Ask at the Queset House 1st Floor Office for any of the games listed below. Games get checked out on an adult card, and DO NOT leave the building.
GAME |
# OF PLAYERS |
GAME TIME |
AGE RANGE |
DESCRIPTION |
Android Netrunner: the Card Game |
2 players |
1 hour |
14+ |
“Android: Netrunner is a two-player Living Card Game® set in a dystopian, cyberpunk future where monolithic megacorps own and control the vast majority of human interests.”AMAZON |
Big Boggle |
2-8 players |
10 minutes |
8+ |
*Big Boggle is a timed word game where players attempt to find as many connected words as possible from the face up letters resting in a 25 cube grid. When the timer runs out, players compare their list of words and remove any shared words. Points are then awarded for remaining words, depending on how many letters are in the word. |
Carcassonne |
2-5 players |
30-45 minutes |
8+ |
*Carcassonne is a tile-placement game in which the players draw and place a tile with a piece of southern French landscape on it. The tile might feature a city, a road, a cloister, grassland or some combination thereof, and it must be placed adjacent to tiles that have already been played, in such a way that cities are connected to cities, roads to roads, etcetera. Having placed a tile, the player can then decide to place one of his meeples on one of the areas on it: on the city as a knight, on the road as a robber, on a cloister as a monk, or on the grass as a farmer. When that area is complete, that meeple scores points for its owner. |
Classic Jenga: How Do You Stack Up? |
1-8 players |
20 minutes |
6+ |
*Jenga is played with 54 wooden blocks; each block is 3 times as long as it is wide, and slightly smaller in height than in width. The blocks are stacked in a tower formation; each story is three blocks placed adjacent to each other along their long side, and each story is placed perpendicular to the previous (so, for example, if the blocks in the first story are pointing north-south, the second story blocks will point east-west). There are therefore 18 stories to the Jenga tower. Since stacking the blocks neatly can be tedious, a plastic loading tray is included. |
Forbidden Island |
2-4 players |
30 minutes |
10+ |
*"Forbidden Island is a visually stunning cooperative board game. Instead of winning by competing with other players like most games, everyone must work together to win the game. Players take turns moving their pawns around the 'island', which is built by arranging the many beautifully screen-printed tiles before play begins. As the game progresses, more and more island tiles sink, becoming unavailable, and the pace increases. Players use strategies to keep the island from sinking, while trying to collect treasures and items. As the water level rises, it gets more difficult- sacrifices must be made." |
Galaxy Trucker |
2-4 players |
60 minutes |
10+ |
*Galaxy Trucker is a tile laying game that plays out over two phases: building and flying. The goal is to have the most credits at the end of the game. You can earn credits by delivering goods, defeating pirates, building an efficient ship, and being the furthest along the track at the end of the flying phase. |
Game of Life |
2-6 players |
60 minutes |
8+ |
*This game attempts to mirror life events many people go through from going to college, raising a family, buying a home, working and retiring. The intent of the game is to have the most assets at the end of the game, assets are earned primarily by working and earning tokens with dollars amount on them. Additionally the first person to complete the course gets additional money tokens. |
King of Tokyo |
2-6 players |
30 minutes |
8+ |
*In King of Tokyo, you play mutant monsters, gigantic robots, and strange aliens—all of whom are destroying Tokyo and whacking each other in order to become the one and only King of Tokyo. At the start of each turn, you roll six dice, which show the following six symbols: 1, 2, or 3 Victory Points, Energy, Heal, and Attack. Over three successive throws, choose whether to keep or discard each die in order to win victory points, gain energy, restore health, or attack other players into understanding that Tokyo is YOUR territory. |
Mage Knight: Board Game |
1-4 players |
150 minutes |
14+ |
*The Mage Knight board game puts you in control of one of four powerful Mage Knights as you explore (and conquer) a corner of the Mage Knight universe under the control of the Atlantean Empire. Build your army, fill your deck with powerful spells and actions, explore caves and dungeons, and eventually conquer powerful cities controlled by this once-great faction! In competitive scenarios, opposing players may be powerful allies, but only one will be able to claim the land as their own. In cooperative scenarios, the players win or lose as a group. Solo rules are also included. |
Mexican Train Domino Game |
2-8 players |
30 minutes |
8+ |
“Players work to dispense all the dominoes in their hand by playing them onto one or more "trains" emanating from a central hub.”AMAZON |
Monopoly |
2-8 players |
60-180 minutes |
8+ |
*Players take the part of landowners, attempting to buy and then develop their land. Income is gained by other players visiting their properties and money is spent when they visit properties belonging to other players. When times get tough, players may have to mortgage their properties to raise cash for fines, taxes and other misfortunes. |
Mouse Trap |
2-4 players |
30 minutes |
6+ |
“Mouse Trap pits 2-4 players against each other as mice trying to navigate through a complex mousetrap. They build the Rube Goldberg inspired mousetrap as they move their mice across the board. They also try to collect cheese cards, which allow them to move other mice to cheese wheel which is the bait for the trap. Once the mousetrap has been completely constructed, players can attempt to capture each others' mice in it by turning the crank, which activates the mousetrap. If the mousetrap doesn't malfunction, the mouse is captured and out of the game. The winner is the last mouse who avoids being trapped.”AMAZON |
Risk |
2-5 players |
120 minutes |
10+ |
*"Possibly the most popular, mass market war game. The goal is conquest of the world. Each player's turn consists of: - Gaining reinforcements through number of territories held, control of every territory on each continent, and turning sets of bonus cards. - Attacking other players using a simple combat rule of comparing the highest dice rolled for each side. Players may attack as often as desired. If one enemy territory is successfully taken, the player is awarded with a bonus card. - Moving a group of armies to another adjacent territory." |
Risk: Lord of the Rings |
2-4 players |
120 minutes |
9+ |
*"A new version of Risk, with the following differences: The map is of Middle Earth, and the tokens represent armies of that fictional world. You play either good or evil. Leaders, missions and sites of power have been added. The One Ring acts as a timing mechanism, when it leaves the board, the game ends. |
Settlers of Catan |
3-4 players |
60-120 minutes |
10+ |
*Players try to be the dominant force on the island of Catan by building settlements, cities, and roads. On each turn dice are rolled to determine what resources the island produces. Players collect these resources (cards)—wood, grain, brick, sheep, or stone—to build up their civilizations to get to 10 victory points and win the game. |
Settlers of Catan: 5-6 Player Expansion |
5-6 players |
60-120 minutes |
10+ |
*Allows you to add up to two more opponents to The Settlers of Catan. The only change in the rules is that there is a building round at the end of each turn in which any player can build. |
Ticket to Ride |
2-5 players |
30-60 minutes |
8+ |
*With elegantly simple gameplay, Ticket to Ride can be learned in under 15 minutes, while providing players with intense strategic and tactical decisions every turn. Players collect cards of various types of train cars they then use to claim railway routes in North America. The longer the routes, the more points they earn. Additional points come to those who fulfill Destination Tickets – goal cards that connect distant cities; and to the player who builds the longest continuous route. |
The games we offer here are a nice variety of different game types (strategy, luck, and empire-building are all part of the fun). Want to know more about the different kinds of board games out there? Game Cows posts reviews and rankings.
*Descriptions courtesy of https://boardgamegeek.com.