Here are short descriptions of these upcoming titles:
The Pandemic Escape Room Puzzle Book features images and locations familiar to anyone who knows and loves the original board games in a series of chapters containing visual cryptic conundrums for the reader to ponder over, translating the Pandemic game into a thrilling global narrative.
• BGG admin and sometimes Queen Melissa Rogerson is overseeing a survey related to playing games during the Covid-19 pandemic. You can go directly to the survey here, or you can click through her Twitter and Facebook posts, perhaps sharing them with others at the same time to expand the potential pool of respondents.
• How did 30 bridge teams respond when asked to face off against alleged cheaters in a tournament? They refused to play, as explained in this highly entertaining article by David Owen of The New Yorker. Here's an excerpt from this October 2021 publication:
In 2014, videos of matches at the European bridge championships were uploaded on YouTube for the first time. Maaijke Mevius, a physicist in the Netherlands, had heard the rumors about Fantoni and Nunes — or Fantunes, as they are sometimes known — and decided to study some of their games. She wasn't an expert player, but she thought that her training as a scientist might help her spot anomalies that better players had missed. Sure enough, she noticed something odd: when Fantoni and Nunes played a card in certain situations, they sometimes placed it on the table horizontally, and sometimes vertically. She shared her observation with Boye Brogeland, a Norwegian professional player, who has been instrumental in exposing prominent cheaters. An ad-hoc team of expert players quickly cracked the code: in eighty-two of eighty-five instances, they determined, Fantoni and Nunes placed a card on the table vertically when their hands contained an unseen ace, king, or queen of the same suit, or when their hands contained no other card of the same suit; otherwise, they placed it horizontally. (Fantoni and Nunes have denied all allegations of cheating, and have declined to comment.)
Oh, wait, a press release from Mattel notes that the event is actually "the first-ever official UNO Championship Series Vegas Invitational Tournament powered by Mobil 1" — and that "powered by Mobil 1" is an odd thing to see in a game tournament logo, but perhaps only because I don't normally follow auto racing events...although this quote from the press release doesn't make things any less odd: