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Boardgames To Go 246 - A Boardgamer's Take on Sports

Boardgames To Go

Release Date: 10/01/2025

Boardgames To Go 247 - Fairplay Scoutaktion Results for Essen 2025 show art Boardgames To Go 247 - Fairplay Scoutaktion Results for Essen 2025

Boardgames To Go

Opener: Please send in your comments, questions, or suggestions for next month's Feedback-focused episode Closer: When do you opt out of game night? Every year I pay special attention to Fairplay magazine's booth at Essen. In recent years, they've been great about sharing their Scoutaktion results on social media, too. Fairplay is primarily a German language print magazine for our hobby, but every year at Essen they do an additional service for our global hobby: they collect ratings for the first impressions of these new titles, and share them for all to see. Here's...

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Boardgames To Go 246 - A Boardgamer's Take on Sports show art Boardgames To Go 246 - A Boardgamer's Take on Sports

Boardgames To Go

Please join us on the  where you can chat online with other podcast listeners. Opener: The games we played at the second BGTG Online Mini-Con Closer: , and I'll still follow it (but not anticipate it) For a long time I've wanted to have a boardgamer's discussion about different sports...as games. I don't mean sports boardgames, or season/league play. Nor do I mean franchise management. I mean the physical game itself, on the field, with its rules. Sure, a sport is a physical activity. An enormous part of the resulting play comes from the athletic prowess and...

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Boardgames To Go 245 - Revisiting Deep Thoughts (with Greg Pettit) show art Boardgames To Go 245 - Revisiting Deep Thoughts (with Greg Pettit)

Boardgames To Go

Please join us on the  where you can chat online with other podcast listeners. Reminder! Please join other podcast listeners for the next online BGTG Mini-Con, scheduled for September 6. I plan to be online from 9am-9pm Pacific time, including the  for voice & video. The games will mostly be played on BoardgameArena, but adventurous gamers can also use Yucata, Brettspielwelt, Boardgames.io, Steam, apps, or whatever. It's free, and no RSVP or signup is necessary. Openers: Mark:  Greg:    Closers: Greg: "I don't know" ❤️ Mark:...

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Boardgames To Go 244 - Summer Game Convention Season show art Boardgames To Go 244 - Summer Game Convention Season

Boardgames To Go

Announcement! Please join other podcast listeners for the next online BGTG Mini-Con, scheduled for September 6. I plan to be online from 9am-9pm Pacific time, including Discord for voice & video. The games will mostly be played on BoardgameArena, but adventurous gamers can also use Yucata, Brettspielwelt, Boardgames.io, Steam, apps, or whatever. It's free, and no RSVP or signup is necessary. Opener:  Closer: , which we watched/listened to live on the drive back from a convention Over the years you've heard me talk about a number of game conventions....

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Boardgames To Go 243 - SdJ & Kennerspiel 2025 Opinions & Predictions show art Boardgames To Go 243 - SdJ & Kennerspiel 2025 Opinions & Predictions

Boardgames To Go

Opener: , and again I'm talking about vacation-linked boardgames   Closer: The Dornücopia we've got planned for EsCon in a couple weeks.    I'm always happy to talk about the Spiel des Jahres. The winners, the nominees, the recommended titles, the jury process, and the award's immense, positive impact on our hobby. That goes for the Kennerspiel and Kinderspiel, too...though I'm woefully ignorant about the children's category. This time it's just me talking about the games, severall of which I've played, but some I've missed. I don't think...

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Boardgames To Go 242 - Spiel des Jahres Wayback Machine for 2005 (with Jonathan Takagi) show art Boardgames To Go 242 - Spiel des Jahres Wayback Machine for 2005 (with Jonathan Takagi)

Boardgames To Go

Please join us on the  where you can chat online with other podcast listeners. Openers: Mark:  Jonathan: 2005 Flashback & Quiz Closers: Jonathan: My top games of 2005 Mark: Hosting my own (small) event instead of traveling to a con? The Wayback Machine is back. One more time, a friend joins me to go back in time to an earlier Spiel des Jahres, looking at the winner but also the other nominees and recommended games. In addition, my guest helps me think about the earlier time itself, and how the games, the hobby, and the community may have...

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Boardgames To Go 241 - Session Report & Feedback show art Boardgames To Go 241 - Session Report & Feedback

Boardgames To Go

Please join us on the  where you can chat online with other podcast listeners. Opener: Join us to play games online together on May 3. We're meeting on the , as well as the        I set out to give myself a break this month, just talking about some recent games and fielding a few questions sent to me. In fact, I've been doing so much gaming lately that I had to whittle my list down to just these six games to share my impressions about. Then the feedback questions ended up being more fun to dive into than I expected. These kinds of shows are...

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Boardgames To Go 240 - Dice Tower West and the Mark Madness 2025 Champions show art Boardgames To Go 240 - Dice Tower West and the Mark Madness 2025 Champions

Boardgames To Go

The annual voting/predicting competition called Mark Madness is now finished. The results are posted with the rest of the updates for episode 239, and here co-host Eryn Roston returns one last time to share the winners. Unconscious Mind was our collective favorite for game cover art, and Adam Brocker is this year's winner. The plan now is for Adam to help me run next year's Mark Madness, in 2026. Next, I share my time at Dice Tower West. This is the second year in a row that I've gone to this national boardgame convention. Is it national? I think so. It's certainly big. Held in Las...

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Boardgames To Go 239E - Mark Madness 2025 (with Eryn Roston) show art Boardgames To Go 239E - Mark Madness 2025 (with Eryn Roston)

Boardgames To Go

The Championship is now set!   https://boardgamegeek.com/geeklist/354557/mark-madness-2025-game-cover-art-with-eryn-roston

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Boardgames To Go 239D - Mark Madness 2025 (with Eryn Roston) Elite Eight show art Boardgames To Go 239D - Mark Madness 2025 (with Eryn Roston) Elite Eight

Boardgames To Go

Be sure to go vote at https://boardgamegeek.com/geeklist/354557/mark-madness-2025-game-cover-art-with-eryn-roston?itemid=11634552#11634552

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Opener: The games we played at the second BGTG Online Mini-Con

Games played at the second BGTG Online Mini-Con




CloserEssen is almost here, and I'll still follow it (but not anticipate it)

For a long time I've wanted to have a boardgamer's discussion about different sports...as games. I don't mean sports boardgames, or season/league play. Nor do I mean franchise management. I mean the physical game itself, on the field, with its rules. Sure, a sport is a physical activity. An enormous part of the resulting play comes from the athletic prowess and physical skill of the players. However, there's a lot of strategy in the best sports games. It's part of what makes them fun to watch, to discuss, to second-guess, and so on. Whether it's football, baseball, basketball, hockey, soccer, or tennis, these games have rules, they have scoring systems, they have strategic texture. Right? If you don't see that, then it might explain why you don't care for sports.

Sports leagues


Maybe all sports have strategic texture. It's much harder for me to see in something like the dash races on the track or in a pool. Those seem to be much more measures of sheer physical athleticism. Though even in races, I've heard runners talk about the strategy for a race, especially with the energy management and psychological contest against other runners.

However, I'm really focusing on sports that have more rules, more scoring. I think these provide greater opportunity for players and teams to differentiate from each other by their strategy. Sometimes it comes from the coach or manager, such as when managing the clock.

Part of the reason this is a solo episode is that I've always had difficulty getting others to understand what I'm talking about. Or perhaps no one is interested! Whatever--I decided to record this episode by myself and find out what kind of response it generates. If you are a sports fan--and a boardgamer--does any of this make sense to you? Did I forget something? Especially with the sports I don't follow so much (soccer, basketball, hockey), I'm sure that I did. Boardgamers seem to gravitate toward baseball, a game that offers the opportunity for deep study and second-guessing. I'm anticipating some reaction there.

-Mark