MeeplePulse

Animals Games

Browse all Animals board games in the Meeple Pulse database.

Ark Nova
RANK #2
Embark on a thrilling adventure with Ark Nova, a strategic board game designed for 1-4 players. This immersive experience typically lasts around 120 minutes, offering a rich and engaging gameplay session. Players take on the role of zoo administrators, tasked with building and managing their own zoos while competing to attract visitors and earn prestige points. The game features a unique blend of hand management, tile placement, variable player powers, action programming, and set collection mechanics, providing a challenging and rewarding experience for players of all skill levels. As you navigate the complexities of zoo management, you'll need to balance resource allocation, exhibit design, and animal care while also navigating the cutthroat world of zoo politics. With its engaging theme, intricate gameplay, and high replayability, Ark Nova is an excellent choice for fans of strategic board games looking for a new challenge.
1-4 120m⚖️ 3.8
Harmonies
RANK #57
In Harmonies, players take on the role of nature spirits, tasked with creating vibrant and flourishing ecosystems. This visually stunning game invites you to craft a personal landscape, a miniature world filled with mountains, forests, rivers, and fields. The ultimate goal is to build habitats that are so inviting and well-balanced that they attract a diverse array of animal species. By carefully arranging natural elements into specific patterns, you earn victory points for the wildlife you successfully house. The player who creates the most harmonious and populous environment, demonstrating a deep connection to the natural world, will be declared the winner. It's a game of poetic construction and gentle strategy, where every piece placed contributes to a beautiful, three-dimensional diorama on your player board. The gameplay loop is elegant and intuitive, centered around an open drafting mechanic. On your turn, you will select a group of three element tokens from a central market. These tokens represent different terrain types—water, trees, mountains, fields, and buildings. You must then place all three of these tokens onto your personal hexagonal grid. A key innovation in Harmonies is its verticality; tokens can be stacked on top of one another to create 3D features. For example, placing a green token on a brown one forms a tree, while stacking grey tokens creates towering mountain ranges. This adds a unique spatial puzzle to the tile-laying. In addition to placing tokens, you can claim animal cards from a shared display. Each card shows a specific habitat pattern required by that species. Once you successfully replicate that pattern on your board, you can place an animal cube onto your creation, scoring points and completing the card. Harmonies has captured the hearts of players with its serene theme and engaging, puzzle-like gameplay. The act of building a tangible, 3D landscape is deeply satisfying, offering a strong sense of creation and accomplishment. While the rules are straightforward enough for families and newcomers to learn quickly, the game reveals layers of strategic depth. The decision of which tokens to draft and where to place them to optimally fulfill multiple animal cards at once presents a constant, rewarding challenge. The game also boasts significant replayability, thanks to a solo mode for individual play and an expert variant that introduces "Nature's Spirit" cards, which provide unique end-game scoring objectives. This blend of accessibility, strategic nuance, and beautiful production makes Harmonies a standout title for anyone who enjoys clever pattern-building and creating something beautiful on the tabletop.
1-4 45m⚖️ 1.9
Cascadia
RANK #59
Welcome to the vibrant wilderness of the Pacific Northwest! Cascadia is an award-winning puzzle game that invites players to build their own thriving ecosystems. In this beautifully illustrated game, your goal is to create the most harmonious environment by carefully selecting and placing habitat tiles and populating them with native wildlife. You'll compete to build the largest contiguous areas of different terrains—forests, prairies, wetlands, mountains, and rivers—while also strategically placing wildlife tokens to satisfy unique scoring conditions. Success requires a keen eye for patterns and a bit of foresight, as you balance the dual objectives of expanding your habitats and fulfilling the specific needs of the animals that call them home. The player who creates the most balanced and synergistic environment, scoring points for both land and fauna, will be declared the winner. The gameplay in Cascadia is elegant and accessible, centered around a simple yet engaging turn structure. On your turn, you must choose one of the four available pairs, each consisting of a hexagonal habitat tile and a wooden wildlife token. This core choice presents a compelling dual-layered puzzle. You must decide where to place the new habitat tile to expand your personal landscape, aiming to create large, unbroken corridors of matching terrain types. Simultaneously, you must place the accompanying animal token—be it a bear, elk, salmon, hawk, or fox—onto a suitable tile in your environment. Each of the five animal species scores points based on a specific scoring card drawn at the beginning of the game, introducing significant variability. Bears might want to be in pairs, while hawks prefer to be solitary. To add a layer of tactical flexibility, players can spend 'nature tokens' to break the pairing rule, allowing them to choose any tile and any token from the display, opening up crucial strategic opportunities. Cascadia has captured the hearts of players worldwide due to its perfect blend of simplicity and strategic depth. It serves as an excellent 'gateway' game, with rules that can be taught in minutes, making it approachable for families and new gamers. However, the shifting puzzle of the tile display and the variable scoring objectives for the wildlife provide a satisfying challenge for even seasoned strategists. The game's replayability is immense; with multiple scoring cards for each animal, no two games ever feel quite the same. This variability, combined with the tactile pleasure of placing the chunky tiles and wooden tokens, creates a deeply rewarding experience. The serene and beautiful artwork by Beth Sobel further elevates the game, immersing players in the tranquil beauty of the natural world it represents. It's a peaceful yet competitive puzzle that rewards clever planning and adaptability.
1-4 45m⚖️ 1.9
Caverna: The Cave Farmers
RANK #62
In "Caverna: The Cave Farmers," players step into the sturdy boots of a small dwarf family carving out a living within a mountain. As a spiritual successor to the designer's acclaimed game *Agricola*, Caverna expands upon the core worker-placement formula with a greater sense of freedom and discovery. Your goal is to develop the most prosperous homestead over twelve rounds of play. This is measured in victory points, awarded for the size of your family, the livestock you've raised, the crops you've harvested, precious gems you've mined, and the unique furnishings you've installed in your ever-expanding cave network. Success requires a delicate balance between cultivating the forest on one side of your player board and excavating the mountain on the other, transforming a humble hovel into a thriving underground domain. The game's engine is driven by a classic worker-placement mechanism. Each round, players take turns placing their dwarf tokens on a central board of action spaces. These actions allow you to gather essential resources like wood and stone, dig new tunnels and caverns in your mountain, or clear forests to create fields and pastures. As the game progresses, new and more powerful action spaces become available, escalating the strategic possibilities. Notable mechanics include raising a variety of animals—sheep, donkeys, boars, and cattle—which breed during harvest phases, and forging ore into weapons. These weapons equip your dwarves for expeditions, a key feature where they venture forth to gain a diverse range of resources and even new board components, offering an alternative path to prosperity away from the competitive main action spaces. Throughout this, you must also manage your food supply to feed your growing family at the end of key rounds, a central puzzle that demands foresight and efficient planning. "Caverna: The Cave Farmers" is beloved for its 'sandbox' nature, offering a vast and less restrictive strategic landscape compared to its predecessors. While the pressure to feed your family remains, the options for generating food and victory points are abundant, empowering players to pursue many different viable strategies. This freedom makes each game feel like a unique puzzle. Players can become master farmers, expert miners who outfit their caves with dozens of unique furnishing tiles for powerful bonuses, or intrepid adventurers who rely on expeditions for their wealth. The sheer variety of room tiles and strategic paths ensures immense replayability, inviting players back to explore new ways to build their perfect dwarven home. It is a deeply rewarding, medium-to-heavyweight experience for gamers who relish complex engine-building and optimizing their own personal tableau.
1-7 120m⚖️ 3.8
Dominant Species
RANK #112
Dominant Species transports players back in time to a world on the verge of a great ice age. In this highly strategic and competitive game, 2 to 6 players each assume control of a major animal class—such as Mammals, Reptiles, or Insects—vying for supremacy. The ultimate goal is to accumulate the most victory points by adapting, propagating, and migrating across a dynamically changing landscape. Survival is a constant struggle as the environment grows colder and resources become scarce. Players must carefully manage their species' evolution and expansion to ensure they are the ones who thrive while others face extinction, ultimately earning the title of the planet's dominant species before the final chill of the ice age sets in. The game's core is driven by a powerful blend of worker placement and area control mechanics. Each round is divided into phases, beginning with players placing their action pawns on a central board to claim specific actions for the round. These actions are then resolved in a set order, creating a tense puzzle of timing and priority. Players can perform a wide range of actions, from adding new species cubes to the board (Speciation) and moving them across the hexagonal tiles (Migration), to expanding the world itself by adding new terrain (Wanderlust). Crucially, players can also trigger Glaciation to introduce new tundra tiles, which alters the map and can eliminate rivals. A key strategic element is the concept of 'dominance' over a tile, which is not simply about having the most cubes, but about how well-adapted your species is to the food sources present. Achieving dominance allows a player to use powerful, game-changing cards, adding another layer of strategic consideration beyond mere numbers. What makes "Dominant Species" a revered classic among strategy gamers is its immense depth and high degree of player interaction. It is an unapologetically heavy game that rewards long-term planning and clever tactical adjustments. Every decision is meaningful, and the actions of one player can dramatically impact the fortunes of others, leading to a dynamic and often cutthroat experience. The game masterfully integrates its theme of evolutionary struggle into every mechanic; the tension between growing your population and adapting to the changing environment feels authentic and compelling. It's a long, epic journey that creates a memorable narrative of survival, conflict, and adaptation with every playthrough. For those who relish a substantial, thinky challenge with direct competition, "Dominant Species" offers an unparalleled and deeply rewarding strategic experience.
2-6 180m⚖️ 4.0
Calico
RANK #265

Calico

2020
In Calico, players step into the cozy world of competitive quilting, tasked with creating the most beautiful and comfortable patchwork quilt to attract the cuddliest cats. This is a puzzly tile-laying game where players strategically place hexagonal fabric patches onto their personal game boards. The ultimate goal is to craft a quilt that is not only visually appealing but also meets a variety of scoring objectives. Success is measured by accumulating the most victory points from fulfilling specific design goals, sewing on buttons, and, most importantly, luring feline friends onto your finished creation. The game masterfully combines its charming, gentle theme with surprisingly deep abstract strategy, creating a challenge that is both relaxing and intellectually stimulating. The gameplay loop is elegant and straightforward. On their turn, a player chooses one of two patch tiles from their hand, places it onto any empty space on their quilt board, and then drafts a replacement tile from a central, face-up market. This simple sequence of actions belies the game's strategic depth. Points are accrued through three distinct avenues. By stitching together groups of three or more tiles of the same color, players earn a matching button worth points. By arranging patches to form specific patterns dictated by the 'cat scoring' tiles for that game, players can attract a cat token, which provides a significant point bonus. Finally, each player's board features three pre-printed design goal tiles, which score points if the six surrounding hexagons are filled with tiles that meet certain criteria, such as having three pairs of different patterns or containing no repeating colors. The remarkable appeal of Calico lies in its ability to be both a serene, meditative puzzle and a fiercely competitive brain-burner. The gorgeous, gentle artwork by Beth Sobel draws players in, but the tight decision-making keeps them engaged. Every tile placement is a meaningful choice with cascading consequences, forcing players to constantly evaluate trade-offs between short-term gains and long-term plans. Should you place a tile to complete a button group, work towards attracting a cat, or fulfill a difficult design goal? The limited tile market and the actions of your opponents add a layer of tension and indirect interaction, making every game a unique puzzle to solve. This perfect blend of accessibility and depth has cemented Calico's status as a modern classic, beloved by families and seasoned strategists alike.
1-4 45m⚖️ 2.2
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
Wispwood
RANK #3,418
Wispwood invites players into a luminous, enchanted woodland where the primary objective is to harness the ethereal glow of magical wisps to guide a wandering cat through the shadows. In this visually striking experience, players act as tenders of the forest, strategically placing light sources to illuminate the dense foliage and create paths that appeal to the feline's natural curiosity. The game strikes a delicate balance between a peaceful, thematic journey and a calculated spatial puzzle. As the forest floor becomes a canvas of color and light, every tile placed serves the dual purpose of expanding the illuminated reaches of the woods and securing the favor of the elusive forest inhabitant. The overarching goal is not just to build a beautiful landscape, but to optimize the placement of these glowing elements to maximize influence over the game's final scoring conditions. The core gameplay revolves around a drafting board featuring eight distinct positions, each offering a combination of face-up wisp tiles and specific polyomino shapes that range from two to four blocks in size. Over the course of three distinct rounds, players must carefully select their pieces to build out their personal forest tableau. The mechanic of tile-laying is elevated by the presence of conditional scoring elements that change based on goal cards, ensuring that no two sessions feel the same. Between rounds, the forest undergoes a phase of transformation where it fades and expands, forcing players to adapt their long-term strategies to the shifting landscape while maintaining the wisps they have already established. This evolution adds a layer of depth to the drafting process, as players must consider not just the immediate utility of a shape, but how it will interact with future expansions and the ever-changing requirements of the forest's magic. What truly distinguishes Wispwood from other polyomino-based games is its blend of accessible drafting and surprisingly intricate scoring logic. While the act of placing colorful shapes is intuitive, the high volume of conditional bonuses requires players to maintain a sharp focus on efficiency and spatial planning. The game's appeal lies in its puzzle-like nature, where every decision carries weight, yet the theme remains light and enchanting. Enthusiasts of the genre will appreciate the solo-friendly design and the tactical flexibility required to navigate the drafting board's eight spots. Whether you are navigating solo challenges or competing in a four-player group, the game offers a satisfying progression as your forest grows from a few scattered lights into a radiant, interconnected ecosystem. With its quick playtime and high replayability, it serves as an excellent mid-weight title that rewards both casual play and more intense, analytical approaches to tile optimization.
1-4 45m⚖️ 2.2
Tembo: Survival on the Savanna
RANK #13,724
"Tembo: Survival on the Savanna" invites players to embark on a cooperative journey of immense challenge and strategic depth. In this game, you don't compete against each other but work together as a unified team, guiding a majestic herd of elephants across the perilous African savanna. The ultimate goal is to navigate this vulnerable group through a series of key landmarks, ensuring they find adequate food and water, before reaching a final, safe destination. Success is a collective triumph, but failure is an ever-present threat. The herd's journey can be cut short if they are caught by the relentless lions that stalk the plains, if they run out of time as indicated by the dwindling draw deck, or if they succumb to starvation. This shared objective fosters a rich environment of communication and collaborative problem-solving, making every decision a critical one for the entire group. The gameplay is driven by a clever and restrictive card-playing system that forms the core of its puzzle. On your turn, you will draw a card and face a simple but profound choice: use the card to expand the savanna, laying down a new piece of terrain for the herd to cross, or use it to add more elephants to your path, extending the line of your migrating herd. This seemingly straightforward decision is complicated by a significant constraint: cards often have a fixed orientation determined by each player's seating position around the table. You cannot simply rotate a piece to fit the perfect spot. This rule transforms the game from a simple tile-laying exercise into a complex spatial puzzle that demands constant discussion, foresight, and adaptive planning among all players to overcome the environmental challenges presented on the board. The unique appeal of "Tembo" lies in this compelling fusion of accessible, family-friendly rules with a genuinely challenging cooperative puzzle. The restriction on card orientation is a masterstroke of design, forcing players to think from different perspectives and communicate their intentions clearly to forge a viable path forward. This core mechanic ensures that no two games feel exactly alike. Further enhancing its longevity, the game includes options for scaling difficulty to match the players' experience level, a thoughtfully designed solo mode for individual play, and an engaging campaign mode that weaves a longer narrative across multiple sessions. Combined with the evocative and beautiful artwork from celebrated artist Vincent Dutrait, "Tembo" promises a deeply thematic and highly replayable experience for gamers seeking a strategic and heartfelt cooperative adventure.
1-4 45m⚖️ 2.3
Keystone: North America – Second Edition
RANK #15,813
Keystone: North America – Second Edition invites players to step into the professional boots of a dedicated wildlife biologist, tasking them with the restoration and preservation of vibrant, interconnected ecosystems across the North American continent. The primary objective is to strategically arrange diverse species cards within a personal player grid to simulate a flourishing and stable natural habitat. Players must carefully balance the specific requirements of various flora and fauna, ensuring that their biological selections provide the necessary synergies to create a resilient environment. Whether you are competing head-to-head against a rival researcher or tackling the unique challenges of the wilderness in a solo capacity, the ultimate goal remains to generate the highest conservation score by fostering high levels of biodiversity and protecting essential keystone species. The gameplay experience centers on a refined and engaging blend of open drafting and tile-placement mechanics. During each turn, players must select species cards from a common central market, weighing the specific habitat requirements and biological classifications of the animals they wish to introduce to their board. These cards are then placed onto a square grid, where their spatial relationship to neighboring cards becomes critical for scoring. Points are predominantly awarded based on color-coded habitat chains and numerical sequences, rewarding players who can visualize complex ecological patterns several turns in advance. The inclusion of special 'Keystone' animals provides powerful scoring bonuses but requires sophisticated planning to integrate effectively, making every placement a meaningful puzzle of tactical ecological balance. What truly distinguishes this second edition is its impressive versatility and the depth of its thematic immersion. The game features a robust solo and cooperative narrative campaign through the 'Field Journal,' a fully illustrated adventure book that leads players through twenty unique scenarios across diverse North American climates. This edition has been specifically streamlined to provide a premium experience for one to two players while maintaining the 'brain-burning' strategic depth that enthusiasts of the original version celebrated. Featuring stunning, scientifically-inspired artwork from a talented team of illustrators, the game serves as both a challenging tactical exercise and a poignant tribute to the importance of conservation biology. Its elegant combination of beginner-friendly rules and rewarding strategic complexity makes it a definitive title for nature lovers and board game veterans alike.
1-2 45m⚖️ 2.0
Earth Express
Earth Express offers a vibrant, fast-paced journey into the world of nature, distilling the critically acclaimed engine-building experience of its predecessor, *Earth*, into a highly condensed and accessible format. In this standalone game, players compete to cultivate the most synergistic and valuable ecosystem. The goal is to strategically draft and place cards representing diverse flora, fauna, and terrains into a personal 3x3 grid. Victory is achieved by accumulating points from the intrinsic value of these cards, the resources they generate, and by successfully completing a mix of randomly drawn public objectives and secret private ecosystem goals. Whether you're creating a perfect habitat for a Bald Eagle or arranging columns of matching colors, every choice contributes to your final score in this beautifully illustrated race to build the best patch of wilderness. The gameplay is elegantly structured over five distinct rounds, driven by a simultaneous card-drafting mechanic that eliminates downtime and keeps the pace brisk. Each player begins the first four rounds by selecting two cards from their hand to play, then passing the remainder to a neighbor. The final round concludes with a single card draft, completing each player's nine-card tableau. A signature mechanical twist is the concept of 'spatial locking'; once a card is placed into the 3x3 grid, its position is permanent, demanding careful forethought. After placement, engines activate in a cascading sequence from top-left to bottom-right, generating key resources like Soil, Seeds, and Growth. The game also introduces a clever component solution with slotted grid markers for tracking 'Sprouts', ensuring that the stunning card artwork remains unobscured throughout play. What makes Earth Express so appealing is its remarkable ability to provide a deeply satisfying strategic puzzle in a session that can last as little as 20 minutes. The simultaneous action selection allows the game to scale effortlessly from a solo challenge up to eight players without increasing the playtime, making it an incredibly versatile choice for any game night. By constraining the play area to a fixed grid and locking card positions, the design cleverly mitigates the analysis paralysis often found in larger tableau-builders. This creates a snappy, engaging, and approachable experience that's perfect as a 'filler' game for serious hobbyists or a main event for more casual players. It successfully captures the spirit of its bigger sibling while carving out its own identity as a quick, replayable, and rewarding engine-building game.
1-8 30m⚖️ 2.1