The Hotness
Games|People|Company
Dominion: Dark Ages
Fantastiqa
Mage Knight: Board Game
Total War
Descent: Journeys in the Dark (Second Edition)
Eclipse
Mice and Mystics
Dungeon Fighter
Collapsible D: The Final Minutes of the Titanic
Lords of Waterdeep
Agricola: All Creatures Big and Small
Libertalia
Android: Netrunner
Virgin Queen
The Lord of the Rings: Nazgul
A Game of Thrones: The Board Game (Second Edition)
Dominion
Star Wars: X-Wing Miniatures Game
Infiltration
The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game
Among the Stars
Twilight Struggle
The Swarm
Agricola
1989: Dawn of Freedom
Goa
7 Wonders
Glory to Rome
Arkham Horror
Village
Ora et Labora
Battles of Westeros: House Baratheon Army Expansion
Through the Ages: A Story of Civilization
Thunder Road
Trajan
Zombicide
The Castles of Burgundy
7 Wonders: Cities
Ace of Spies
War of the Ring
Skyline
Space Alert
Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective
City of Horror
Race for the Galaxy
Dungeon Command: Sting of Lolth
Twilight Imperium (third edition)
Kingdom Builder
Le Havre
Battlestar Galactica
Recommend
 
 Thumb up
 Thumb up
6 Posts

London» Forums » Strategy

Subject: More chance to win with more boroughs? rss

Your Tags: Add tags
Popular Tags: [View All]
John Kerstholt
Netherlands
Enschede
Netherlands
mbmbmbmbmb
I once read the suggestion that you might try running a small city. My girlfriend quite aggressively buys boroughs, while I try to run the lean city. But in our eight games I only have won once .
Of our last five games I have registered the number of boroughs and it seems that the more boroughs you have the better you're off.
The graph shows the number of VPs versus the number of boroughs and each borough seems to increase the number of VPs with 9.

Does anyone has the same experience?
(BtW we tend to play not too competitively and also keep the number of Building Displays quite low (four or five).)

 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Ben
United States
Washington
Dist of Columbia
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Why would you intentionally not buy buroughs? This seems to me like asking whether more family members in Agricola increases your chances of winning. There is no benefit to having fewer buroughs, and the actions you save won't be as efficient because buroughs are the most effective way to draw cards. I've never played in a two-player game where either player ended with fewer than 8.
4 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Martin G
United Kingdom
London
flag msg tools
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
I think 'small city' usually refers to a low number of card stacks, not to how many boroughs you own. Buying boroughs is pretty much unreservedly good.
6 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Joe Pastuzyn
United States
Midland
Michigan
mbmbmbmbmb
chally wrote:
Why would you intentionally not buy buroughs? This seems to me like asking whether more family members in Agricola increases your chances of winning. There is no benefit to having fewer buroughs, and the actions you save won't be as efficient because buroughs are the most effective way to draw cards. I've never played in a two-player game where either player ended with fewer than 8.


Lovely data presentation, but I wholeheartedly agree with Ben above. I don't think you can win this game without staying up in buying buroughs. You will eventually lose to poverty points if you have any reasonable sized city (card stacks), or if you have few card stacks, you are allowing your opponent to run a much larger city and not be penalized by poverty. That can only mean more victory points in the end for her.

By the way, when you play two player, do you use the variant posted on BGG where you block a burough when you sweep cards from the board? This tightens the game and brings back the tension of poverty into the game.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Snooze Festival
United States
Hillsborough
North Carolina
flag msg tools
We love our pups!! Misu, RIP 28 Nov 2010. Tikka, RIP 11 Aug 2011.
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
In a game themed about the rebuilding of London, you simply have to rebuild London -- i.e., buy burroughs -- to win! It also helps, of course, if you fill it with pretty shiny buildings!
3 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
John Kerstholt
Netherlands
Enschede
Netherlands
mbmbmbmbmb
Thanks for all your comments and remarks. They made much clearer the idea behind the game.
I see now that I was confused about what "the/your city" is. Not in terms of the rules, but in the concept.

BGG is one of the best sites I know.
2 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Front Page | Welcome | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertise | Support BGG | Feeds RSS
Geekdo, BoardGameGeek, the Geekdo logo, and the BoardGameGeek logo are trademarks of BoardGameGeek, LLC.