Historical Games
Browse all Historical 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 #1
Step into the sooty, vibrant heart of England's Industrial Revolution with Brass: Birmingham, a masterful economic strategy game that casts players as ambitious entrepreneurs vying for industrial dominance. Set against the backdrop of a transformative era, you will embark on a compelling journey to forge a powerful empire, shaping the landscape and economy of Birmingham through two distinct historical periods: the Canal Era and the more advanced Rail Era. This is a game where vision, resourcefulness, and strategic foresight determine who will rise as the preeminent industrialist.
At its core, Brass: Birmingham is a meticulous ballet of economic expansion and shrewd resource management. Players will lay down the foundations of industry, establishing essential coal mines, ironworks, and lucrative cotton mills, potteries, and breweries across a sprawling map of key locations. Success hinges on not only building these enterprises but also efficiently connecting them through an intricate network of canals and railways, facilitating the crucial flow of resources and finished goods. The ingenious 'flipping' mechanism is central: once a product is sold, the underlying industry tile is flipped, revealing its true value and generating vital income or victory points, creating a compelling loop of investment and profit. Balancing the high costs of construction with the constant need for capital, often through carefully managed loans, adds a layer of intense financial pressure and strategic depth.
The strategic depth of Brass: Birmingham evolves dramatically through its two eras, demanding adaptability and long-term vision from even the most seasoned players. As the game progresses, new technologies emerge, altering construction costs and market dynamics, forcing players to continually re-evaluate their strategies and pivot their industrial focus. While individual turns might seem straightforward, the profound interplay between players creates a highly competitive, yet largely indirect, environment. Every canal built, every resource consumed, and every market accessed by one player impacts the opportunities available to others, fostering a constant strategic dance. This interwoven competition, combined with varied scoring opportunities and deeply interconnected mechanics, ensures that no two games ever feel the same, offering immense replayability and a truly satisfying intellectual challenge.
Brass: Birmingham stands as a pinnacle of modern economic strategy, celebrated for its elegant design, immersive thematic depth, and profound strategic nuance. It’s a sophisticated game for thinkers who relish complex decision-making, appreciate intricate economic systems, and thrive on outmaneuvering rivals with subtle yet impactful moves. Prepare to immerse yourself in the gritty glory of industrial progress, where every well-placed industry and every timely sale can tip the scales of fortune and cement your legacy.
2-4 90m⚖️ 3.9

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

RANK #16
Through the Ages: A New Story of Civilization (2015) is a monumental strategy board game where players rewrite history, guiding their burgeoning civilization from antiquity through the modern era. Your ultimate goal is to accumulate the most culture points by developing a superior civilization, marked by technological advancements, powerful leaders, magnificent wonders, and a thriving population. This epic journey tests your foresight and adaptability, demanding careful long-term planning to emerge as the preeminent power in a constantly evolving world.
The game unfolds through a unique card drafting system, where new technologies, leaders, and wonders become available, requiring players to strategically acquire and utilize them using an innovative action point allowance system. Managing essential resources like food, minerals, and population is crucial for expansion and development, while balancing economic growth with military strength is paramount. Building a robust military deters aggression and secures your borders, adding a tense layer of player interaction and strategic bluffing to the otherwise deep economic engine.
Beloved for its unparalleled strategic depth and immersive thematic experience, Through the Ages offers a truly brain-burning challenge with virtually limitless replayability. Its elegant design minimizes luck, rewarding careful planning, efficient resource management, and cunning tactical decisions. Players adore the sensation of guiding a civilization through millennia, making profound choices that ripple across ages, creating a highly satisfying and richly rewarding gaming experience that stands as a benchmark for heavy strategy games.
m⚖️ N/A

RANK #36
Orléans
2014In Orleans, you are a merchant trying to rebuild the city after a devastating flood. You'll collect and trade resources, build structures, and manage your workers to restore the city's prosperity. This game combines worker placement and engine building mechanics with a unique auction system. As players progress, they'll unlock new buildings and improvements, increasing their chances of winning.
1-3 60m⚖️ 3.0

RANK #63
Agricola
2007In Agricola, players step into the well-worn boots of a 17th-century farming family, starting with little more than a spouse and a two-room wooden hut. The singular goal is to cultivate the most prosperous and well-rounded homestead over 14 rounds of play. This isn't just about accumulating wealth; it's about survival and balanced development. Victory points are awarded for a diverse farm that includes plowed fields, various crops, fenced pastures, different types of livestock, and an expanded family living in an upgraded home. The game masterfully punishes over-specialization, penalizing players for neglected areas of their farm, ensuring that true prosperity comes from being a jack-of-all-trades.
The game's engine is driven by a tense worker placement mechanism. Each round, players take turns placing their limited family members on action spaces to gather resources, build improvements, or grow their family. Since each action space can only be used once per round, players are in constant, indirect competition for critical actions like collecting wood or plowing a field. As the game progresses, new, more powerful actions become available, broadening strategic possibilities. This steady development is punctuated by six harvest phases, where the true pressure of Agricola is felt. During a harvest, you reap what you've sown, your animals may breed, but most importantly, you must feed your family. Failing to produce enough food forces a player to take a "Begging" card, which carries a steep point penalty, creating a persistent, challenging tension between expanding your farm and simply providing for your household.
Agricola's enduring appeal lies in this brilliant balance of long-term strategic planning and short-term tactical necessity. The struggle to feed your family is a constant, pressing puzzle that forces difficult decisions every single round. Its depth and replayability are legendary, largely due to the massive decks of Occupation and Minor Improvement cards dealt to each player. These cards provide unique abilities and scoring opportunities, ensuring no two games ever feel the same and allowing for countless strategic pathways. It is this combination of a deeply thematic, relatable struggle and a highly rewarding, complex strategic framework that has cemented Agricola's status as a masterpiece of the Eurogame genre and a benchmark for worker placement games.
1-5 90m⚖️ 3.6

RANK #75
The White Castle
2023Set in the rich historical era of 1761 feudal Japan, 'The White Castle' invites players to step into the roles of ambitious rival clan leaders. Your ultimate objective is to earn the favor of Daimyo Sakai Tadakiyo and amass political influence within the stunning walls of Himeji Castle, famously known as the White Heron Castle. As you navigate the intricate social hierarchies and resource economies of the period, you must strategically manage your clan's assets to outmaneuver your opponents. Every decision carries weight as you seek to maximize your standing in the royal court, carefully balancing the needs of your people against your aspirations for power and prestige.
The gameplay revolves around a remarkably tight and unforgiving structure: the entire game unfolds over a mere three rounds. In each round, players draft exactly three dice, meaning you are granted only nine core actions throughout the entire game session. This fascinating limitation transforms the experience into a deeply strategic puzzle of engine building and extreme efficiency. Dice of three different colors are rolled and arranged along striking three-dimensional cardboard bridges. When drafting, you must select either the highest or lowest value die from the bridge's edges. You then place this die onto various action spaces, paying or earning coins based on the difference between the die's value and the space's requirement. Taking lower-value dice strategically triggers your personal lantern action, establishing a scaling engine of bonuses to propel your future turns.
Utilizing these drafted dice, players engage in a specialized form of worker placement. By spending tracked resources like food, iron, and precious pearls, you deploy three distinct types of clan members across the board. Gardeners cultivate the grounds for immediate rewards and end-of-round income, courtiers ascend the social ladder within the Room of the Thousand Carpets for pivotal action cards, and warriors secure the training grounds to act as powerful endgame multipliers. Your final score hinges on how brilliantly you synthesize these diverse avenues of influence into a cohesive strategy before the time inevitably runs out.
Board game enthusiasts praise 'The White Castle' for its brilliant juxtaposition of an ultra-compact footprint with genuinely heavy, brain-burning decision-making. As a standout entry in Devir Games' acclaimed small box Euro line, it delivers the strategic depth of a massive big-box game in a fraction of the space and time. The pressure of the nine-turn limitation forces players to constantly seek out masterful, cascading combo turns. Paired with the gorgeous, vibrant artwork heavily inspired by traditional Japanese ukiyo-e prints, this beautifully crafted puzzle offers immense replayability and remains highly engaging from the first drafted die to the final scoring phase.
1-4 80m⚖️ 3.0

RANK #80
Le Havre
2008In "Le Havre," the celebrated design from Uwe Rosenberg, players are transported to the burgeoning port city of Le Havre in northwestern France. As magnates of the shipping industry, players compete to amass the greatest fortune. This is not achieved through simple commerce alone, but by strategically developing the city's infrastructure and managing a complex web of resources. The ultimate goal is to end the game with the highest net worth, a sum of your cash reserves plus the value of the buildings and ships you've constructed. The game challenges you to balance short-term gains with long-term investments, building a powerful economic engine that can outpace your rivals in this bustling harbor town. It's a deep and rewarding experience for those who enjoy meticulous economic planning and optimization.
The gameplay in "Le Havre" is elegantly structured around a two-part turn. First, goods are added to the offer spaces, creating an ever-changing marketplace. Then, the active player must choose one of two primary actions: either take all goods of a single type from an offer space, or utilize one of the many buildings on the board. Buildings are the heart of your strategy, enabling you to transform raw materials like fish and wood into more valuable processed goods, such as smoked fish or charcoal. This process of creating production chains is a classic engine-building challenge. A fascinating layer of player interaction emerges from building ownership; while any player can use any building, they must pay a fee to the owner, creating a dynamic flow of capital and forcing difficult choices about which actions are most profitable. Furthermore, players must acquire ships not just for their value, but to generate the food required to feed their workers at the end of each round, with failure resulting in costly loans.
"Le Havre" is beloved by strategy gamers for its immense strategic depth and the satisfying feeling of building an efficient economic machine from the ground up. The tension between expanding your industrial capabilities and meeting the recurring demand for food creates a compelling puzzle that requires constant foresight and adaptation. Unlike many other worker placement games, the core action is singular—you move your one worker pawn—which makes each decision incredibly significant. The indirect player interaction, where you must weigh the benefit of using an opponent's building against the cost of paying them, is a masterstroke of design that keeps all players engaged. The game's variable building display ensures high replayability, as the path to victory changes with each session. For players who relish a heavy, brain-burning economic simulation with tight resources and rewarding long-term planning, "Le Havre" stands as a monumental achievement in the genre.
1-5 150m⚖️ 4.1
BoxNo Cover Art
RANK #99
Fields of Arle
2014Fields of Arle immerses you in the challenging yet rewarding life of a farming family in 18th-century East Frisia. In this masterwork by acclaimed designer Uwe Rosenberg, players are tasked with developing a modest plot of land into a thriving and prosperous homestead. Over the course of four and a half years, you will shape the very landscape, manage livestock, and craft valuable goods. The game is a deeply thematic and strategic experience where the ultimate goal is to accumulate the most victory points by building a diverse and efficient agricultural engine, demonstrating your family's success through the tangible growth of your farmstead and the wealth of goods you've produced.
The gameplay is centered around a robust worker placement system that unfolds over nine rounds, each representing a half-season of either summer or winter. Each season offers a distinct set of actions, from plowing fields and shearing sheep in the summer to breeding animals and weaving cloth in the winter. Players strategically place their family members on action spaces to manage every aspect of their farm. This includes draining moors to create new pastures, building dikes to protect land from floods, raising cattle and horses, and constructing an array of buildings that provide crucial new abilities. A clever mechanic allows a player to perform an off-season action once per round, but this flexibility comes at the cost of giving up the first-player advantage, adding another layer of tactical decision-making.
What makes Fields of Arle a beloved classic among strategy gamers is its incredible depth and the sandbox-style freedom it offers. It is a quintessential heavy Eurogame, specifically tailored for a one or two-player experience, complete with a rich and engaging solo mode. There is no single prescribed path to victory; players can focus on animal husbandry, crop cultivation, trade, or building construction, leading to immense replayability as you explore different strategies with each playthrough. The satisfaction of watching your personal player board transform from barren land into a complex, bustling farm is a core part of its appeal, offering a deeply rewarding journey for those who enjoy intricate, low-interaction engine-building puzzles.
1-2 90m⚖️ 3.9

RANK #114
"Through the Ages: A Story of Civilization" is a monumental board game that tasks players with one of the grandest challenges imaginable: guiding a civilization from its humble beginnings in antiquity through to the complexities of the modern era. It's a game of epic scope where military might is just one tool among many. The ultimate objective is not world domination, but the creation of a lasting legacy. Victory is determined by the accumulation of culture points, a measure of your society's artistic, philosophical, and technological contributions to history. Players strive to build a civilization that will be remembered and celebrated for its profound impact, leaving an indelible mark on the annals of time.
The game's engine is driven by a clever card drafting mechanism. A central 'card row' displays a constantly shifting array of potential advancements, from new technologies and political systems to great leaders and world wonders. The cost to acquire these cards decreases the longer they remain unchosen, creating a tense and dynamic market of opportunities. On their turn, players spend a set number of civil and military actions to execute their grand strategy. These actions allow them to draft cards, increase their population, construct or upgrade buildings, and bolster their military forces. Success hinges on a delicate balancing act. You must carefully manage your production of food and resources, your investment in science to unlock new possibilities, and the strength of your army, as rivals can exploit any weakness through aggression or outright war to seize resources and disrupt your progress.
Players are drawn to "Through the Ages" for its profound strategic depth and the immensely rewarding experience of nurturing a civilization from a single settlement into a sprawling empire. It presents an intricate and fascinating puzzle, forcing players to make crucial long-term decisions while adapting to the tactical opportunities presented by the card row. The game's unique appeal lies in this synthesis of grand strategy and tactical execution. While player interaction can be direct and confrontational through the military system, the core conflict is often a race for efficiency and cultural prestige. This focus on building a superior internal engine, rather than simply conquering territory, has cemented its reputation as an essential title for serious hobbyists seeking a challenging, engrossing, and highly replayable masterpiece of game design.
2-4 180m⚖️ 4.2

RANK #126
Carnegie
2022Step into the shoes of an aspiring magnate during America's Gilded Age in *Carnegie*, a board game inspired by the legendary industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. In this medium-heavy economic Eurogame, you are tasked with building a business empire from the ground up. Over the course of 20 rounds, you will manage employees, develop new technologies, invest in real estate across the nation, and expand your transport network. The ultimate goal is not just to be the wealthiest, but to build the most prestigious enterprise. Victory is determined by points earned through savvy business growth, strategic construction, and, crucially, generous contributions to society, proving that true success lies in both industry and philanthropy.
The gameplay is driven by a clever and highly interactive action-selection mechanism. Each round, the active player chooses one of four actions corresponding to a department in their company, and critically, all other players must also perform that same action. The 'Human Resources' department allows you to move your employees on your personal player board to activate different areas for future turns. 'Management' is used to acquire essential goods and money. 'Construction' lets you build new projects and expand your company's network on the main game board, while 'Research & Development' advances your company's technology, unlocking powerful new abilities and scoring paths. This system forces constant engagement and requires you to strategically anticipate your rivals' needs and intentions while optimizing your own.
What truly sets *Carnegie* apart is its brilliant integration of business acumen with philanthropic duty. Throughout the game, players are presented with opportunities to donate their wealth to charitable causes. This isn't merely a thematic element; these donations are a core mechanism for unlocking significant end-game scoring objectives. This creates a compelling strategic tension: do you reinvest your profits for immediate expansion and engine-building, or do you sacrifice short-term gains for long-term prestige and victory points? This dual focus, combined with the shared action system that ensures no downtime, makes for a deeply rewarding and thinky experience where every decision matters, not just for you, but for everyone at the table.
1-4 120m⚖️ 4.1

RANK #150
In Russian Railroads, players step into the roles of ambitious railway magnates competing to build the most advanced and expansive rail network across the vast expanse of 19th-century Russia. The primary goal is to accumulate the most victory points by developing three key railway lines on your personal player board: the legendary Trans-Siberian Railroad, and two smaller but crucial lines to St. Petersburg and Kiev. This is a quintessential 'Euro-style' game, where strategic planning, resource management, and efficient action selection are paramount. Victory isn't just about reaching the end of the track first; it's about creating a powerful, point-scoring engine that will leave your rivals in the dust, with final scores often soaring into the hundreds.
The game's engine is driven by a classic worker placement mechanism. Each round, players take turns deploying their workers to a shared central board to claim actions. These actions are the lifeblood of your enterprise, allowing you to lay progressively more valuable tracks, from basic black rails to superior white ones. To capitalize on your expanding network, you must also upgrade your locomotives, as they determine how far along a track you can actually score points. Beyond the rails, players can advance on an industrialization track to unlock powerful bonuses and hire specialized engineers who grant unique, game-long advantages. Every decision is critical, as action spaces are limited, creating a tense and interactive environment where you must constantly adapt to your opponents' strategies.
Russian Railroads is celebrated for its remarkable strategic depth and high replayability. While several paths to victory exist—focusing on a single super-powered rail line, balancing all three, or pushing industrialization—the game's tight, often described as 'vicious,' worker placement system ensures no single strategy is always dominant. Players love the puzzle-like challenge of optimizing their turns and the immense satisfaction of seeing their carefully constructed engine pay off with massive point gains in the later rounds. Its reputation as a challenging, 'thinky' game makes it a beloved staple for gamers who crave a deep, competitive experience with a rewarding and climactic finish.
2-4 120m⚖️ 3.6
Showing 1 to 12 of 26 games
