Thursday, 23 April 2026
Malaysia Boardgame Show on national TV
Wednesday, 22 April 2026
Malaysia Boardgame Show 2026: 2 busy days!
Tuesday, 21 April 2026
boardgaming in photos: 4 donkeys
Playing Bottle Imp with Alex and Ivan at ZUS Coffee. They were both highly intrigued and took learning the strategy seriously. This is a game with much depth. There are serious skills involved. This is an unusual and clever trick-taking game.
I showed Pinocchio to Yip, Captain Fuaad and Kelvin. Right from the start Captain teased Yip that he was going to get four donkeys (and lose the game). This prediction turned out to be accurate. I rarely see someone lose a game of Pinocchio so happily. Yip wanted to buy a copy of the game immediately afterwards.
This was a game of Monopoly Deal played at FnD Mindspot with Eric Lang and several other Malaysian game designers and gamers. Eric greatly admires the game and uses it as an example of good game design. I must say it is not quite my thing, but indeed this is an accessible game that works well for a wide audience.
Monday, 20 April 2026
Pilgrim Poker concept art
- I added the card distribution to the game components section of the rulebook. I did have a component list section, but I did not mention that the cards went from 1 to 13, and that each number appeared twice. This was something the group asked when they played, and this information wasn't in the rules. They would have to check the actual cards.
- I was not clear enough about the maximum bet amount for a round being $10. In the section for Raising, I wrote that the maximum bet amount was $10. That was misinterpreted as when you Raise, you can raise the bet amount by as much as $10. The correct rule is you can raise the bet amount to at most $10.
- Naming the action Side Bet caused a misinterpretation by one of the players, that you can only issue a Side Bet to one of your immediate neighbours. I hadn't considered this possible misinterpretation. However this was quickly clarified by the other players. So eventually I just stuck with the same term.
- In one part of the rules, I used the phrase "you determine who wins the Side Bet at the end of the round". That caused some confusion because the word "determine" was misunderstood as meaning "decide", as opposed to meaning "check". The players were puzzled why the person issuing the Side Bet could decide who won. I rephrased this to "you resolve the Side Bet at the end of the round". I must minimise the risk of misunderstanding.
- I did not explicitly say that you should not tell other players what their cards are. In Pilgrim Poker, everyone holds up their cards facing forward, so that you don't know your own card but you can see everyone else's cards. In the game that was played, no one specifically told anyone else what their cards were, but there were a few times the table talk almost or effectively gave away this information. I realised I should mention this explicitly, because if players openly tell one another their cards, the play experience would be destroyed.
Saturday, 18 April 2026
Soothsayers
Tuesday, 14 April 2026
Watergate
The white token is the initiative token. Every round the player controlling initiative draws 5 cards and the other draws 4. The player with initiative plays first, and will also play last. By default, initiative switches every round. However if you win the initiative token, you will control initiative next round. So it is the player who will lose initiative next round who has incentive to fight for it.
You usually play cards to pull items to your side of the track, but the cards have various other effects too, including activating witnesses and disabling witnesses. Some cards let you react to and cancel your opponent's cards.
The game is an immersive experience. Many historical details are represented in the game. In my first game where I played the editor, my opponent Han was aggressive in disabling witnesses. I guess he had a lot of money to pay them to shut up, or many thugs to threaten them into staying quiet. He silenced 5 out of 7 witnesses. Thankfully I secured the remaining two, and they were nearby on the board, which meant less effort for me to create links. Unfortunately for me, I misread the board. At one point I thought I had linked up both the witnesses to Nixon and won. Then I realised I was still one link short, between one witness and an adjacent piece of evidence (the green one at the bottom). That was a stupid mistake. Nixon eventually completed his term and won.



























