MeeplePulse

Co-operative Games

Browse all Co-operative board games in the Meeple Pulse database.

BoxNo Cover Art
RANK #71
Embark on an epic voyage into the unknown in Sleeping Gods, a monumental cooperative campaign game. Players assume the roles of Captain Sofi Odessa and her nine-person crew aboard the steamship 'Manticore' in an alternate 1929. After being mysteriously transported to the Wandering Sea, you and your fellow players are tasked with a seemingly impossible goal: find at least fourteen mystical totems to awaken the slumbering gods of this realm, who are your only hope of returning home. This is not a game of linear paths, but a true open-world experience where your choices carve a unique and persistent story across a sprawling, dangerous world. The gameplay unfolds across two primary components: a spiral-bound Atlas that serves as your map and a massive Storybook that functions as a choose-your-own-adventure guide. Instead of a traditional board, players navigate the pages of the Atlas, and upon reaching a numbered location, they are directed to a specific paragraph in the Storybook, presenting them with rich narrative choices, skill challenges, and unexpected consequences. A typical turn involves performing a ship action, which uses a light worker placement mechanic to gain resources or prepare the crew, followed by drawing an event card that pushes the narrative and acts as the game's timer. Finally, players take actions like exploring, traveling, or engaging in the game's unique combat system, all while managing the crew's health, fatigue, and resources. Sleeping Gods is celebrated for its masterful integration of narrative and mechanics. The world feels alive and persistent, as choices you make grant 'keywords' that unlock or alter future story branches, ensuring high replayability. Its combat system is a standout feature, presenting a strategic puzzle where players don't just reduce hit points but place damage tokens on an enemy's grid to strategically cover and disable its most dangerous attacks. The game also features a brilliant drop-in/drop-out campaign system, allowing players to easily save their progress and resume their grand adventure later. This flexibility makes it a phenomenal solo experience, where one player manages all nine crew members, as well as an engaging cooperative puzzle for up to four.
1-4 120m⚖️ 3.2
Arkham Horror: The Card Game (Revised Core Set)
RANK #109
Arkham Horror: The Card Game is a cooperative Living Card Game that plunges one to four players into the eerie, Lovecraftian world of the 1920s. Assuming the roles of unique investigators in Arkham, Massachusetts, players work together to unravel sinister conspiracies, confront otherworldly beings, and prevent ancient evils from devouring the world. Each investigator comes with their own strengths, weaknesses, and customizable deck of cards representing their assets, skills, and resources. The goal is to successfully navigate a series of interconnected narrative scenarios, forming a larger campaign where choices and outcomes in one chapter have lasting consequences on the next. This Revised Core Set provides the definitive entry point, containing everything needed for a full group of four to begin their harrowing adventures right out of the box. The gameplay unfolds over a series of rounds, each composed of four distinct phases that create a tense and challenging rhythm. In the Mythos Phase, the forces of darkness advance as doom accumulates and each player draws a random card from the encounter deck, introducing new enemies, treacherous obstacles, or reality-bending effects. During the Investigation Phase, players take turns performing up to three actions, which can include playing cards, moving between locations, battling monsters, or most importantly, investigating to find clues. These clues are essential for advancing the 'act' deck, which propels the story forward. The Enemy Phase sees any engaged monsters attack the investigators, while others hunt across the board. Finally, the Upkeep Phase allows players to refresh their assets, draw a new card, and gain a resource, preparing them for the horrors of the next round. What makes Arkham Horror: The Card Game so compelling is its profound fusion of rich narrative storytelling with strategic card play and deck customization. The game is celebrated for its deep thematic immersion, where the unfolding story feels personal and impactful. Failure doesn't necessarily end the game, but it can scar an investigator or alter the campaign's trajectory, creating a truly dynamic and replayable experience. The challenge is significant, demanding careful cooperation and clever resource management to overcome the relentless odds. For players who crave a deep, story-driven hobby game they can expand over time, its campaign structure and character progression provide an unparalleled cooperative adventure into the heart of cosmic dread.
1-4 120m⚖️ 3.5
The Lord of the Rings: Fate of the Fellowship
RANK #121
The Lord of the Rings: Fate of the Fellowship immerses one to five players in a desperate, cooperative journey across Middle-earth. In this new narrative-driven adventure from acclaimed designer Matt Leacock, players embody the heroes of Tolkien's epic saga, working together to ensure the One Ring reaches the fires of Mount Doom. The ultimate objective is the Ring's destruction, but this final confrontation can only be attempted after the fellowship successfully navigates three randomly assigned objectives. Players take on the roles of the Fellowship's members and their trusted allies, with each player uniquely controlling a pair of characters from a roster of thirteen, each boasting distinct abilities. The path to victory is fraught with peril, as failure looms if the collective 'Hope' of the fellowship is extinguished. This crucial resource dwindles when safe havens are overrun by darkness, if the Ringbearer is discovered by Sauron's minions, or if the heroes exhaust their resources. It is a race against the encroaching shadow to fulfill their destiny before all hope is lost. The game's engine is a sophisticated adaptation of the celebrated "Pandemic" system, promising a familiar yet richer mechanical experience. The core gameplay loop involves players strategically spending action points to maneuver friendly forces and their heroes across a detailed map of Middle-earth. These actions are vital for completing the prerequisite missions and pushing back the ever-advancing armies of the Dark Lord. A central element of tension is the constant need to protect Frodo, keeping him concealed from the relentless pursuit of the Nazgûl and the piercing gaze of the Eye of Sauron. This threat is manifested through the 'Shadow Card' deck, a mechanism that functions much like its counterpart in "Pandemic," dictating where Sauron's influence will spread and escalating the danger with each draw. Players must carefully manage their character abilities and card resources to overcome these challenges and clear a path for the Ringbearer. "Fate of the Fellowship" offers a compelling synthesis of a proven cooperative game system with one of fantasy's most beloved narratives. Its appeal lies in this seamless integration, creating an experience that feels both innovative and deeply thematic. The design has been hailed as Matt Leacock's most mechanically intricate take on the Pandemic framework to date, offering a significant and rewarding challenge for veteran strategy gamers. The unique system of each player managing two distinct heroes introduces a fascinating layer of tactical decision-making and enhances replayability. This constant balancing act—completing grand objectives while simultaneously managing the stealthy, perilous journey of the Ringbearer—generates a persistent sense of urgency and suspense, making it an essential title for fans of cooperative board games and Tolkien's timeless world.
1-5 m⚖️ 3.1
Eldritch Horror
RANK #138
Eldritch Horror is a cooperative board game that immerses players in a world of cosmic dread inspired by the writings of H.P. Lovecraft. Taking on the roles of intrepid investigators, participants band together to confront a malevolent entity poised to awaken and consume the world. This is a desperate race against a doomsday clock, not a battle of simple force. The team's primary objective is to traverse the globe, from bustling cities to remote wilderness, in order to solve three distinct mysteries unique to the chosen Ancient One. These mysteries represent the only known way to prevent the creature's arrival. Should the investigators succeed before the ever-advancing doom track reaches zero, they will have saved humanity. Failure, however, means the Ancient One awakens, triggering a final, brutal confrontation. Gameplay unfolds in rounds composed of three critical phases. First, in the Action Phase, each investigator performs two actions, such as traveling the world map, gathering vital assets like weapons and spells, recuperating health and sanity, or trading with allies. Following this, the Encounter Phase plunges each player into a unique narrative event based on their location. Drawing a card presents a story, a choice, and often a skill test resolved by rolling six-sided dice, where a five or six is a success. Investigators can spend clue tokens to reroll dice, adding a layer of resource management. Finally, the Mythos Phase represents the Ancient One's sinister influence; a new card can introduce devastating effects, spawn monsters, open otherworldly gates, and relentlessly advance the doom track, pushing the world ever closer to oblivion. What makes "Eldritch Horror" a beloved classic is its epic, globe-spanning scale and the rich, emergent stories it generates. The game turns the entire world into a playground of impending doom, creating a grand sense of adventure. The challenge is significant, fostering true teamwork as players strategize how to best use their unique character abilities and manage limited resources. Every session creates a memorable tale of near-misses, heroic triumphs, and tragic sacrifices. The game's appeal lies in its masterful blend of strategic planning and the unpredictable chaos of the Mythos deck, ensuring high tension from start to finish. It's a daunting adventure that rewards players not just with a win, but with a compelling story they have created together, making it a pinnacle experience for those who love deep narrative and cooperative challenges.
1-8 180m⚖️ 3.8
ISS Vanguard
RANK #158
ISS Vanguard invites players to embark on a grand, galaxy-spanning science fiction epic as members of humanity's first deep-space exploration vessel. This sprawling, cooperative campaign game casts 1 to 4 players as the leaders of the Vanguard's four primary sections: Security, Recon, Science, and Engineering. Guided by a mysterious signal that could hold the key to humanity's survival, your mission is to explore strange new worlds, uncover the secrets of ancient alien civilizations, and navigate the countless dangers of the cosmos. The ultimate goal is not just survival, but to unravel a profound mystery that will determine the fate of humankind, making choices that will have a lasting impact across a lengthy and memorable narrative campaign. The gameplay is structured around a compelling two-phase loop that seamlessly blends tactical planetary missions with strategic ship management. During the Planetary Exploration phase, players assemble an away team, customize their lander, and descend to alien planets represented by a lushly illustrated logbook. On the surface, they navigate challenges and points of interest through a unique dice-based skill check system, where custom dice, character skills, and strategic card play are used to overcome obstacles and advance the story. Following each mission, the game transitions to the Ship Management phase. Here, players make critical decisions aboard the ISS Vanguard, using a clever binder system to manage the ship's crew, research new technologies, manufacture advanced equipment, and heal their personnel. The resources and discoveries from planetary missions directly fuel the ship's progress, creating a deeply satisfying feedback loop. What makes ISS Vanguard a standout experience is its profound sense of immersion and player-driven storytelling. The game masterfully combines the thrill of discovery on alien worlds with the weighty responsibility of managing a massive starship and its crew. The high-quality components, from the detailed miniatures to the innovative binder-based ship book, create a tangible and engaging world for players to inhabit. With a narrative penned by an accomplished author and an optional companion app providing professional voice-overs, the story comes alive, drawing players deep into its universe. Fans of rich thematic experiences, long-form campaign play, and cooperative problem-solving will find a truly epic adventure that offers dozens of hours of unforgettable moments and emergent stories.
1-4 120m⚖️ 3.6
Pandemic
RANK #170
Pandemic presents a thrilling, high-stakes challenge where players must band together as a team of elite disease-control specialists. In this quintessential cooperative game, the world is on the brink of disaster, with four deadly diseases spreading rapidly across the globe. Players don't compete against each other; instead, they unite against the game's automated systems, which relentlessly propagate the infections. Each team member assumes a unique role, such as the resourceful Scientist or the indispensable Medic, bringing special abilities to the table that are critical for success. The ultimate objective is to discover the cures for all four plagues before time runs out, a pandemic spirals out of control, or the supply of medical resources is exhausted. It’s a race against the clock where teamwork and strategic foresight are the only tools standing between humanity and a global catastrophe. The gameplay unfolds through a tense and structured sequence of turns. On their turn, a player can perform up to four actions, creating a wealth of strategic choices. These actions include moving between major world cities, treating localized infections by removing disease cubes, establishing vital research stations, sharing knowledge by trading city cards with teammates, or using a set of matching city cards to discover a cure. After taking actions, the player must draw two cards from the player deck, which contains the city cards needed for cures but also powerful one-time Event cards and the dreaded Epidemic cards. Drawing an Epidemic card is a pivotal moment that escalates the crisis: it accelerates the infection rate, triggers an immediate large-scale infection in a new city, and critically, reshuffles the previously infected cities back to the top of the infection deck. This 'intensify' mechanic ensures that hotspots are likely to be hit again, leading to potential chain-reaction outbreaks that spread disease to adjacent cities. The enduring appeal of Pandemic lies in its brilliant fusion of accessible rules and profound strategic depth. It creates a palpable sense of mounting pressure, forcing players into constant communication and collaborative problem-solving. The game becomes a fascinating puzzle where the team must constantly weigh managing immediate threats—stamping out fires on the board to prevent outbreaks—against progressing toward the long-term victory condition of finding all four cures. This delicate balancing act is the heart of the game's tension. Because the difficulty can be scaled by altering the number of Epidemic cards in the deck, it offers a consistently engaging challenge for both newcomers and seasoned strategists. Its design has become a benchmark for cooperative games, celebrated for its ability to create a compelling narrative of global crisis and collective heroism with every session.
2-4 45m⚖️ 2.4
The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game
RANK #184
Embark on perilous quests in The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game, a cooperative Living Card Game (LCG) set within J.R.R. Tolkien's iconic Middle-earth. Unlike collectible games with randomized booster packs, this is an LCG where players can strategically grow their collection with fixed expansions. In this game, one to four players unite to form their own fellowship, working together against automated scenarios controlled by an 'encounter deck'. Your goal is to navigate treacherous lands, battle fearsome enemies, and complete a series of quest objectives to achieve victory against the encroaching shadow of Sauron. It's a narrative-driven adventure that brings the world of the books to your tabletop. The core of the game revolves around strategic deck-building and a structured round sequence. Each player constructs a deck of at least fifty cards centered on one to three powerful heroes, chosen from four distinct spheres of influence: Leadership, Lore, Spirit, and Tactics. These spheres dictate which allies, attachments, and events a player can use. A typical round involves gaining resources to pay for cards, questing to make progress on the current objective, potentially traveling to new locations, engaging with enemies from the encounter deck, and finally resolving combat. Players must manage their characters carefully, deciding who will quest, defend, or attack. Victory is hard-won, as players lose if any member's threat level reaches 50 or if all of their heroes are defeated. The enduring appeal of The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game lies in its deep, strategic challenge and rich thematic immersion. It is renowned for its difficulty, often requiring players to meticulously craft and refine their decks to overcome the unique obstacles presented by each scenario. The cooperative nature fosters a strong sense of camaraderie as players must coordinate their actions and build synergistic decks to succeed. The game's artwork is inspired directly by Tolkien's novels rather than the films, creating a distinct and authentic vision of Middle-earth. This combination of challenging cooperative gameplay, extensive customization, and a beloved fantasy setting makes it a highly replayable and rewarding experience for any fan of adventure.
1-4 60m⚖️ 3.4
Return to Dark Tower
RANK #226
Return to Dark Tower is a grand, cooperative fantasy adventure and a modern reimagining of the iconic 1981 electronic board game. In this app-driven epic, one to four players assume the roles of unique heroes who must unite to save the kingdoms from a great evil that has resurfaced. The central goal is to complete a major objective, which will lure the primary adversary out from the technologically advanced, malevolent tower for a final, decisive confrontation. Players are working against a strict timeline, needing to achieve victory before the end of the sixth in-game 'month'. The path to defeat is multifaceted; the heroes can lose if they run out of time, if the supply of skulls to feed the tower is exhausted, or if any single hero succumbs to overwhelming corruption, making every decision a tense and critical calculation. The gameplay unfolds over a series of hero turns, each structured into distinct phases. A player's turn begins with an optional, character-specific 'Banner Action', followed by movement and a choice of one heroic action: battling monstrous foes, cleansing corrupting skulls from the land's buildings, or undertaking vital quests. Afterward, heroes can reinforce their strength by utilizing the special ability of the building they occupy to gain resources. The game's centerpiece is the towering electronic spire which, in conjunction with a companion app, dictates the flow of the adventure. At the conclusion of each turn, a player must drop a skull into the tower, which may then dispense them back onto the board, spreading corruption. The integrated app manages all quests, events, and combat encounters, ensuring a dynamic and unpredictable challenge every time you play. Return to Dark Tower commands an impressive table presence, with its massive, interactive tower immediately drawing players into its world. It masterfully blends the nostalgia of the original classic with sophisticated modern mechanics, creating an experience that feels both familiar and refreshingly new. The game is celebrated for its highly immersive and cooperative gameplay, where teamwork and strategic planning are paramount to overcoming the app-controlled adversary. The constant pressure from the tower and the race against the clock generate a palpable tension that results in truly memorable gaming sessions. For those seeking a different challenge, the game also includes a competitive variant where heroes race to prove their individual worth.
1-4 110m⚖️ 2.6
Dorfromantik: The Board Game
RANK #329
Winner of the prestigious 2023 Spiel des Jahres award, *Dorfromantik: The Board Game* masterfully translates the serene, creative spirit of the beloved video game into a cooperative tabletop experience. In this game, one to six players work together to craft a beautiful, sprawling pastoral landscape from hexagonal tiles. The collective goal is not to defeat opponents, but to harmoniously build a world that fulfills the requests of its tiny inhabitants, aiming to achieve the highest possible score. Players are challenged to think creatively and collaboratively as they lay down tiles featuring forests, grain fields, villages, railways, and streams, constructing an idyllic countryside that grows with every turn. The gameplay is elegantly simple yet deeply engaging. On each turn, a player draws a landscape tile and adds it to the growing map, ensuring that any streams or train tracks seamlessly connect with existing ones. The core of the game revolves around fulfilling collective "Tasks." These tasks appear on the board and challenge players to connect a specific number of a certain landscape type to that point. Completing these objectives earns valuable points. Beyond these immediate goals, players are also rewarded for creating the longest continuous river and the longest railway line. The game concludes once the last tile is placed, and the final score is tallied from completed tasks, the major routes, and special flag tiles that grant bonuses for enclosing specific areas. What truly sets *Dorfromantik* apart and makes it a cherished experience is its blend of tranquil, puzzle-like gameplay with a gentle sense of discovery. It is a wonderfully non-confrontational game, perfect for families, couples, or solo players seeking a relaxing yet thoughtful challenge. Its most innovative feature is a replayable "legacy-lite" campaign. As players reach certain score thresholds across multiple games, they unlock new components and rules from sealed boxes. This system gradually introduces new types of tiles, more complex tasks, and additional scoring opportunities, ensuring the game evolves and remains fresh over many sessions. This element of unlocking hidden content provides a delightful sense of progression without permanently altering the game, making it a highly replayable and rewarding journey.
1-6 45m⚖️ 1.3
Descent: Legends of the Dark
RANK #475
Embark on an epic adventure in the fantasy world of Terrinoth with *Descent: Legends of the Dark*, a sprawling, fully cooperative dungeon-crawling board game for one to four heroes. This is not a new edition of *Descent: Journeys in the Dark*, but an entirely distinct, standalone experience built from the ground up around a required digital companion app. Players take on the roles of unique heroes, each with their own backstory and playstyle, and work together to unravel the mysteries of the overarching "Blood and Flame" campaign. The app serves as the game master, controlling monster AI, tracking all game state information, and weaving a rich narrative that responds to the players' choices and actions, creating a seamless and immersive storytelling experience. The gameplay blends tactical combat with deep character customization through an innovative mechanical framework. During a scenario, heroes take turns spending three actions to maneuver across stunning, multi-level 3D terrain, attack menacing foes, and interact with points of interest. One of the game's most celebrated mechanics is its use of double-sided hero and weapon cards. Players can spend fatigue to trigger powerful abilities but must eventually use an action to 'ready' their cards, flipping them to their opposite side to clear the fatigue and unlock an entirely different set of skills. This creates a compelling resource management puzzle on top of the dice-driven combat, forcing players to make critical decisions about when to push their limits and when to prepare for the next threat. What sets *Descent: Legends of the Dark* apart is its seamless integration of the tactical quest phase with a robust city management phase. Between adventures, the heroes return to the city of Frostgate, where they can use materials and experience gained to craft powerful new weapons, upgrade their existing gear, and purchase valuable items. This RPG-lite progression system allows players to feel a real sense of growth and ownership over their characters as the campaign unfolds. By offloading the complex bookkeeping and enemy management to the companion app, the game allows players to focus entirely on cooperative strategy, character development, and the unfolding story, making it a modern, accessible, and deeply engaging dungeon crawl that has been praised for its narrative depth and clever design.
1-4 150m⚖️ 2.7
Escape Comics: The Alien Ship
Dive headfirst into a gripping science-fiction mystery with "Escape Comics: The Alien Ship," an innovative experience that masterfully fuses the immersive storytelling of a graphic novel with the hands-on challenges of an escape room. In this adventure, players are tasked with exploring a mysterious alien vessel to uncover its secrets and ultimately save the Earth from an unknown fate. The entire game is driven by a full-color comic book that you read together. This narrative-first approach creates a cinematic and engrossing atmosphere, pulling players directly into the high-stakes story as it unfolds page by page, panel by panel. The core gameplay establishes a compelling loop of reading, problem-solving, and discovery. As you progress through the comic's narrative, you'll be instructed to pause and tackle a specific puzzle. To do so, you'll open sealed envelopes containing a variety of high-quality, tactile components that represent items and scenarios depicted in the artwork. Puzzles are diverse, testing your powers of observation, object manipulation, and logical deduction. Instead of a frantic timer, the game employs a point system where incorrect answers or using the progressive hint system will cost you points. Solutions are verified using a classic decoder wheel, which then directs you to the next part of the story in the comic, seamlessly blending the narrative and puzzle-solving elements. "Escape Comics: The Alien Ship" is designed as a substantial campaign, offering between four and eight hours of gameplay. Recognizing that this is a significant time investment, the designers have cleverly included nine distinct save points, allowing you to easily pause your adventure and resume it over multiple sessions. One of its most appealing features is that it is fully resettable—no components are ever destroyed or permanently altered, meaning the entire experience can be shared with friends or family after you've completed your mission. While the game supports up to four players, it is widely considered an exceptional experience for solo players or partners, ensuring everyone can stay fully engaged with both the detailed comic panels and the intricate physical puzzles.
1-4 360m⚖️ 2.5
BoxNo Cover Art
Marvel: Crisis Protocol Alliances – Night of the Goblin is a standalone, fully cooperative board game that plunges one to four players into the vibrant world of Marvel's web-slingers. Published by Atomic Mass Games, this title marks the beginning of the new "Alliances" series, offering a distinct experience from the competitive skirmishes of the original "Marvel: Crisis Protocol." Players assemble a team from a roster of iconic heroes—Spectacular Spider-Man, Ultimate Spider-Man, Ghost Spider, and Black Cat—to directly confront the nefarious Green Goblin. The ultimate goal is to work together to overcome a series of narrative scenarios, known as Stages, thwarting the villain's escalating schemes and saving the city from his army of minions, including War Goblins and Spider Slayers. This game offers a story-driven campaign where success hinges on teamwork and tactical coordination. The gameplay unfolds as a fast-paced, tactical "beat-em-up" on a hex-grid map. Each round is split into two phases. During the hero phase, players take turns activating their characters, spending energy to move across the board, attack enemies, and complete stage-specific objectives. Following the heroes, the enemy phase begins. The Green Goblin and his minions are controlled by an automated system, with their actions dictated by individual rules cards, ensuring a dynamic and unpredictable challenge. New enemies will spawn, existing ones will move and attack, creating constant pressure that players must manage. A central mechanic is the robust character progression system. By defeating foes and achieving objectives, heroes earn experience points, which are spent on "Level Up" cards to unlock powerful new abilities, allowing for significant customization throughout the campaign. The unique appeal of "Night of the Goblin" lies in its accessible yet strategic cooperative gameplay, making it an ideal entry point for newcomers while retaining enough familiar mechanics—like its dice and iconography—to satisfy veterans of "Marvel: Crisis Protocol." The shift to a purely cooperative, story-focused campaign provides a fresh perspective on the universe. Furthermore, the game is designed with hobbyists in mind, featuring highly detailed, "push-fit" miniatures that assemble without glue using the new F.A.S.T. (Fusion Assembly System). A major draw for the wider community is its forward-looking design; it's the first in a line of cross-compatible "Alliances" games, with future installments promising team-ups with the X-Men and Avengers. This not only ensures high replayability but also builds a larger, interconnected cooperative gaming ecosystem.
1-4 120m⚖️ 2.8