• In October 2018, I noted that Z-Man Games had picked up the remaining stock of Mike Selinker and James Ernest's Lords of Vegas and the Lords of Vegas: UP! expansion for distribution in the U.S., in addition to "developing and releasing the Lords of Vegas: Underworld expansion that [original publisher] Mayfair had teased prior to its demise".
As you might have noticed, Underworld has not been released, and as of Feb. 26, 2020, Selinker reports that the rights to the game have returned to the designers, so they plan to bring the game back to market as a Lone Shark Games title. Selinker notes that plans are still being locked down with final details to be announced in March 2020, but here's what they have so far:
—We hope to make the long-awaited expansion Underworld this year.
—We hope to put together a 10th anniversary deluxe edition or something like it.
—We also regained the rights to our popular poker book Dealer's Choice: The Complete Handbook of Saturday Night Poker. We hope to publish a 15th anniversary edition of that too.
—We're building a Kickstarter for all that. We hope to launch it ASAP.
One of my favorite game experiences ever came from me teaching Lords of Vegas to a group at BGG.CON, then watching the game unfold over two-and-a-half hours — far longer than the normal playing time — with those players going at one another constantly and negotiating forever on trades, with the experience being akin to a play in which mother and daughter and the daughter's boyfriend and fourth person who I don't recall discover a lot about their inner wants and needs, with the game-playing being the trigger that brought such discoveries to the surface. It was amazing.
• Following other recent game announcements, U.S. publisher The Op has revealed that a new Harry Potter game will join its catalog next to Hogwarts Battle, Codenames: Harry Potter, and Harry Potter: Death Eaters Rising. So much Potter!
The new title is a 2-4 player worker placement game called Harry Potter: House Cup Competition that gives people yet another chance to call "dibs" on their favorite Hogwarts house:
• UK publisher Surprised Stare Games is running a crowdfunding campaign (KS link) for two new games, one being the two-player game The March of Progress from SSG's Alan Paull. (Technically, the KS campaign is being run by Spanish publisher 2Tomatoes, which will release these games in Spanish and French, with Frosted Games releasing the titles in German.) Here's an overview of this design, which will debut at UK Games Expo in June 2020:
In the game, each side has a hand of eight action cards, ranging from Move to Attack to Recruit. Each player simultaneously chooses one card to play each turn, then reveals and carries out the action. Cards stay discarded until a player plays their score card after which they regain all played cards.
The March of Progress includes an introductory scenario based on The Thirty Years War to set out the core rules of the game. The game includes four additional historical scenarios: The Age of Marlborough, Vive l’Empereur, World War 1 in the West, and World War 2 in the West. Each scenario changes the set-up and tweaks the rules to give a flavor of strategy in different time periods. The scenarios create a varied and challenging two-player game.
In The Ming Voyages, one player will be the Ming Emperor who is trying to complete all seven treasure voyages, in addition to protecting the Chinese borderlands from invading barbarians. The other player controls the three disparate barbarian factions who are trying to settle on the borderlands with China. Battles can occur in these borderlands, with players use their three dice to roll for triples, doubles, and singles that are better than their opponent's rolls. Reserved cards can be used for re-rolls.
The game uses multi-function cards to provide actions for players to reinforce their armies and attack the enemy and for the Emperor to complete voyages. Play of a card may provide an out-of-turn action for the opponent, so players must be careful of timing. Only the Emperor draws new cards. Players swap hands at the end of each turn, so the Emperor always knows what the Barbarian Overlord holds, and each player tries to exploit the out-of-turn actions.