Gen Con 2022: Polygon’s best board games are also the most chaotic

Gen Con 2022 felt like coming home for me. After nearly two decades attending board gaming’s Super Bowl, I’ve developed some very close friends that I enjoy seeing every year. Two years of not renewing these relationships is a very long time. This year, after the vendor floor closed, we weren’t interested in playing the latest Euro-style game, or a campaign in a box, or a big, sprawling Ameritrash strategy game. It was just a fun lark. The variety of available games perfectly met our requirements.

In reality, Gen Con was filled with the most lighthearted and frivolous games you can imagine. But more than anything, the best games this year were chaotic — including the title that might just be my own personal game of the show.

The Ghost Mayor’s (GM’s) screen, hiding the layout for this particular area of Ghost Town.

Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

A player’s map, scrawled out on a blank grid.

Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

Psychic pizza delivery men go to ghost town

Psychic pizza delivery men go to ghost town Hidden-environment games for up to 3-5 players. Notice that I didn’t say hidden movement — like say Run Nuns, Last Friday, Whitechapel, LettersOr Spec Ops. Each player gets a large grid of laminated tiles and a dry-erase marker. You must find and deliver a Pizza to Ghost Town. How many pizzas does each household want? You won’t know until you’ve found a pizza, and then used your psychic powers to divine where it belongs. The concept is just as batshit as the name — especially when you accidentally stumble onto a teleport space and have to start making your ZorkIt’s like mapmaking over and again.

Buy it Psychic pizza delivery men go to ghost townBoard Game Tables Dot Com: $39.00 Direct from the Publisher

Here’s a bit on the rest of the most chaotic new titles, presented in alphabetical order.

Ghost meeples from Psychic Pizza Deliverers all have different faces.

Following its crowdfunding success, Psychic Pizza Deliverers put their money where it counts — into adorable ghost meeples.
Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

Boop

The latest from Smirk & Laughter Games, Boop It is an adorable Scott Brady small-box-game that’s absolutely charming. Inside you’ll find a collection of wooden cat meeples and a plush comforter. Turn the inside of the box over, place the comforter on top, and proceed to boop your opponents in a match-three-meets-area-control fiasco.

BoopSoon, it will be online.

A double-layer sideboard for holding your most important quantum card suits.

Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

Cat in the Box

Cat in the Box is a trick-taking card game — like Hearts, Spades, EuchreAnd Pinochle. The aim of the game is to get as many cards as possible by attempting to play the best card from each suit. There is a twist to this: all the cards are made of black. Players call out the suit that they are playing, then mark down the card they’ve played on a double-layer board with a unique token. If for whatever reason you break the logic of the board that you’re creating — by being unable to play a color or number of a card that’s missing, for instance — you create a paradox and all of the points you’ve scored so far turn negative. It’s an elaborate game of screw-your-neighbor, but also surprisingly fast and light.

Cat in the BoxAvailable now from the publisher at $29.95

Players sit down for a game of Kites, with 5 sand timers between them and a hand of cards each.

Floodgate Games Photo

Kites

When I open a game, the first thing that I grab is the punchboard. If there’s one, the punchboard is my first thing to throw away. The stress of that thing has contributed absolutely no fun to any game that I’ve ever played — except Kites. The timers are all different. One is at 30 seconds and another one at about a minute. Players take turns playing cards that correspond to the timers, cooperatively trying to keep all these “kites” in the air before their sand runs out. Again, absolute chaos — but also a great way to warm people up at the beginning of a long night of board gaming.

Pre-Order KitesGet it now at $20

All set to make a bet

I was lucky enough to get a demo of AEG’s All set to make a betRuel Galviola is the man who created the app and shared his voiceover with the audience. He described it as “a party game for board gamers,” which makes perfect sense. It basically takes both horse racing and Roulette and mixes them in a live game. Then it adds additional win conditions, such as a stack or cards. It allows family members that enjoy playing at the casino to compete with players who are more familiar with trifecta and other math concepts. Tickets to Ride.

All set to make a betIt will cost $39.99 and should be available later in the year.

Red and blue players pace each other on top of a cube in Reality Shift

Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

Reality shift

Academy Games are well-known for creating historical and strategic simulations. I am happy to report that Gunter Eickert’s Stellaris: Infinite LegacyThis is going well. The real star for me though was Reality shiftThe design is clearly inspired by lightcycle racing. Tron. It’s just that this time around the the track moves, with cubes that rotate and pivot along their axes. You’ve not lived until you’ve taken turn four and brought it crashing down on the back straightaway, derezzing your opponent and sending them back to the starting line. There’s a deluxe edition, as well as optional rules to go full Mario Kart with shells, bananas, and more.

Reality shift The deluxe set was $65, and it was on sale only this year at Gen Con. It will be available for purchase soon.

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