Designer Manuel Correia and publisher Board&Dice have licensed this design and reworked Correia's Agent Decker into SUPERHOT Card Game, due out in 2017. Here's an overview of this design, which has solitaire, versus, co-op, and 2v1 playing modes:
In the micro deck-building SUPERHOT Card Game, you use abilities and items to deal with increasing threats. Threats you eliminate are added to your hand, giving you improved abilities and more options while bringing you closer to victory — but you need to be careful because the more cards you use, the faster you move through time (represented by a line of obstacles moving in your direction).
In more detail, you need to interact with obstacles — whether killing them or knocking them out — to increase your future possibilities for interaction or to give you more time before bullets appear! The cards that you use are discarded to the obstacle pile while cards you pass by are placed in your personal discard pile, creating a mini-deck of cards. The game has three types of obstacle cards: enemy, scenery, and objects, with each type giving you different abilities when they're in your deck.
For 2016, however, AEG has revealed that the Black Box to be released on Nov. 25 — today! — will contain only a single game: Jeremy Holcomb's Phase, a collectible card game that was announced by AEG in 2010 but never released. Cards are double-sided, with one side being light and the other dark, and they "phase" (that is, flip) throughout the game for various reasons, changing what the cards can do in the process. AEG is marketing Phase as an old-school CCG (that's not collectible, mind you) in which "crazy combos" pop up all over the place:
• Renegade Game Studios has picked up Kalle Malmioja's Honshu — which debuted at SPIEL 2016 from Finnish publisher Lautepelit.fi — for release in North America in 2017. Honshu is an auction game that resembles a trick-taking game, with each player playing a numbered card from hand on the table before each player claims one of those cards starting with whoever played the highest card. Players then place their claimed card in their tableau, overlapping one or more cards already present. At the end of the game, players score for the largest city in their tableau, water spaces beyond the first in a lake, forests, and resource cubes delivered to destinations.
• Cryptozoic Entertainment and Playroom Entertainment are combining licensing power with a pre-existing game to create Geek Out! The Big Bang Theory, which takes the existing Geek Out! formula in which players bid on how many things they think they can name for questions related to comics, science fiction, and other geeky topics. This new edition includes questions about the Warner Bros. Television’s sitcom of the same name.