In Fallen City of Karez, each player will take the role of a lord of one of the guilds who seek to tighten their grasp on the rising city. The players will strive to maintain a balance between keeping the city safe for its citizens by sending exploration parties to defeat any threats, and at the same time attracting to the emerging city new adventurers wishing to fill their pockets with fortunes and their names with glory.
In the action phase at the start of each of the eight turns, players can assign two citizens or one adventurer to act on their behalf in the various buildings of Karez, send an exploration party to remove any threats that lurk near Karez, or buy new equipment to reinforce their parties of heroes. Some guild houses may choose to erect their own private Dungeons (!) in an attempt to inflict havoc and dismay on the other houses. After everyone performs their actions, the players must check how these actions affected migration to Karez; the results of this phase will reflect on the growth of Karez towards a city state, which is the common aspiration of all players.
Players start with different initial possessions and owned buildings. In addition to the common goal of raising the city, each house also has some unique goals (ambitions), which will eventually determine the sole winner. That said, the game is semi-cooperative in that while each guild has its own ambitions, all players must succeed in raising the city by the end of the game or else everyone loses.
• Asmodee's Stefan Brunell has uploaded the cover for Nicolas Normandon's City of Horror, a sequel of sorts to Normandon's Mall of Horror that will debut at Gen Con in August 2012. (In case you couldn't tell, the game has zombies in it.)
• In April 2012, I linked to a cover image of a Hobbit-based card game from Martin Wallace. That game has now been revealed as a new title from Kosmos (and other publishers in non-German languages) that will be released in October 2012. Here's a brief description Der Hobbit: Das Kartenspiel, which is for 3-5 players:
• U.S. publisher Fantasy Flight Games has announced that it will republish The Adventurers: The Temple of Chac, which first appeared from Alderac Entertainment Group in 2009. The publishing rights to this title and other designs from Dust Games were later sold to FFG, and now FFG is bringing the game back to print, with a Q3 2012 release date.
• Newcomer designer/publisher Michael R. Keller has announced the Q1 2013 release of City Hall through his [company=22425]Visible Hand Games[/company]. Here's a fairly detailed overview of this role-selection game:
There are seven offices within City Hall. These offices deal with a different aspect of building the city or campaigning, such as the Tax Assessor, Surveyor, or Zoning Board. In a round, each player will get to activate one of these offices. However, just because you activate an office doesn't mean you will get to use it. The other players will have an opportunity to use their influence to steal control of the office away from you. Keeping it will require countering with your own influence. However, you can instead let another player control that office this round and add their influence to your own, giving you a leg up on controlling things later on.
In using these offices, players will buy land and build properties to create attractive neighborhoods which will bring the most people into the city – or they might place a factory next to an opponent's housing complex to drive people out. They will also tax their constituents to raise funds (with the option of sacrificing popularity to tax at higher rates), buy and sell influence to the Lobbyist, and campaign to increase their approval level.
At the end of the game, the citizens of the city will vote based on which player brought them in and that player's approval level. Special interest groups will also collect votes for players based on certain goals, such as Wall Street backing the player with the most money. Whichever player has the most votes on election day will become Mayor of New York and appoint his or her opponents to the Sanitation Department.