Use Fruit Bats Wisely in Uwe Rosenberg's Atiwa, and Revisit Ohley and Orgler's 1880: China

Use Fruit Bats Wisely in Uwe Rosenberg's Atiwa, and Revisit Ohley and Orgler's 1880: China
Board Game: Atiwa
German publisher Lookout Games plans to demo a few of its upcoming releases at UK Games Expo, which opens June 3, so it's now made information about those releases public, with the headliner undoubtedly being Atiwa, an Uwe Rosenberg design for 1-4 players that features a fruit bat hugging an orange on the cover.

In case that's not all the info you need, here's an overview of the setting in this worker placement game:
Quote:
The Atiwa Range is a region of southeastern Ghana in Africa consisting of steep-sided hills with rather flat summits. A large portion of the range comprises an evergreen forest reserve, which is home to many endangered species. However, logging and hunting for bushmeat, as well as mining for gold and bauxite, are putting the reserve under a lot of pressure.

Meanwhile, in the nearby town of Kibi, the mayor is causing a stir by giving shelter to a large number of fruit bats in his own garden. This man has recognized the great value the animals have in deforested regions of our planet: Fruit bats sleep during the day and take off at sunset in search of food, looking for suitable fruit trees up to sixty miles away. They excrete the seeds of the consumed fruit, disseminating them across large areas as they fly home. A single colony of 150,000 fruit bats can reforest an area of up to two thousand acres a year.

Just like that mayor, in Atiwa, you know that fruit bats — once scorned and hunted as mere fruit thieves — are in fact incredibly useful animals, spreading seeds over large areas of the country. By doing so, they help to reforest fallow land and, in the medium term, improve harvests. This realization has led to a symbiotic co-operation between fruit bats and fruit farmers. The animals are kept as "pets" to increase the size of fruit farms more quickly. Tall trees are left as roosts, providing shelter for them rather than hunting them for their scant meat. However, if you have a lot of fruit bats, you need a lot of space...

Board Game: Atiwa
Gameplay example

In the game, you will develop a small community near the Atiwa Range, creating housing for new families and sharing your newly gained knowledge on the negative effects of mining and the importance that the fruit bats have for the environment. You must acquire new land, manage your animals and resources, and make your community prosper. The player who best balances the needs of their community and the environment wins.
Atiwa will debut at SPIEL '22 in October, with the game scheduled to be available in the UK, the U.S., and Canada shortly afterward. English and German rules are available on the Lookout Games website. The game will also be released in Japanese, Chinese, and Polish.

Board Game: Stack'n Stuff: A Patchwork Game
Patchwork — or rather Patchwork Express — is getting a new look as Stack'n Stuff, with Marianne Waage being credited as co-designer with Rosenberg.

As far as I understand the situation, Waage posted an image of a custom version of Patchwork Express with the game boards now serving as the inside of moving vans. Waage got permission from Lookout to post files of this version for those who wanted to print their own copy, and now Lookout is making the collaboration official with this release, which will be available in both German and English editions before the end of 2022.

Board Game: Stack'n Stuff: A Patchwork Game

From gallery of rascozion
• In a story similar to the one above, in January 2021, news dropped that Lookout Games would release a new edition of 1880: China, which was first released by designers Helmut Ohley and Leonhard "Lonny" Orgler through their Double-O Games line.

The preliminary cover to the right was shown at the time, but at the same time as the announcement, BGG user Vince Alvarez posted this image showing an alternate take for the game's cover from his partner — and in the end Lookout Games has decided to use this image from Sofia Zhong for its edition of 1880: China, which will debut in Germany in August 2022 ahead of a Q4 2022 release in the UK and the U.S.

For details on gameplay, you can download rules in English and German from the Lookout Games website.

Board Game: 1880: China

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