unique room tiles, and secret bonus cards, no two games are ever the same, offering immense replayability. Watching your nonsensical yet functional castle take shape is a wonderfully thematic and rewarding experience that has cemented the game's status as a modern classic in the genre.
1-4 90m⚖️ 2.7