Strategy Games
Browse all Strategy board games in the Meeple Pulse database.
Styles
AbstractAbstract StrategyAdventureAnimalsCard GameChildren's GameCivilizationCo-operativeCompetitiveDiceEconomicEducationalEuroExpansion for Base-gameFamilyFantasyFightingHistoricalHorrorMedium HeavyPartyParty GamePrint & PlayPuzzle-LikeRacingReal-timeSpace ExplorationSportsStrategyTerritory BuildingThematicWargame
Themes
AbstractAdventureAncientAnimalsArtBusinessCard GameCo-operativeComic BookCooperativeCrimeEconomicEnvironmentalismExplorationFantasyHistoricalHorrorHumorIntrigueLiteraryMagicMarvelMedievalModernMuseumMysteryMythologyNatureNauticalParty GamePoliticalPress Your LuckRacingSatireSci-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 AdditionMap MovementMarketMarket DraftingMarket ManipulationMarket MechanicMarket SpeculationMatchingMeasurement MovementMemoryMission ObjectivesModular BoardModular Board ConstructionMove Through DeckMovement PointsMovement TemplatesMulti-Use CardsMulti-use CardsMultiple ScenariosMust FollowNarrative ChoiceNarrative Choice / ParagraphNegotiationNegotiation MechanicsNetwork & Route BuildingNetwork BuildingNetwork and Route BuildingOne vs ManyOne vs. ManyOpen DraftingOwnershipPaper-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
BoxNo Cover Art
RANK #241
Horrified
2019Horrified is a cooperative board game where players work together to defend their town against the classic Universal movie monsters. The game takes place in a small town plagued by not one, but seven of the most terrifying creatures from horror history. Players must use their unique skills and abilities to defeat each monster, while also working together to protect the town's inhabitants. With its simple yet engaging gameplay, Horrified is an excellent entry-level cooperative game that appeals to both adults and children alike. The game's high replayability value comes from the different strategies required for each monster, making it a great choice for players who enjoy cooperative games with a unique twist.
The game's components are well-designed, with intricately sculpted miniatures and a beautifully illustrated board. The rules are clear and concise, making it easy to learn and play. With its short playing time of approximately 60 minutes, Horrified is an excellent choice for families or groups of friends looking for a fun and challenging game.
One of the standout features of Horrified is its ability to create a sense of urgency and tension among players. As the monsters wreak havoc on the town, players must work together to defeat them before it's too late. This creates a thrilling experience that keeps players engaged and invested in the game. Additionally, the game's theme and artwork are well-executed, immersing players in the world of classic horror movies.
Overall, Horrified is an excellent choice for anyone looking for a cooperative board game with a unique twist. Its engaging gameplay, high replayability value, and well-designed components make it a great addition to any game collection.
1-5 60m⚖️ 2.0

RANK #252
Ankh: Gods of Egypt transports players to a mythical past where the old ways are fading and the people of Egypt are beginning to favor a single, monotheistic religion. In this fiercely competitive game, 2 to 5 players take on the roles of legendary Egyptian deities like Ra, Anubis, and Isis, each struggling for dominance and survival. The ultimate goal is to become the last god standing, the sole object of worship for all of Egypt. This is achieved by accumulating Devotion, the game's victory points, which are earned through strategic control of monuments, demonstrations of power in battle, and the loyalty of your followers. As the game progresses, the stakes get higher, and gods who fall too far behind in Devotion face the ultimate threat: being forgotten by history forever.
The gameplay is driven by an elegant and highly tactical action selection system. On their turn, a player performs one or two of four possible actions—moving their figures, summoning units, gaining followers, or unlocking unique Ankh powers—and advances a corresponding marker on a shared event track. When a marker reaches the end of its path, a game-altering event is triggered for all players. These events include claiming control of powerful monuments, strategically dividing the board into new regions with camel caravans, and, most importantly, initiating Conflict. Combat is a deterministic affair, completely free of dice rolls. Players commit battle cards from their hand and sum the strength of their god and warriors in a region to determine the victor. A truly unique and dramatic feature for games with three or more players is the Merge event, where the two players with the lowest Devotion scores are forced to combine their powers, becoming a single, more powerful entity for the remainder of the game.
What makes Ankh: Gods of Egypt so compelling is its blend of pure strategy and intense player interaction. The absence of randomness in combat means every victory and defeat rests squarely on the players' shoulders, rewarding careful planning and clever card play. The shared action track creates a fascinating puzzle, as every action you take brings the game closer to an event that might benefit your opponents more than you. The game is a constant battle of wits, where you must anticipate your rivals' moves while advancing your own position. The god-merging mechanic is a brilliant twist, ensuring that no player feels completely out of the running and introducing a surprising cooperative dynamic into a cutthroat competitive game. It is a stunning conclusion to a celebrated trilogy of mythology-themed games, offering a deep, rewarding, and unforgettable strategic experience.
2-5 90m⚖️ 3.1

RANK #274
Set amidst the treacherous, sand-swept dunes of Frank Herbert's iconic universe, 'Dune: War for Arrakis' is a sprawling, deeply thematic strategy wargame that condenses a planetary conflict into an accessible, yet tactically rich experience. Serving as a spiritual successor to the acclaimed 'War of the Ring', this asymmetrical duel pits the ruthless House Harkonnen—backed by the Padishah Emperor's fierce Sardaukar—against the beleaguered House Atreides and their fierce Fremen allies. The ultimate goal depends entirely on the faction you command. The oppressive Harkonnens seek to secure an iron-fisted grip on the planet by achieving Supremacy Points, actively hunting down hidden Fremen Sietches while desperately striving to meet aggressive spice harvesting quotas. In stark contrast, the Atreides player fights a desperate guerrilla war to achieve Prescience Points, completing secret, narrative-driven objectives that echo the pivotal events of the classic novels.
At the mechanical core of this grand desert conflict lies a brilliant Action Dice system that drives every strategic decision. Each round, players roll a pool of custom, faction-specific dice that dictate the potential actions available to them, ranging from deploying legions and moving vehicles to initiating massive combat engagements and drawing powerful cards. House Harkonnen operates with overwhelming military force and aerial dominance through Carryalls and Ornithopters, but they are constantly burdened by the ticking clock of spice quotas. Failing to appease the Spacing Guild and the Imperium with adequate spice drastically reduces their future dice pool. Meanwhile, the Atreides player relies heavily on the environment, using 'Wormsign' tokens to obscure their troop movements and suddenly summoning terrifying Sandworms to swallow enemy harvesters whole. This creates a relentless cat-and-mouse dynamic where brute force meets cunning desert power.
Fans of heavy, narrative-driven strategy games have quickly fallen in love with 'Dune: War for Arrakis' because it masterfully balances thematic immersion with surprisingly streamlined mechanics. While it shares the robust DNA of its predecessors, it effectively strips away the overly burdensome rules to deliver a relentlessly paced 'dudes-on-a-map' conflict. The immense asymmetry guarantees that playing each side feels like an entirely distinct board game, offering incredibly high replay value. Whether you are leading elite legions to crush rebellions or riding the colossal makers into the heart of an Imperial stronghold, the game perfectly captures the lethal, high-stakes political warfare that defines the Dune franchise.
1-4 120m⚖️ 3.8

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

RANK #283
Western Legends
2018Western Legends is a sweeping sandbox experience that transports players into the rugged landscape of the American Old West. Unlike traditional board games with linear objectives, this title offers a sprawling open-world environment where players assume the roles of legendary historical figures like Wyatt Earp, Calamity Jane, or Billy the Kid. The primary goal is to accumulate Legendary Points (LP) through various frontier activities, ultimately carving out a lasting legacy. Whether you choose to walk the path of a righteous lawman or a notorious outlaw, the game adapts to your playstyle, allowing for a personalized journey through its dusty towns and gold-filled hills.
The gameplay loop revolves around a flexible action system where players manage three actions per turn, which can be spent on movement, mining for gold, or engaging in local town activities. One of the most distinctive features is the moral alignment system, tracking players on either the Marshal or Wanted tracks. Law-abiding citizens can earn prestige by arresting criminals, fighting bandits, or driving cattle to the railhead. Conversely, those seeking a life of crime can rob the bank, rustle cattle to the rival ranch, or challenge other players to high-stakes robberies. Conflict resolution eschews dice in favor of a specialized poker deck, where players play cards simultaneously to determine outcomes. This card-based system adds a layer of bluffing and strategic management, mirroring the tension of a real saloon showdown.
What truly distinguishes Western Legends is its immersive freedom and high player interaction. The sandbox nature ensures that no two sessions feel identical, as the board state evolves based on player decisions. Some may focus on the economic engine of gold mining and selling nuggets at the bank, while others might spend their time hunting down 'Wanted' friends to claim bounties. The inclusion of authentic historical figures adds a rich layer of flavor, grounding the mechanical systems in a recognizable period setting. It captures the essence of frontier life, blending strategic depth with cinematic storytelling, making it a favorite for those who enjoy narrative-rich experiences with a competitive edge.
2-6 90m⚖️ 2.7

RANK #293
Glory to Rome
2005Set in the aftermath of the Great Fire of Rome in 64 A.D., Glory to Rome is a masterpiece of card-driven design that tasks players with the monumental reconstruction of the empire's capital. As influential Roman patricians, players must compete to build structures, manage resources, and accumulate prestige points to emerge as the most powerful figure in the city. The game is celebrated for its dense, interconnected economy where every decision ripples through the state of the board. The ultimate objective is to earn the most Influence, which can be secured through building completion, stocking a private Vault with valuable materials, and strategic exploitation of special card abilities that can provide massive end-game scoring bonuses.
The engine of the game is its revolutionary multi-use card system. Each card in a player's hand can serve multiple functions: it can be played as a role to lead an action, used as a resource to fund construction, recruited as a client for permanent action bonuses, or placed as a building foundation. The core gameplay loop revolves around the 'Lead and Follow' mechanism. When the active player selects a role, such as the Architect to build or the Merchant to trade, opponents face a critical choice: they can follow the action by playing a matching card from their hand, or they can 'think' to replenish their hand or take a wildcard Jack. This ensures that every player remains engaged on every turn. Additionally, played cards flow into a central 'Pool,' creating a shared resource market that players must cleverly manipulate.
Glory to Rome is widely considered a 'grail game' within the hobby, largely due to its incredible depth and the high-octane synergy of its card effects. Fans admire how a single well-placed building can create powerful combos that fundamentally shift the game's momentum. The tension between using a card for its immediate action versus committing it as a long-term asset is constant and rewarding. Although it has faced distribution challenges and remains difficult to find in certain editions, its influence persists through successor games. It remains a definitive example of how complex strategy can be distilled into a single deck of cards, offering a medium-weight experience that rewards repeat plays and deep tactical familiarity.
2-5 60m⚖️ 2.9

RANK #294
Tapestry
2019Tapestry is a civilization-building board game that breaks away from traditional historical simulations by offering a colorful, anachronistic approach to human development. Designed by Jamey Stegmaier, the game challenges players to guide a unique culture from the earliest days of discovery into the technological wonders of the near future. The primary goal is to accumulate the most victory points by advancing on four core tracks: Science, Technology, Exploration, and Military. Unlike typical '4X' games that focus heavily on combat, Tapestry emphasizes a strategic optimization puzzle where players craft their own narrative through cards and landmarks within their growing capital city.
The heart of the experience lies in a streamlined decision-making process. On every turn, a player chooses between an Advancement turn or an Income turn. Advancement involves spending resources to climb one of the four tracks, each providing immediate rewards, permanent upgrades, and powerful landmark miniatures. When resources run dry, players take an Income turn to transition into a new era. This phase allows them to collect income based on their current progress, play a Tapestry card that defines their civilization's special abilities for that era, and upgrade technology. This asymmetric structure is further enhanced by sixteen distinct civilization mats, each granting game-changing powers that require players to pivot their strategies constantly.
What truly sets Tapestry apart is its high production value and the 'simple rules, deep strategy' philosophy. The game features 18 prepainted landmark miniatures that players place on their Capital City grids to complete 3x3 districts, adding a tactile tile-laying element. Because players take exactly five income turns throughout the session, the pacing varies significantly between participants. One player might conclude their journey early while others are still in their fourth era, creating a unique tension in resource efficiency. It is a medium-weight engine-building experience that rewards long-term planning while remaining accessible to many due to its concise rulebook, offering high replayability through variable setups and asymmetric components.
1-5 105m⚖️ 2.9

RANK #296
Roll Player
2016Roll Player is a creative board game that turns the classic tabletop RPG character creation process into a full competitive experience. Instead of embarking on a dungeon crawl, players are focused entirely on the preparation stage—building the most powerful and well-rounded fantasy hero possible. Set in the world of Ulos, each player takes on the role of a character with a specific race, class, and backstory. The primary objective is to earn the most Reputation Stars by the end of the game, which are awarded for meeting attribute requirements, fulfilling backstory goals, aligning your character's morality, and gathering powerful gear from the local market.
The gameplay revolves around a central dice-drafting mechanic spanning several rounds. Each round, dice are rolled and placed on initiative cards. Players take turns selecting a die to place on their character sheet in specific attribute rows like Strength, Intelligence, or Charisma. Each placement triggers a unique attribute action, allowing players to manipulate their dice by flipping them to opposite sides, re-rolling them, or swapping positions. This creates a deep, puzzle-like environment where players must carefully manage their resources and dice values. After the drafting phase, players visit the market to spend gold on skills, traits, and armor sets, all of which provide additional ways to score points or gain tactical advantages during future rounds.
What makes Roll Player so beloved is its ingenious 'gamification' of a meta-concept. It captures the nostalgic joy of rolling stats for a Dungeons & Dragons character while providing a rigorous strategic framework. The tension between picking the 'perfect' die for your stats versus picking an earlier initiative card to get the best equipment in the market makes for a compelling decision space. It is a highly satisfying optimization puzzle that feels thematic and rewarding, especially as you see your hero come together from a blank slate to a fully equipped champion. With a moderate complexity level, it is accessible enough for casual gamers while offering enough depth for strategy enthusiasts.
1-4 75m⚖️ 2.4

RANK #305
Aeon's End: The New Age is a standalone cooperative deck-building experience that invites players into the final bastion of humanity, Gravehold. As Breach Mages, participants must defend their home against the relentless assault of the Nameless—monstrous entities from another dimension. This entry in the series serves as a perfect jumping-off point for newcomers while offering a wealth of content for long-time fans. The primary objective is to deplete the health of the Nemesis before they overrun the city or exhaust the mages' collective life force. Unlike traditional deck-builders, this title introduces a narrative campaign that evolves with every victory and defeat.
The gameplay's core revolves around the ingenious 'no-shuffling' mechanic. When your deck is empty, you simply flip the discard pile over, meaning the order in which you play and discard your cards determines your future draw sequences. This adds a deep layer of tactical planning, allowing mages to set up devastating combos by timing their card acquisitions and plays. The New Age introduces the 'Expedition System', a semi-legacy format where players progress through four connected battles. Between matches, you unlock 'Treasures'—powerful artifacts that enhance your mage's unique abilities—and manage the 'Barracks' to customize your market. New keywords like 'Echo', which permits spells to be cast twice, and 'Attach', which upgrades breaches with permanent perks, further deepen the strategic complexity.
What truly sets this expansion apart is its modularity and tension. The 'Variable Turn Order' deck ensures that players never know exactly when the Nemesis will strike, preventing the 'alpha gamer' problem often found in co-ops. The Expedition system isn't just a story; it's a hub that allows players to integrate content from any other Aeon's End box, creating a custom, high-stakes campaign using a massive library of mages and enemies. This creates near-infinite replayability. Fans adore the game for its punishing but fair difficulty, the high-quality narrative envelopes that reveal new content organically, and the satisfying feeling of building a perfectly tuned engine that can take down a god-like foe.
1-4 75m⚖️ 3.0

RANK #343
Cloudspire
2019Cloudspire delivers a groundbreaking tabletop experience by expertly translating the high-stakes action of a Multiplayer Online Battle Arena (MOBA) and the strategic foresight of a tower defense game into a physical format. Set in the fantastical floating realm of Ankar, players assume command of one of four highly unique and asymmetrical factions, each with its own distinct units, heroes, and strategies. The primary objective is a direct and uncompromising assault on your opponents' fortresses. Victory is a matter of tactical supremacy, achieved by methodically dismantling enemy defenses and ultimately razing their stronghold to the ground while ensuring your own fortress withstands the relentless onslaught. It’s a game of calculated aggression and stalwart defense where only the most cunning leader will prevail.
The game unfolds over four intense rounds, known as waves, each governed by a structured sequence of phases that guides the flow of battle. The action begins with an Event phase, which can introduce unexpected twists to the current wave. Following this, players gain their primary resource, 'Source', during the Income phase. This resource is then spent in the Market and Build phases to purchase new units and spires, upgrade existing defenses, and enhance their fortress's capabilities. In the Prep phase, players commit their forces, spending Command Points to deploy minions and powerful heroes onto the modular hex-grid game board. The climax of each wave is the Onslaught phase, where units automatically advance along the map, engaging any foes they encounter. Heroes, however, offer a layer of direct control, allowing players to make critical tactical decisions in the heat of battle.
Cloudspire is celebrated for its immense strategic depth and exceptional production quality, a hallmark of its publisher, Chip Theory Games. The game's appeal lies in its successful fusion of genres, creating a puzzle that is both tactically demanding and immensely rewarding. The asymmetry of the factions guarantees a high degree of replayability, as mastering one faction feels entirely different from commanding another. This is further enhanced by the game's robust support for multiple play styles, offering meticulously designed rulesets for solo, cooperative, and fiercely competitive player-versus-player engagements. For players who crave a complex, component-rich wargame with high player interaction and a fresh take on established video game concepts, Cloudspire stands as a monumental achievement in modern board game design.
1-4 120m⚖️ 4.4

RANK #1,267
Star Wars: Legion catapults players onto the iconic battlefields of the galaxy, offering a deeply tactical miniatures wargame focused on infantry-level combat. In this game, you take on the role of a battlefield commander, assembling and leading an army from one of the saga's legendary factions, such as the Galactic Empire or the Rebel Alliance. Using a point-buy system, you customize your forces from the ground up, selecting everything from squads of humble Stormtroopers and fleets of nimble speeder bikes to powerful heroes like Darth Vader and towering vehicles like the AT-ST. The objective isn't merely to annihilate your opponent; victory is achieved through a combination of controlling key objectives, completing mission-specific goals, and outmaneuvering the enemy across a six-round engagement.
The gameplay is defined by a unique and compelling command and activation system that simulates the fog of war. Each round begins with a Command Phase, where players secretly select a command card from their hand. These cards determine not only who gets initiative for the round but also how many specific units can be issued direct orders. During the subsequent Activation Phase, players alternate activating a single unit. The twist is that a player must either choose a unit that previously received an order or draw a random token from their order pool. This chit-pull mechanic creates constant tactical tension, as you can never be entirely certain when a crucial unit will get to act unless you've planned for it with your command card. When a unit does activate, it can perform actions like moving with unique jointed tools, attacking with custom dice, or taking aim to improve its odds. Combat is swift, but is layered with strategic depth through cover, weapon keywords, and a brilliant suppression mechanic.
What makes Star Wars: Legion a standout experience is how it masterfully blends accessible wargaming mechanics with the rich, cinematic flavor of its source material. The suppression system is a highlight, where troopers who come under fire become less effective and risk panicking, perfectly capturing the feeling of being pinned down by blaster fire. The game's emphasis on list-building and customization provides immense replayability, encouraging players to experiment with different unit compositions and upgrade loadouts. For hobbyists, the high-quality, unassembled miniatures offer a fantastic canvas for painting and personalization, allowing you to bring your own version of the Star Wars galaxy to life. It strikes a perfect balance, offering the strategic depth to satisfy veteran wargamers while remaining streamlined enough to serve as an excellent gateway into the miniatures hobby.
2 180m⚖️ 3.2

RANK #2,015
Marvel: Crisis Protocol is a dynamic tabletop miniatures game where two players assemble, paint, and battle with teams of iconic characters from the Marvel Universe. More than just a fight to the finish, the game is an objective-based contest where strategy and positioning are paramount. Players take on the role of leaders, guiding their hand-picked squad of heroes and villains through a unique crisis scenario. The ultimate goal is to be the first to accumulate 16 Victory Points by controlling key locations on the battlefield and securing valuable assets, all while unleashing spectacular superpowers. Each game presents a new tactical puzzle, demanding players to adapt their strategy to the ever-changing state of the conflict and the unique combination of objectives in play.
Gameplay is defined by its innovative roster-building and scenario-generation systems. Before the game, each player creates a roster of ten characters, from which they will select their squad for the specific mission. The mission itself is determined by combining a "Secure" Crisis card, which dictates objective zones to control, with an "Extraction" Crisis card, which involves characters grabbing and holding objective tokens. This combination sets a "Threat Level" that limits which characters a player can field, ensuring balanced and varied matchups. During a round, players alternate activating one character, who can perform two actions like moving, attacking, or using a special ability. A core mechanic is the "Power" resource. Characters gain Power when they take damage, creating a thrilling ebb and flow where a hero on the ropes can power up for a devastating counter-attack, spending that energy to unleash their most famous and powerful abilities.
The game's immense appeal lies in its fusion of accessible rules with deep tactical gameplay, making it an excellent gateway into the miniatures hobby. While the core mechanics are straightforward, mastering character synergies, managing the Power economy, and utilizing the highly interactive terrain provides a rich strategic experience. The environment itself is a weapon; characters with superhuman strength can hurl cars, dumpsters, and newsstands at their opponents, creating cinematic moments straight from the comics. The high-quality miniatures are a hobbyist's delight, offering fantastic canvases for painting. Above all, Crisis Protocol excels at capturing the feel of a superhero battle, delivering a thematic, action-packed experience that is visually stunning and endlessly replayable thanks to its modular scenario system and ever-expanding roster of characters.
2 90m⚖️ 2.9