MeeplePulse

Economic Games

Browse all Economic board games in the Meeple Pulse database.

The Castles of Burgundy
RANK #15
Embark on a captivating strategic journey to cultivate your own flourishing principality in medieval Burgundy with this acclaimed 2011 board game. Players skillfully roll dice to acquire and place hex tiles, meticulously developing their estates by building settlements, raising livestock, mining silver, or engaging in trade. Every decision shapes your domain, demanding clever resource management and tactical foresight to accumulate victory points. "The Castles of Burgundy" offers a deeply engaging and satisfying tile-placement experience, rewarding careful planning and adaptability, making it a timeless classic for strategy board game enthusiasts seeking depth and replayability.
m⚖️ N/A
Eclipse: Second Dawn for the Galaxy
RANK #22
No description available.
2-6 180m⚖️ 3.6
Eclipse: New Dawn for the Galaxy
RANK #101
Eclipse: New Dawn for the Galaxy is a critically acclaimed 4X board game that places you at the head of a vast interstellar civilization. Over nine rounds, you must guide your people to dominance by exploring new star systems, researching powerful technologies, and engaging in both diplomacy and warfare. The ultimate goal is to accumulate the most Victory Points, which are earned through a variety of achievements, including controlling galactic sectors, winning decisive battles, forging alliances, and discovering ancient alien artifacts. The game masterfully blends the grand, thematic scope of an 'Ameritrash' space opera with the tight, resource-driven puzzles of a 'Euro-style' game, creating a rich and rewarding strategic experience. The gameplay revolves around a clever action and upkeep system that forces difficult decisions. On your turn, you perform a single action, such as exploring the modular galaxy, building customized starships, or advancing on a shared technology tree. Each system you control or action you take requires placing an influence disc from your player board. As these discs are used, your civilization's end-of-round upkeep cost increases, creating a tense balance between rapid expansion and economic stability. Players must carefully manage three resources—Materials for building, Science for research, and Money to pay upkeep—generated by colonizing planets, forcing them to weigh every decision against its long-term cost. What truly sets Eclipse apart is its deep and intuitive ship customization system. Players don't just build generic ships; they design them. Using the Upgrade action, you can add powerful components like improved engines, advanced computers, deadly weapons, and resilient shields directly onto your ship blueprints. This allows for incredible strategic flexibility, as you can tailor your fleets to counter specific opponents or pursue unique combat doctrines. Combat itself is resolved through dice rolls, but the odds are heavily influenced by your custom designs, rewarding clever engineering and tactical foresight. This combination of deep strategic planning, tense economic management, and thrilling, customizable combat makes Eclipse a modern classic in the space strategy genre.
2-6 150m⚖️ 3.7
Troyes
RANK #139

Troyes

2010
In Troyes, players are transported to the year 1200 in the Champagne region of France to lead a rich and influential family. Over the course of four centuries, you will guide the destiny of the city, leaving your mark on its history. The ultimate goal is to amass the greatest fame and glory, measured in victory points. This is achieved by contributing your family's resources and citizens to three key societal pillars: the military, the religious, and the civil domains. Players will work to construct the magnificent cathedral, a central project that demands shared effort, while simultaneously defending the city from a constant barrage of unfortunate events. Your success will be judged by your ability to navigate these challenges and strategically place your family members in positions of power throughout the city's burgeoning society. The game's engine is driven by a unique and highly interactive dice-placement mechanism. At the start of each round, players roll a pool of dice determined by the number of their citizens (meeples) they have stationed in the city's three main guildhalls. These dice, colored red (military), white (religious), and yellow (civil), represent the available labor force for that round. On your turn, you'll group one to three dice of the same color to perform actions. These actions include activating powerful ability cards on the board, recruiting more citizens, earning money, fighting off negative event cards, or dedicating work towards the cathedral. The most compelling twist is that you are not limited to your own dice. For a price, you can purchase dice directly from your opponents' pools, forcing them to react and creating a tense, dynamic marketplace for actions each and every turn. This system forces constant evaluation of not only your own plans but the potential moves of everyone at the table. Troyes is celebrated among strategy gamers for its brilliant fusion of classic Eurogame mechanics with an uncommonly high degree of player interaction. While many games in its weight class can feel like 'multiplayer solitaire', the ability to buy an opponent's dice ensures that you are always invested in their rolls and decisions. This creates a constant tension and a need for tactical flexibility. The game offers immense replayability through its modular setup; the specific action cards available in each of the three domains change from game to game, as do the events and character cards that grant secret end-game scoring objectives. This variability means that no two games of Troyes feel the same. It's a deeply rewarding and challenging puzzle that masterfully balances long-term strategic planning with the need for sharp, opportunistic tactical plays, making it an enduring classic of the genre.
2-4 90m⚖️ 3.5
Roll for the Galaxy
RANK #171
Roll for the Galaxy is a dice-based engine-building game where players compete to create the most prosperous and powerful space empire. As the leader of a fledgling galactic faction, your goal is to accumulate the most victory points by strategically developing new technologies and settling valuable worlds. The game is a spiritual successor to the acclaimed card game, Race for the Galaxy, translating its core concepts into a dynamic and tactile experience driven by custom dice. Each player manages their own domain, striving to build an efficient engine that generates credits, new tiles, and ultimately, victory points. The game concludes when one player constructs their twelfth tile or when the central pool of victory points is depleted, at which point the player with the highest score is declared the victor. The gameplay revolves around a clever simultaneous action mechanic. Each round, all players roll their dice behind a screen. These dice, with faces representing different actions, are your workforce. Players secretly assign their dice to one of five possible phases: Explore, Develop, Settle, Produce, or Ship. Crucially, each player also selects one of their dice to lock in a specific phase for the round. Only the phases selected by at least one player will activate for everyone, creating a tense game of prediction and priority. Once revealed, players use their assigned dice as workers to perform actions in the active phases, such as drawing new world and development tiles, paying to build them into their tableau, producing goods on worlds, and shipping those goods for either credits or victory points. The tiles you build grant powerful abilities, special dice, and new scoring opportunities, creating a satisfying loop of escalating power. What makes Roll for the Galaxy a fan favorite is its brilliant combination of tactical dice management and strategic planning, all wrapped in a package with virtually no downtime. The simultaneous play keeps every player constantly engaged, as you're always rolling, assigning, and acting. While the dice introduce an element of luck, the game provides numerous ways to mitigate it, from reassigning dice to leveraging special tile powers. This creates a compelling puzzle each round as you adapt your strategy to what you roll. It captures the strategic depth of its card game predecessor but in a more accessible and faster-playing format, offering immense replayability through its vast array of worlds, developments, and starting factions. It's a masterclass in design that feels both grand in scope and remarkably streamlined.
2-5 45m⚖️ 2.8
Andromeda's Edge
RANK #186
Andromeda's Edge invites players to command a unique faction in a newly discovered, resource-rich sector of the galaxy. As a spiritual successor to the acclaimed fantasy game 'Dwellings of Eldervale', this title trades swords and sorcery for starships and advanced technology. Your objective is to establish dominance over your rivals by earning the most victory points. This is achieved through a combination of territorial expansion, technological advancement, commercial savvy, and military might, creating a grand-scale struggle for supremacy in the unexplored frontiers of space. The gameplay is centered around a compelling blend of worker placement and engine building, driven by a simple but strategically deep choice each turn: either launch a starship or recall your entire fleet. Launching your ships sends them to various regions to gather resources from planets, claim moons for special abilities, trigger powerful actions at Alliance Bases, or engage rivals and non-player raiders in combat. The dice-based combat system includes an innovative 'targeting' mechanic that lets you mitigate luck by re-rolling dice below your ship's targeting value. Recalling your ships is a pivotal move, allowing you to activate the custom engine of module cards you've assembled on your personal space station, generating a cascade of resources and special actions to power future turns. What makes Andromeda's Edge so engaging is the satisfying puzzle of building an efficient engine while competing for control on an interactive board. Players must constantly weigh the benefits of expanding their presence against the need to pull back and upgrade their capabilities. Success demands careful planning and advancement along five distinct progress tracks: Science, Industry, Commerce, Civilization, and Supremacy. Each track provides crucial rewards and contributes significantly to your final score. As a medium-to-heavyweight Eurogame, it offers substantial strategic depth and replayability, appealing to gamers who relish intricate systems and multiple, interlocking paths to victory.
1-5 120m⚖️ 3.9
Stone Age
RANK #187
Stone Age invites players to the dawn of civilization, casting them as leaders of a burgeoning tribe. This quintessential "gateway" game, first released in 2008, serves as a perfect introduction to the worker placement genre. Your goal is to guide your people to prosperity by strategically gathering resources, developing new technologies, and expanding your village. The ultimate path to victory lies in accumulating the most victory points, which are earned primarily by constructing useful buildings and acquiring valuable civilization cards. These cards reward players for achieving specific long-term goals, such as building a diverse village or growing a large tribe. The player who best balances the immediate needs of their people with the foresight required for a thriving society will be crowned the winner. The core gameplay is structured around a simple, repeating cycle: placing workers, taking actions, and feeding your tribe. In turn order, players assign their tribe members to various action spaces on the board. These locations allow for hunting, gathering resources (wood, clay, stone, gold), expanding your family, improving agriculture, or crafting helpful tools. Competition for limited spots creates engaging player interaction. Once all workers are placed, their actions are resolved. Resource gathering introduces a clever dice-rolling mechanism: the number of workers sent determines the number of dice you roll. The total is then divided by a specific value for each resource type to determine your yield, creating a fun risk-reward system. Finally, each round concludes with the critical feeding phase, where every tribe member requires food, pushing players to maintain a sustainable food supply or risk penalties. The enduring appeal of Stone Age lies in its masterful blend of accessibility and satisfying strategic depth. Its rules are easy to grasp, making it an excellent choice for families and those new to the hobby. Yet, the game offers a wealth of meaningful choices that keep experienced players engaged. Do you prioritize increasing your population for more actions, or focus on agriculture to ease the constant demand for food? Do you pursue immediate points from buildings or invest in civilization cards for a big payoff at the end? The element of luck from the dice rolls adds just enough unpredictability to keep the game exciting and prevent it from becoming a purely deterministic puzzle. This elegant design, combined with Michael Menzel's charming and thematic artwork, creates a warm, inviting, and highly replayable experience that remains a staple in the board gaming world.
2-4 75m⚖️ 2.4
Xia: Legends of a Drift System
RANK #196
Xia: Legends of a Drift System invites you to stake your claim in a sprawling, open-world space adventure. This is a true 'sandbox' experience where you take the helm of your own starship with a singular goal: to become a legend. Fame is the ultimate currency, and players compete to be the first to reach a predetermined number of Fame Points. How you achieve this status is entirely your decision. Will you become a shrewd interstellar merchant, a daring explorer charting the unknown, a feared pirate preying on others, or a dependable contractor completing vital missions? The galaxy is a vast canvas, and your actions will paint the story of your rise to legendary status. The gameplay is dynamic and driven by player choice, set against the backdrop of a modular galaxy that is built as you play. The game board begins with just a few sectors, and as captains venture into the unknown, they draw and place new hexagonal tiles, revealing planets, asteroid fields, nebulae, and other celestial phenomena. This ensures that no two games ever feel the same. A player's turn is an active affair, involving actions like moving via a 'roll and move' mechanic determined by your ship's engine power, exploring new tiles, buying and selling goods between planets, mining resources, and engaging in dice-driven combat with NPCs or other players. Central to the experience is the deep ship customization, allowing you to purchase new ship models and outfit them with a tangible array of upgraded engines, shields, and weapons that slot directly onto your ship mat. What makes Xia a beloved classic is the profound sense of freedom and the powerful emergent narratives it creates. The game doesn't funnel you down a specific path; it provides the tools and the universe, then steps back to let your story unfold. One moment you might be hauling cargo for a modest profit, and the next you could be ambushed by a rival, forcing a desperate escape or a thrilling dogfight. This blend of strategic planning, resource management, and press-your-luck risk creates a highly thematic and immersive journey. Players don't just play a game; they live out a unique sci-fi adventure, making Xia a pinnacle of the sandbox board game genre.
3-5 120m⚖️ 3.2
John Company: Second Edition
RANK #214
John Company: Second Edition is a deeply immersive and interactive simulation of the British East India Company, a historically powerful but notoriously dysfunctional trading corporation. Players represent ambitious British families seeking to exploit the Company for their own gain. The ultimate goal is not necessarily the Company's success, but rather amassing the greatest personal wealth and prestige for one's dynasty. This is achieved by securing lucrative positions, making shrewd investments, and ultimately retiring family members in a blaze of glory. This second edition is a significant redesign of the 2017 original, featuring a lavish production and refined rules that heighten the strategic depth and political maneuvering. The gameplay is a masterful blend of semi-cooperative action and cutthroat individualism. On one hand, players must work together to keep the Company financially solvent, as its collapse brings ruin to all. On the other hand, victory is entirely individual. The game's structure revolves around players gaining control of key offices—from the prestigious Chairman to regional Presidents in India—often through tense auctions and brokered deals. In these roles, players execute Company actions like trade, shipping, and military campaigns, where success is often subject to the whims of dice rolls. The game progresses through distinct rounds that include managing private family affairs, voting on transformative laws in Parliament, and navigating the crucial London Season, where prestige is scored and legacies are made. What truly distinguishes John Company is its unparalleled focus on negotiation and emergent narrative. Success is nearly impossible without engaging in constant deal-making, forming temporary alliances, and even resorting to bribery. The game is a political sandbox where the most memorable moments arise not from scripted events, but from the players' own schemes and betrayals. It brilliantly models a complex bureaucracy where individual ambition clashes with collective responsibility, creating a challenging and unforgettable experience. It appeals to players who relish high interaction, complex systems, and the thrill of turning a sprawling, failing institution into an engine for their own personal triumph.
1-6 180m⚖️ 4.4
Clash of Cultures: Monumental Edition
RANK #231
Clash of Cultures: Monumental Edition is a grand 4X civilization-building game where players guide a fledgling society from a single settlement into a sprawling, influential empire. This comprehensive 2021 edition revitalizes the beloved classic by integrating its core expansions, including "Civilizations" and "Aztecs," offering the definitive experience in a single box. The primary goal is to accumulate the most Victory Points by the end of the game's final age. These points are not earned through warfare alone; players are rewarded for developing a vibrant culture, constructing magnificent wonders, achieving specific objectives, and advancing their society's knowledge. Players must balance aggressive expansion and military might with economic stability and cultural growth to etch their civilization's name into the annals of history. The game unfolds over six distinct "Ages," each comprising three rounds. On their turn, a player performs three actions, choosing from a wide array of options like exploring the modular, unknown world, founding new cities, researching technologies, or moving military units. A central pillar of the gameplay is the expansive and flexible technology tree, which features 48 unique Advances. This system allows players to customize their civilization's path, unlocking new buildings, units, and powerful abilities that can create unique strategic synergies. Combat is resolved through dice rolls, influenced by unit types and technological prowess, while resource management—balancing food, ore, wood, ideas, and gold—is crucial for funding your ambitions. Every few rounds, a Status Phase triggers scoring, provides a free technology, and introduces new objective cards, maintaining a dynamic pace throughout the game. What makes Clash of Cultures: Monumental Edition a cherished classic is its remarkable strategic depth and high replayability. The freedom to pursue victory through multiple avenues—be it military conquest, technological supremacy, or cultural dominance—ensures that every game feels different. The modular board and variable objective cards create a unique landscape and set of goals for each session. This edition elevates the experience with stunning, newly sculpted miniatures and upgraded components that provide a commanding tabletop presence. It stands as a monumental achievement in the civilization genre, offering a deeply engaging and challenging experience for players who enjoy long-term strategy and the satisfaction of building a unique empire from the ground up.
2-4 210m⚖️ 4.1
Camel Up (Second Edition)
RANK #266
Welcome to the wildest race in the desert! In Camel Up (Second Edition), players are not the jockeys but wealthy spectators hoping to strike it rich by betting on a frantic camel race. The goal is simple: end the game with the most money. To do this, you'll place bets on which camel will lead at the end of each round, or 'leg', as well as which camel will be the overall champion and which will be the ignominious loser. The game's vibrant, high-quality production, featuring a stunning 3D palm tree and an ingenious pyramid dice shaker, immediately draws players into the excitement of race day. Gameplay is a delightful mix of calculated risk and hilarious chaos. On your turn, you choose one of four actions: grab a leg betting tile for a specific camel, place a spectator tile on the track to help or hinder the race, make a long-shot bet on the final winner or loser, or commit to moving a camel. This last action involves grabbing the pyramid, giving it a shake, and releasing a single colored die. The die's color dictates which camel moves, and the number (1, 2, or 3) shows how far. The game's signature mechanic is 'stacking'—if a camel lands on an occupied space, it climbs on top of the other camel(s). When the bottom camel in a stack is activated, it carries the entire pile with it, and only the camel on top is considered in the lead! This edition also introduces rogue camels, which start at the finish line and run backward, potentially dragging entire stacks away from victory. The unique appeal of Camel Up lies in its sheer unpredictability and the social excitement it generates. It's a game where a long-shot bet can pay off spectacularly and the race leader can suddenly find itself at the back of the pack. This level playing field makes it an exceptional 'gateway' game for newcomers and a fantastic choice for family game nights, yet the subtle timing of when to bet versus when to move a camel offers enough depth to keep experienced players engaged. It truly shines with a larger group, creating a boisterous, party-like atmosphere filled with cheers and groans as the camels stack, stumble, and sprint toward the finish line.
3-8 45m⚖️ 1.5
Dinosaur Island
RANK #278
Dinosaur Island invites players to take the helm of a sprawling, neon-drenched biological amusement park where bringing prehistoric creatures back to life is just part of the daily grind. Channeling a vibrant, nostalgic aesthetic inspired by the pop culture of the 1980s and 90s, this thematic strategy game tasks you with synthesizing ancient DNA, erecting thrilling rides, and keeping your visitors entertained. Your ultimate objective is to run the most successful and profitable park possible, carefully balancing the awe-inspiring excitement of your newly minted dinosaurs against the ever-present danger of a catastrophic, guest-eating breakout. The gameplay loop operates across several distinct phases and utilizes a clever blend of worker placement, set collection, and dice drafting. In the initial research phase, players deploy scientists to extract vital genetic sequences from custom amber dice, expand cold-storage capacities, and discover new dinosaur recipes. Next, managers hit the market to purchase essential upgrades, hire skilled specialists, and build amenities like food stands or rollercoasters. The core action then shifts to personal laboratory boards, where workers are simultaneously assigned to refine DNA, breed creatures into paddocks, and bolster park security. Finally, the park opens its gates to a blind draw of visitor meeples. While paying guests bring in much-needed revenue and victory points, sneaky hooligans take up valuable space for free, and any lapse in security will lead to rampaging carnivores devouring the clientele. What truly sets Dinosaur Island apart is its masterful integration of a deeply engaging theme with satisfying Euro-style mechanics. Fans adore the striking visual presentation, largely driven by vivid pinks and retro graphic design that makes the table presence absolutely pop. Beyond its stunning looks, the game offers remarkable flexibility; players can tailor the experience's length by selecting different sets of objective cards to accommodate quick sessions or sprawling engagements. With a well-regarded solo mode and multiple strategic avenues to explore—from focusing on massive, high-risk carnivores to building a safe, amenity-rich resort—the game provides a robust, replayable puzzle that keeps managers coming back for more thrilling park management.
1-4 120m⚖️ 3.0

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