MeeplePulse

Co-operative Games

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

Pandemic Legacy: Season 1
RANK #3
Embark on an unparalleled cooperative board game journey with Pandemic Legacy: Season 1, released in 2015, where your every decision permanently reshapes the world. As members of an elite disease-fighting team, you'll face an evolving global pandemic over a thrilling, persistent campaign, experiencing dramatic twists and turns that make each playthrough utterly unique. This groundbreaking legacy game challenges players with difficult ethical choices, dynamic rule changes, and an unfolding narrative, ensuring an unforgettable strategic experience unlike any other tabletop adventure.
m⚖️ N/A
Arkham Horror: The Card Game
RANK #32
In Arkham Horror: The Card Game, you take on the role of investigators trying to uncover the mysteries and horrors lurking in the shadows of Arkham. As you delve deeper into the mysteries, you'll encounter terrifying creatures and try to survive long enough to save the world from an impending doom. This cooperative card game challenges you to make tough decisions and manage your resources carefully as you navigate the dangers of the Cthulhu Mythos.
1-4 30m⚖️ 3.5
BoxNo Cover Art
RANK #74
Mansions of Madness: Second Edition is a cooperative board game designed for 1-5 players, where each player takes on the role of an investigator tasked with uncovering mysteries and battling against the forces of darkness in the 1920s. The game is set in the Arkham Horror universe, which is known for its Lovecraftian themes and eerie atmosphere. Players work together to explore locations, gather clues, and solve puzzles while navigating the challenges posed by the game's complex rules and mechanics. The gameplay experience is divided into two main phases: exploration and combat. During the exploration phase, players move their investigators around the board, visiting various locations such as mansions, cemeteries, and libraries. Each location has its own set of challenges and rewards, which are determined by a deck of cards that represents the game's narrative. Players can also draw event cards, which may provide benefits or penalties to their progress. The combat phase is where the game's tension builds up. When an investigator encounters a monster or other hostile entity, they must engage in combat using a combination of dice rolls and card play. The outcome of these battles depends on the player's skills, equipment, and luck. If an investigator falls in battle, they are removed from the game, which adds to the sense of urgency and danger. One of the unique features of Mansions of Madness: Second Edition is its modular board design. The game comes with a set of interlocking tiles that can be arranged differently each time it's played, creating a new map for the investigators to explore. This feature allows for high replayability and adds to the game's overall sense of mystery and discovery. The game also includes a range of miniatures and tokens that represent the investigators' equipment and abilities. These components add a tactile element to the gameplay experience and help players visualize their progress and challenges.
1-5 60m⚖️ 4.0
Arkham Horror: The Card Game (Revised Core Set)
RANK #109
Arkham Horror: The Card Game is a cooperative Living Card Game that plunges one to four players into the eerie, Lovecraftian world of the 1920s. Assuming the roles of unique investigators in Arkham, Massachusetts, players work together to unravel sinister conspiracies, confront otherworldly beings, and prevent ancient evils from devouring the world. Each investigator comes with their own strengths, weaknesses, and customizable deck of cards representing their assets, skills, and resources. The goal is to successfully navigate a series of interconnected narrative scenarios, forming a larger campaign where choices and outcomes in one chapter have lasting consequences on the next. This Revised Core Set provides the definitive entry point, containing everything needed for a full group of four to begin their harrowing adventures right out of the box. The gameplay unfolds over a series of rounds, each composed of four distinct phases that create a tense and challenging rhythm. In the Mythos Phase, the forces of darkness advance as doom accumulates and each player draws a random card from the encounter deck, introducing new enemies, treacherous obstacles, or reality-bending effects. During the Investigation Phase, players take turns performing up to three actions, which can include playing cards, moving between locations, battling monsters, or most importantly, investigating to find clues. These clues are essential for advancing the 'act' deck, which propels the story forward. The Enemy Phase sees any engaged monsters attack the investigators, while others hunt across the board. Finally, the Upkeep Phase allows players to refresh their assets, draw a new card, and gain a resource, preparing them for the horrors of the next round. What makes Arkham Horror: The Card Game so compelling is its profound fusion of rich narrative storytelling with strategic card play and deck customization. The game is celebrated for its deep thematic immersion, where the unfolding story feels personal and impactful. Failure doesn't necessarily end the game, but it can scar an investigator or alter the campaign's trajectory, creating a truly dynamic and replayable experience. The challenge is significant, demanding careful cooperation and clever resource management to overcome the relentless odds. For players who crave a deep, story-driven hobby game they can expand over time, its campaign structure and character progression provide an unparalleled cooperative adventure into the heart of cosmic dread.
1-4 120m⚖️ 3.5
Battlestar Galactica: The Board Game
RANK #125
Battlestar Galactica: The Board Game plunges players into the desperate flight of the last vestiges of humanity. It is a deeply thematic, semi-cooperative experience where survival is paramount, but the greatest threat may be sitting right next to you. In this game of hidden allegiances, most players assume the roles of iconic human characters from the television series, working collectively to guide the fleet to its fabled destination, Kobol. To succeed, they must carefully manage four critical resources—fuel, food, morale, and population—and execute a series of faster-than-light jumps to outrun their pursuers. If any resource is fully depleted, or the Galactica itself is destroyed, humanity is lost forever. However, amongst the crew are Cylon traitors, secretly working to ensure this very outcome through subtle sabotage and outright betrayal. The gameplay masterfully cultivates this atmosphere of paranoia. Each turn, a player draws skill cards representing their character's expertise, moves to a location on the fleet's ships, and performs an action. The turn culminates in drawing a Crisis card, which presents a new challenge the crew must overcome, often through a skill check. This is where the core tension lies. To pass a check, players secretly contribute skill cards to a shared pool. While human players try to contribute cards of the required type to meet a target number, Cylon players can covertly add unhelpful cards to cause a failure. The resulting blame-game and accusations are central to the experience. Further intensifying the suspense is the "Sleeper Agent" phase halfway through the game, where a second loyalty card is dealt, potentially turning a trusted ally into a new enemy. What elevates Battlestar Galactica to legendary status is its unmatched ability to translate the show's core themes of paranoia and desperation into compelling gameplay. The mechanics are not just abstract puzzles; they are engines for storytelling and intense player interaction. The constant suspicion, the debates over who played which card during a failed skill check, and the dramatic moments when a player reveals themselves as a Cylon are what create unforgettable gaming sessions. It's more than a resource management game; it's a social deduction crucible where your ability to read people, build trust, and sow discord is just as important as your strategic card play. This blend of cooperative survival and hidden traitor mechanics makes every decision fraught with weight and every game a unique narrative of survival and betrayal.
3-6 180m⚖️ 3.3
Eldritch Horror
RANK #138
Eldritch Horror is a cooperative board game that immerses players in a world of cosmic dread inspired by the writings of H.P. Lovecraft. Taking on the roles of intrepid investigators, participants band together to confront a malevolent entity poised to awaken and consume the world. This is a desperate race against a doomsday clock, not a battle of simple force. The team's primary objective is to traverse the globe, from bustling cities to remote wilderness, in order to solve three distinct mysteries unique to the chosen Ancient One. These mysteries represent the only known way to prevent the creature's arrival. Should the investigators succeed before the ever-advancing doom track reaches zero, they will have saved humanity. Failure, however, means the Ancient One awakens, triggering a final, brutal confrontation. Gameplay unfolds in rounds composed of three critical phases. First, in the Action Phase, each investigator performs two actions, such as traveling the world map, gathering vital assets like weapons and spells, recuperating health and sanity, or trading with allies. Following this, the Encounter Phase plunges each player into a unique narrative event based on their location. Drawing a card presents a story, a choice, and often a skill test resolved by rolling six-sided dice, where a five or six is a success. Investigators can spend clue tokens to reroll dice, adding a layer of resource management. Finally, the Mythos Phase represents the Ancient One's sinister influence; a new card can introduce devastating effects, spawn monsters, open otherworldly gates, and relentlessly advance the doom track, pushing the world ever closer to oblivion. What makes "Eldritch Horror" a beloved classic is its epic, globe-spanning scale and the rich, emergent stories it generates. The game turns the entire world into a playground of impending doom, creating a grand sense of adventure. The challenge is significant, fostering true teamwork as players strategize how to best use their unique character abilities and manage limited resources. Every session creates a memorable tale of near-misses, heroic triumphs, and tragic sacrifices. The game's appeal lies in its masterful blend of strategic planning and the unpredictable chaos of the Mythos deck, ensuring high tension from start to finish. It's a daunting adventure that rewards players not just with a win, but with a compelling story they have created together, making it a pinnacle experience for those who love deep narrative and cooperative challenges.
1-8 180m⚖️ 3.8
MicroMacro: Crime City
RANK #287
MicroMacro: Crime City is a groundbreaking cooperative experience that transforms the traditional 'hidden object' concept into a sophisticated investigative challenge. Set within a massive, intricately detailed 75 x 110 cm map of a monochrome metropolis, players take on the role of detectives tasked with solving 16 distinct criminal cases. The game's defining feature is its 'living' map, which functions as a temporal landscape where time and space are intertwined. Characters are not just static drawings; they appear multiple times across the city, allowing players to trace their movements from the moments leading up to a crime through to the aftermath. The gameplay loop is elegantly simple yet intellectually stimulating. Each case begins with an introductory card that presents a victim or a suspicious event. Working together, players must scour the dense urban environment to find the starting point and then follow the trail of suspects and witnesses. This requires a sharp eye for detail and the ability to connect events chronologically as you 'rewind' or 'fast-forward' through the character's day. While the game provides a step-by-step investigation via scenario cards, an advanced 'Expert Mode' allows seasoned players to solve the entire mystery using only the initial prompt, relying solely on their own observation and logic to piece together the narrative. The appeal of MicroMacro lies in its unique blend of visual storytelling and deductive gameplay. It successfully bridges the gap between casual puzzle-solving and deep narrative engagement, making it accessible to non-gamers while remaining deeply satisfying for hobbyists. The minimalist, whimsical art style often masks mature themes of crime and intrigue, creating a compelling contrast that keeps players immersed in the hunt. As a winner of the prestigious Spiel des Jahres award, it has been celebrated for its innovation and its ability to turn a simple piece of paper into a vibrant, interactive mystery world that is best enjoyed with a close group of friends or even as a solo challenge.
1-4 30m⚖️ 1.1
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
Box One
RANK #1,884
Box One is a singularly unique gaming experience, conceived by the versatile entertainer Neil Patrick Harris as an unfolding enigma designed for a solo player. At its core, this is an escape-room-in-a-box, a carefully constructed journey that begins under the guise of a simple trivia game. However, this initial challenge is merely the first layer of a much deeper mystery. The ultimate goal is not to win in a traditional sense, but to unravel the secrets held within the box itself, solving a cascading series of challenges that test your intellect and perception. Each solved puzzle reveals new components and deeper secrets, pulling you further into its cleverly constructed world of codes, ciphers, and unexpected discoveries. The gameplay loop is one of continuous revelation. Players start with a set of trivia cards, but quickly realize that every single component of the game, including the very box it came in, is a potential piece of a larger puzzle. This highly tactile and interactive experience demands that players think unconventionally, pushing them to explore every nook and cranny of the physical objects before them. One of Box One's most distinctive features is its integration with the real world, occasionally requiring an internet-connected device to progress. This blending of physical and digital elements creates a dynamic and immersive investigation, where the line between the game and reality begins to blur, making each solution feel like a genuine breakthrough. What truly sets Box One apart and contributes to its acclaim is its masterful sense of surprise and narrative guidance. The game is celebrated for constantly subverting player expectations, transforming what seems ordinary into something extraordinary. This is not just a collection of disconnected puzzles; it's a curated, story-driven adventure that makes the player the central protagonist in their own mystery. The challenges are designed to be difficult but fair, with an integrated hint system to ensure the experience remains engaging rather than frustrating. Although built as a solitary journey, the sheer cleverness of the puzzles makes it a fantastic shared experience, allowing a group to cooperatively unravel its secrets one 'aha!' moment at a time.
1 90m⚖️ 2.4
Arkham Horror: The Card Game
RANK #9,793
Arkham Horror: The Card Game has firmly established itself as a cornerstone of modern tabletop gaming, and the monumental 2026 release of the Chapter Two Core Set acts as the definitive entry point for newcomers and veterans alike. Completely replacing the 2021 Revised Core Set while maintaining strict backward compatibility with all previously released expansions, this edition serves as a sprawling, scenario-driven Living Card Game (LCG) steeped in the deeply unsettling Lovecraftian Cthulhu mythos. Players are thrust into the roles of varied investigators—such as Guardians, Seekers, and Mystics—tasked with unraveling occult mysteries and confronting otherworldly monstrosities before the world descends into madness. Rather than a simple standalone experience, the game is designed as an overarching narrative journey where survival is never guaranteed. The core mechanical philosophy of this heavy, cooperative experience is the brilliant concept that 'your deck is your character.' Before diving into the dark unknown, players construct a customized deck of cards that wholly represents their investigator's unique abilities, specialized equipment, and innate strengths. However, true to the punishing nature of cosmic horror, each deck is also forcefully injected with specific character flaws and basic weakness cards that will inevitably hinder your progress at the worst possible moments. During the action phase, players carefully spend action points to travel between ominous locations, scour for vital clues, play crucial assets, or desperately fight off the creatures drawn from the relentless Encounter Deck. Progress is measured by the Act and Agenda decks; players race to gather clues to advance the Act and secure victory, while accumulating doom tokens push the Agenda forward, signaling the encroaching schemes of the Ancient Ones. Furthermore, traditional dice rolling is entirely abandoned in favor of a thematic 'Chaos Bag.' This bag is filled with modifier tokens that players blindly pull during stat tests, brilliantly mimicking the unpredictable and punishing atmosphere of the game's setting. The true appeal of this 2026 edition lies in its deeply immersive campaign structure and the profound sense of progression. The central gameplay loop heavily emphasizes continuous play across interconnected scenarios. Surviving these harrowing encounters grants players precious Experience Points (XP), which are spent between sessions to purchase upgraded, vastly more powerful cards to refine their decks. The Chapter Two box introduces an exciting three-scenario introductory campaign titled 'Brethren of Ash,' featuring five freshly constructed investigator decks out of the box—allowing up to four players to join forces immediately. As investigators navigate through scenarios like 'Spreading Flames' and 'Queen of Ash,' their choices trigger branching narrative paths, unlocking new permanent reward cards that brilliantly expand deckbuilding possibilities. Between its visceral artwork, heavy strategic depth aided by the new Arkham Grimoire rules reference, and endless expandability, this 2026 iteration solidifies the game as a masterful blend of gripping storytelling and meticulous cardplay.
1-4 90m⚖️ 3.6
The Ghost in the Attic
RANK #15,861
"The Ghost in the Attic" offers an award-winning, immersive experience that masterfully blends the thrill of an escape room with the tactile satisfaction of a high-quality board game. Presented as a mysterious, haunted board game from the 1950s, this intricate puzzle box invites players to step into the role of investigators. The primary objective is not simply to win a game, but to unravel a compelling central mystery. To even begin this journey, players are confronted with a physically chained and padlocked box, the first of many challenges. Success is measured by the ability to piece together clues, solve a series of interconnected puzzles, and ultimately unlock the secrets that have been sealed away for decades, bringing the haunting narrative to its conclusion. Gameplay is a dynamic fusion of physical object manipulation and digital sleuthing. The experience begins before the box is even open, as players must first deduce the combination to the padlock shackling it shut. Once inside, they discover over two dozen beautifully crafted pieces of evidence that demand careful examination. These components are not mere props; they are integral to the puzzles themselves, and include a fully playable 'haunted' board game that forms a core part of the investigation. The journey requires more than just what's in the box, however. Players must use their wits to discover hidden websites and online resources, which hold crucial information needed to progress. For those who find themselves stumped by a particularly devious puzzle, a tiered online hint system is available to provide a gentle nudge or a clear solution, ensuring the story always moves forward. What sets "The Ghost in the Attic" apart is its exceptional production quality and the strength of its narrative, crafted by Olivier award-winner Henry Lewis. The tangible, high-quality components create a profound sense of immersion, making players feel like genuine detectives handling real evidence. The puzzles are designed to be genuinely challenging, with one reviewer describing the initial lock as 'frustratingly fiendish,' which provides a deep sense of accomplishment upon solving. This game is perfect for dedicated puzzle enthusiasts and those who appreciate a well-told story. One of its most celebrated features is its reset-and-replay design; once the mystery is solved, the entire experience can be perfectly repacked, allowing it to be shared with friends and family, extending its life and value far beyond a single playthrough.
1-6 90m⚖️ 2.6
The Glasgow Train Robbery
Set to arrive on tabletop shelves in 2026, 'The Glasgow Train Robbery' is a tense, cooperative board game that plunges exactly two players into one of the most infamous heists in British history. Published by Salt & Pepper Games and brought to life by designers Eloi Pujadas and Ferran Renalias, this asymmetric experience casts participants as the masterminds behind the daring raid: the Coordinator and the Operator. Your shared objective is to flawlessly execute five crucial Plan cards before the targeted locomotive reaches its final destination in London. However, pulling off the crime of the century is no simple feat. The game strictly limits communication between partners in crime, forcing you to rely on sharp intuition, unspoken synergy, and acute observation of your accomplice's moves. Only by working in perfect, silent harmony can you hope to secure the loot and evade the authorities. At the heart of 'The Glasgow Train Robbery' lies a relentless time-track mechanism elegantly represented by a miniature train advancing along the board's perimeter. Nearly every action you take incurs a precious time cost, continuously propelling the locomotive closer to London and ratcheting up the suspense. Gameplay is deeply card-driven, presenting agonizing tactical choices. Players must decide whether to use cards for standard maneuvers—allowing them to be recycled for future use—or to burn them permanently for a much more powerful, immediate effect. Furthermore, players must navigate their hideout to collect essential item tokens, placing them into a central draw bag. This bag building element introduces a critical layer of risk management. While you might pull necessary equipment, you also risk drawing detrimental fingerprint tokens. Accumulating too many fingerprints, letting the train arrive at the station, or having a character arrested results in immediate failure. What truly sets this title apart is its uncompromising, brain-burning challenge designed explicitly for dynamic duos. Fans of deep two-player cooperative games will appreciate the intense psychological puzzle created by the restricted communication rules, where every card played sends a subtle signal to your partner. The beautiful artwork by Javi de Castro immerses players in the gritty atmosphere of a classic British caper. Although communication is heavily restricted, certain cleverly timed actions permit brief moments of spoken coordination, making those rare words incredibly impactful. Combining tight resource management, asymmetric roles, and the thrilling push-your-luck tension of the token bag, 'The Glasgow Train Robbery' promises a highly rewarding strategic endeavor. It perfectly captures the high-stakes anxiety of a meticulously planned heist constantly teetering on the edge of disaster.
2 45m⚖️ 3.0

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