We thought that to allow both Catan fans and Star Trek fans relatively intuitive access to each other's universes, a complex, stand-alone Catan scenario in the fashion of The Starfarers of Catan would be rather unsuitable. The starting point, therefore, was my Settlers of Catan adaptation "Space Settlers," whose unchanged game mechanics also worked well visually. We "only" had to transfer it from its generic, public-domain context I intentionally had given it back then, to the Star Trek universe.
• U.S. publisher Hasbro has released its financial results for Q2 2012, and in the category of relevance for this site, "Net revenues in the Games category declined 8% to $213.8 million with Magic: The Gathering, Duel Masters and Battleship brands continuing to grow."
• On Gamehead, Michael Bahr – who describes himself as "managing partner of Desert Sky Games LLC, which will open its flagship store [in Q3 2012] in Gilbert, Arizona" and someone who has "had an ownership stake in five game stores since 1997, some successful, others disastrous" – catalogs five mistakes that people make when opening game stores. An excerpt:
Where does all this money go? About a quarter to a third to initial inventory, some to provide a few months' operating expenses, and the rest to development of the store – and that is where most owners miss the boat. Most owners allocate adequate cash to trading card game inventory, and the fast turn rate of those products helps the store's bottom line look good in the early going. Often this means they won't see how they undercapitalized elsewhere until it's too late.
• Online gaming site Happy Meeple has added a previously unpublished Reiner Knizia game to its offerings: Keltis Ór. What do you do in the game? Well, you need to unlock the game by first playing other games and earning resources, which you can then cash in for gold to pay the cost of the game – but I think the Knizia/Keltis names and a look at the screenshot below will answer most of your questions.