MeeplePulse

Co-operative Games

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

Frosthaven
RANK #20
Frosthaven plunges players into a perilous cooperative legacy adventure set in the frozen north, far beyond the familiar lands of Gloomhaven. As intrepid mercenaries, your ultimate goal is to establish and defend a fledgling outpost, exploring a vast, untamed wilderness teeming with new challenges, enemies, and mysteries. This epic campaign game seamlessly blends tactical combat with a sprawling narrative, inviting players to shape the destiny of their characters and the titular settlement itself through a series of branching choices and evolving scenarios. Gameplay revolves around intricate, card-driven combat where players strategically manage a hand of ability cards to move, attack, and execute special actions. Each turn, two cards are played, with players choosing one action from the top of one card and one from the bottom of the other, creating a dynamic action-point system. Beyond the battlefield, Frosthaven introduces a robust town-building and resource management phase, where players gather supplies, construct new buildings, and make critical decisions that impact the outpost's prosperity and unlock new content. The legacy aspect means the game permanently evolves with stickers, sealed envelopes, and irreversible choices. Frosthaven captivates players with its unparalleled depth, offering hundreds of hours of immersive storytelling and strategic challenge. Its unique appeal lies in the satisfying loop of tactical combat, deep character progression, and the constant revelation of new content through its legacy mechanics. Fans adore its challenging scenarios, the rich, evolving world, and the profound sense of accomplishment derived from overcoming overwhelming odds and building a thriving community in a harsh, unforgiving land. It's a monumental cooperative experience for those seeking an expansive, narrative-driven fantasy saga.
1-4 120m⚖️ 4.4
BoxNo Cover Art
RANK #85
Endeavor: Deep Sea is an acclaimed mid-weight strategy Eurogame that submerges players into the world of oceanic research. Each participant takes the helm of a burgeoning research institute, tasked with the grand ambition of exploring the planet's final frontier. The primary objective is to earn prestige by conducting groundbreaking research, discovering new underwater locations, and championing marine conservation. Success requires a delicate balance between expanding your institute's scientific capabilities and making a tangible impact on the shared seascape. Recognized with the prestigious Kennerspiel des Jahres award, the game challenges players to think strategically about sustainable development and the preservation of delicate aquatic ecosystems, making every decision impactful. The gameplay unfolds over six rounds in a structured, yet dynamic, sequence. Each round begins with a Preparation Phase, where players bolster their operations by recruiting specialists like divers and scientists, gaining action discs that fuel their turns, and readying their existing team for the tasks ahead. This flows into the Action Phase, where players take turns spending their discs to activate specialists and perform one of five key actions. These include 'Travel' to move a submarine across the modular board, 'Sonar' to discover and place new ocean tiles, 'Dive' to collect valuable research tokens, 'Journal' to acquire cards with endgame scoring goals, and 'Conservation' to protect marine life for various rewards. Players also contribute to a communal "Impact Board," which provides immediate bonuses and influences final scoring. What makes Endeavor: Deep Sea so compelling is its remarkable blend of accessibility and strategic depth. The game’s unique appeal stems from its significant replayability, driven by a modular board that ensures no two expeditions are the same and ten distinct missions that alter starting conditions and objectives. Its flexible design supports competitive, cooperative, and solo play, making it a versatile choice for any gaming group. The central tension between building your institute’s 'engine'—improving its range and capabilities—and using those abilities to score points on the board creates a deeply engaging puzzle. The strong thematic integration, where every action feels connected to the narrative of deep-sea exploration, elevates the experience from a simple abstract puzzle to a memorable aquatic adventure.
1-4 90m⚖️ 3.3
BoxNo Cover Art
RANK #106
Aeon's End is a cooperative deck-building game for 1-4 players, where players work together to defend their village against an onslaught of monsters from the void. The game takes place in a fantasy world, where players must use their unique abilities and items to defeat the monsters and save their village. The game consists of a series of rounds, each representing a night in the village. During each round, players draw cards from their deck, which can be used to attack monsters or defend against them. Players can also acquire new items and abilities by defeating monsters and collecting their loot. One of the unique features of Aeon's End is its modular board, which consists of a series of tiles that are arranged randomly at the start of each game. This creates a different play experience every time, as players must adapt to the changing layout of the village and the monsters that come with it. The game also includes a variety of monster types, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. Players must use strategy and teamwork to defeat these monsters and save their village.
1-4 60m⚖️ 3.0
Robinson Crusoe: Adventures on the Cursed Island
RANK #117
Robinson Crusoe: Adventures on a Cursed Island is a deeply thematic and challenging cooperative board game that casts one to four players as survivors of a shipwreck on a remote, hostile island. The primary objective is not simply to endure, but to achieve the specific goal laid out by one of the game's many distinct scenarios. These missions vary widely, from building a signal fire to escape, to lifting a terrible curse that haunts the land, or even raising a family in this new, wild home. Players must work together with precision and foresight to complete their task before the harsh environment, unforgiving events, or the relentless passage of time overwhelms them. A loss for one is a loss for all; if any character succumbs to the island's dangers, the entire team has failed. This shared fate creates a tense, high-stakes atmosphere where every decision carries significant weight for the group's survival. At its core, the game is a sophisticated worker placement experience where players must carefully allocate their limited actions each round to manage the island's threats. The game progresses through a series of structured phases, starting with an Event card that introduces unforeseen challenges or story elements. After managing morale, players gather resources from their campsite before delving into the crucial Action phase. Here, players assign their action pawns to various tasks: exploring the island to reveal new terrain, gathering vital food and wood, hunting dangerous beasts, inventing new tools and items, or improving their camp with a shelter and palisade. A standout mechanic is the risk-reward system for actions; assigning two pawns guarantees success, but assigning only one requires a dice roll that can result in success, a minor consolation, a painful injury, or an unexpected adventure that further complicates their situation. The round concludes with a Weather phase determined by dice, followed by a Night phase where survivors must eat and rest, potentially suffering wounds if their camp is inadequate. The enduring appeal of *Robinson Crusoe* lies in its masterful fusion of mechanics and narrative, creating one of the most immersive survival simulations in the board game world. Players don't just move pawns; they feel the desperation of a dwindling food supply, the triumph of a successful hunt, and the anxiety of an approaching storm. The game is celebrated for its difficulty and unforgiving nature, demanding sharp strategic planning, efficient resource management, and constant communication among players. The vast number of event cards, inventions, and scenarios ensures that no two games are ever the same, offering immense replayability. Furthermore, its robust design makes it an exceptional solo experience, allowing a single player to tackle the island's challenges alone. This combination of rich, emergent storytelling, brutal but fair challenges, and tight cooperative gameplay has cemented its status as a classic in the thematic game genre.
1-4 90m⚖️ N/A
Nemesis: Lockdown
RANK #128
Nemesis: Lockdown is a cinematic, standalone survival-horror experience set on a secret multi-level base on Mars. It is a semi-cooperative game where players, as survivors of an unknown incident, must navigate a hostile facility infested with terrifying alien organisms known as Night Stalkers. While cooperation is essential to overcome the immediate dangers of the base and its predatory inhabitants, each player holds a secret objective that may conflict with the goals of the group. To achieve victory, a player must not only survive the ordeal but also successfully complete their private mission before escaping, creating a deeply tense atmosphere where trust is a scarce and valuable resource. The gameplay unfolds through a series of rounds, each divided into a Player Phase and an Event Phase. During the Player Phase, individuals take turns performing two actions, the cost of which is paid by discarding action cards from their hand. Actions are varied and crucial, including moving through the labyrinthine base, exploring new rooms, searching for useful items, crafting equipment, and engaging in desperate combat with the aliens. A critical element is managing noise; actions can place noise markers in adjacent corridors, and a second marker in the same location triggers a deadly alien encounter. Lockdown introduces new challenges, most notably the management of the base's power, which can fail and plunge sectors into darkness, adding another layer of strategic depth and terror. The immense appeal of Nemesis: Lockdown lies in its ability to generate powerful, emergent narratives. The combination of hidden agendas, a modular board, and unpredictable event cards ensures that no two sessions are ever alike, producing unique and memorable stories of heroism, desperation, and betrayal. The core semi-cooperative mechanic is the heart of the game, forcing a delicate balance between teamwork and self-preservation. You need your crewmates to fend off the relentless alien threat, yet you can never be certain of their true intentions. This constant psychological tension, coupled with the game's rich thematic immersion, makes it a premium, high-stakes adventure for players who crave a challenging and deeply engaging tabletop experience.
1-5 120m⚖️ 4.2
Vantage
RANK #223
In Vantage, players take on the roles of explorers who have survived a crash landing on a mysterious, uncharted planet. This is a cooperative, narrative-driven game of adventure where survival depends on teamwork, intuition, and a willingness to face the unknown. The primary goal is to navigate and understand this new world together, but victory can be achieved in multiple ways. The group might succeed by completing a challenging shared mission, or an individual player could achieve a personal destiny hidden from the others. For the ultimate triumph, a team can strive for an epic victory by accomplishing both their collective and private objectives in a single, memorable session. Each game is a complete, standalone story; while players' knowledge of the world will grow with each playthrough, there are no persistent campaign elements, making every game a fresh expedition. The gameplay of Vantage is built around a truly unique core mechanic that emphasizes a first-person perspective and shared storytelling. On their turn, a player can only see their current location card, forcing them to rely on the descriptions and guidance of their teammates to build a mental map of the world. The action system introduces a fascinating layer of risk and reward: players choose a basic action—such as move, look, engage, or help—without knowing the specific costs or challenges involved. Another player then reads the outcome from one of eight expansive storybooks, revealing the consequences of the chosen action. Success is determined through dice rolls, where players must strategically manage their challenge dice, mitigating negative results by placing them onto a 3x3 grid on their character and equipment cards. This creates a compelling loop of making intuitive choices, facing unexpected narrative twists, and collaboratively solving the problems that arise. Vantage's appeal lies in its massive, open world and the genuine sense of discovery it fosters. With over 400 double-sided location cards creating more than 800 interconnected places to visit and over 900 other cards to uncover, the game promises immense replayability. No two journeys will ever be the same. The innovative first-person viewpoint and the blind action-selection mechanic create a tense and immersive experience that is different from typical exploration games. It's not just about moving a pawn on a map; it's about communicating effectively, trusting your teammates, and making gut decisions that have real, story-altering consequences. Designed by Jamey Stegmaier, the game skillfully balances accessible rules with deep strategic choices, offering a rich, thematic adventure that is both a compelling puzzle and an unforgettable story you create together.
1-6 150m⚖️ 3.3
Legendary: A Marvel Deck Building Game
RANK #280
Legendary: A Marvel Deck Building Game is a prominent entry in the deck-building genre that brings the Marvel Universe to life on the tabletop. In this experience, players take on the role of SHIELD commanders tasked with assembling a powerful team of iconic heroes to thwart the nefarious plans of a Mastermind. The central goal is collective survival; players must work together to defeat the primary villain four times before they can complete a specific, game-altering Scheme. Unlike traditional deck builders where you simply compete for the highest score, Legendary introduces a looming threat that can cause everyone to lose if the city falls into chaos or the villain's plot reaches its conclusion. The game utilizes a modular setup, meaning no two sessions are exactly alike. Players select a specific Mastermind like Magneto or Dr. Doom, a Scheme that sets the rules for the villain's victory, and a curated pool of hero decks. The core loop involves a Villain Phase, where enemies advance through a five-space city track, followed by a Hero Phase. Players start with basic SHIELD agents and must strategically recruit more powerful cards using Recruit Points or strike down foes using Attack Points. Managing these two distinct resources is vital, as players navigate the Headquarters (HQ) to draft synergies between characters like the Avengers and the X-Men. Successfully defeating villains and saving bystanders adds to a player's personal victory pile, which serves a dual purpose: it measures individual contribution while the team strives for a shared victory. What makes Legendary stand out is its semi-cooperative nature. While the primary objective is to stop the Mastermind, the game crowns a single 'most legendary hero' based on the victory points accumulated during play. This creates a fascinating tension between helping the group and optimizing one's own deck for maximum point gain. The highly thematic integration of the Marvel license, featuring comic-accurate artwork and mechanics that reflect hero powers, ensures a high level of immersion. With its vast array of modular combinations and the threat of a board that evolves every turn, the game offers immense replayability. It strikes a balance between being accessible enough for casual fans while offering the strategic depth required to keep seasoned gamers engaged.
1-5 45m⚖️ 2.4
Zombicide: Black Plague
RANK #285
Zombicide: Black Plague reboots the high-octane zombie survival genre by plunging players into a dark, medieval fantasy world. In this cooperative experience, one to six survivors must unite to fend off hordes of the undead summoned by malevolent Necromancers. Unlike its modern-day predecessors, Black Plague introduces a magical twist where steel, sorcery, and shields are the primary tools of survival. The primary objective is to complete specific mission scenarios, which range from retrieving lost artifacts to cleansing infested vaults, all while managing the ever-growing threat of the zombie apocalypse. Each player controls a unique hero, navigating through modular map tiles that represent plagued villages and sinister dungeons. The gameplay revolves around an intuitive action-point system where survivors spend points to move, attack, or scavenge for gear. As players slay zombies, they gain Adrenaline Points, which allow them to level up and unlock powerful new abilities. However, this progress comes with a catch: the game tracks the party's highest experience level, and as survivors grow stronger, the zombie spawn rates intensify through color-coded danger zones. This creates a tense balancing act where players must scale their power without overwhelming themselves with too many enemies. Unique to this edition are the Necromancers, specialized foes who attempt to escape the board while leaving permanent spawn points in their wake, and the introduction of armor saves, giving players a fighting chance against incoming damage. Fans of the series praise Black Plague for its streamlined rules and significantly improved component quality, notably the recessed plastic dashboards that keep character cards and pegs securely in place. The shift to a fantasy setting allows for creative weapon combinations, such as magic staves and heavy plate mail, providing a distinct mechanical flavor compared to modern versions. With its high-quality miniatures, tactical depth, and 'beer and pretzels' accessibility, it remains a favorite for groups seeking an epic, narrative-driven challenge. The inclusion of solo rules and a variety of challenging scenarios ensures high replayability, making it a definitive entry in the dungeon-crawl and survival-horror board game genres.
1-6 120m⚖️ 2.5
Arydia: The Paths We Dare Tread
RANK #409
Arydia: The Paths We Dare Tread invites players into a sprawling, open-world fantasy experience designed for cooperative play. In this epic role-playing board game, you and your companions embody exiles, individuals cast out from society and striving to find their way back. Your journey will be a grand campaign across the vast and mysterious lands of Arydia, a world brimming with quests to undertake, secrets to uncover, and a rich narrative to shape. The game is built upon four foundational pillars—Exploration, Progression, Combat, and Role-playing—promising a deeply immersive adventure where your choices have a tangible impact on the evolving story and the world around you. The core gameplay loop is a dynamic blend of discovery and conflict. Players begin by creating a unique hero, choosing a distinct path (class) and race, each with special abilities and represented by a beautifully pre-painted miniature. The world of Arydia is revealed through a modular map of hexagonal tiles, which are flipped as you travel to unveil everything from bustling cities to perilous wilds. During "Adventure mode," you'll interact with non-player characters, investigate points of interest, and accept quests that propel the story forward. When danger arises, the game seamlessly transitions to "Combat mode," a tactical, turn-based affair on a gridded map where teamwork is paramount to overcoming AI-controlled adversaries. What truly sets Arydia apart is its innovative "green legacy" system. This design choice offers the persistent, evolving world and unlockable content of a traditional legacy game but with a crucial difference: it's entirely resettable and replayable. Nothing is permanently destroyed, allowing you to experience the 40+ hour campaign multiple times or share the adventure with a new group. The character progression is robust, allowing you to acquire powerful new weapons, items, and skills. Combat is also noteworthy for its unique pattern-based attack system, where you must strategically target specific zones on an enemy's card, carefully navigating their armor to land effective blows. With a convenient index system for saving progress, Arydia delivers an accessible yet deeply strategic campaign for those who dare to tread its paths.
1-4 150m⚖️ 4.0
Mysterium
RANK #441
Mysterium is a cooperative board game for 2-7 players, designed by Julienne Laforce, Giovanni Lapenta, and Jeremy Holmes, published by Asmodee Editions. This game takes you on an eerie journey where one player takes on the role of a ghost trying to communicate with four psychic mediums to solve murder mysteries. The ghost's goal is to guide the psychics to reveal the correct suspects, motives, and locations before time runs out. In Mysterium, each player takes turns playing as a psychic medium, receiving visions from the ghost through a mysterious portal. These visions are represented by cards with different symbols, colors, and numbers. The players must work together to figure out what the ghost is trying to say and make decisions based on the information provided. As the game progresses, the psychics will receive new clues and piece together the mystery. However, they must do so before the time runs out, or else the murder will remain unsolved. The game requires strategic thinking, deduction, and teamwork to solve the crime. What makes Mysterium unique is its cooperative gameplay, where players work together to achieve a common goal. Each player has their own role and abilities, making each playthrough different. Additionally, the game's atmosphere and artwork are designed to evoke feelings of mystery, suspense, and fear, immersing players in an eerie world. Mysterium is perfect for fans of cooperative games, murder mysteries, and puzzle-solving. The unique gameplay mechanic and immersive atmosphere make it a standout title among modern board games. (And now, if you'll excuse me, I'll just go ahead and solve this murder mystery... or maybe not.)
2-7 60m⚖️ 3.0
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
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

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