From his perspective, one of the main issues is that your real life bleeds into virtual conventions instead of the convention being a separate thing that occupies 100% of your time (as when you travel to SPIEL, Gen Con, etc.), which means that the virtual conventions fail to provide a transcendent experience with meaningful connections. Writes Tidball, "By these measures, virtual conventions are relatively sad reflections of the real deal. They don't transcend everyday life because they happen in the exact same places, and they use the exact same tools, as everyday life."
Another big issue is that not everyone attends game conventions for the same reason. Some folks want new games, others are participating in a tournament, and still others are pitching designs to publishers or showing off their costuming skills. Yes, overlap occurs, but the digital tools in place don't allow for meaningful accidental overlap, often because it's hard to know what's going on at all.
Along these lines, T. Caires at HABA pointed out to me that what's really missing from these virtual conventions are the hallways — which might sound ridiculous at first, but a huge percentage of convention activity takes place in the hallways between booths. You compare notes with someone on which games to check out, you see someone playing an intriguing-looking game and move in for a closer look, a publisher rep sees you passing by and invites you to join a game ("One more seat still open!"), you discover a costume contest or a sale of used games as you head somewhere to buy food or use the restroom, a designer you've met once invites you to playtest a prototype in the evening, you get a kick out of watching people's joy as they interact with the Exploding Kittens vending machine (as I've written about here and here) and so on.
None of the virtual events I've attended have hallways that allow for these types of spontaneous encounters. You have rooms for events, and when you're outside of those rooms, you can't accidentally see what's going on inside. You have to make an effort to enter the room, and the publisher or presenter is on the other side of that door, unable to entice you inside as they don't even know you're there.
Tidball's main suggestion is to give up on the idea of recreating an existing event:
More focused events have additional advantages for organizers in that they are less likely to require expensive or bespoke web platforms. They can use Slack, Discord, Zoom, Eventbrite, Shopify, and a hundred other existing pieces of Internet infrastructure instead of requiring the mass adoption of some ConventionOS that's trying to be all things to all people while it tries to run equally inside every desktop and mobile web browser in the world.
• With the end of the year approaching, writers are turning out their "Best of 2020" round-ups, such as Keith Law's "The Best 15 Board Games of 2020" for Paste and Keith Law's "The Best Board Games of 2020" for New York — yes, really! — and Marissa Miller's "Best board games 2020: Unique quarantine gifts for couples" for NBC News, which includes suggestions from our own Lincoln Damerst and Nikki Pontius of GameNight!
• In Discover, Lindsay VanSomeren introduces readers to four "scientifically-accurate board games": Wingspan, Endangered, Neanderthal, and Terraforming Mars.
• In Ars Technica, Jennifer Ouellette writes about quantum chess, which had its first tournament in early December 2020 at the Q2B 2020 conference. Here's an overview of the game from her article:
In quantum chess, there are multiple boards on which the pieces exist, and their number is not fixed. Players can perform "quantum moves" as well as regular chess moves; players just need to indicate which type of move they're performing. Any quantum move will create a superposition of boards (doubling the number of possible boards in the superposition with each quantum move), although the player will see a single board representing all boards at the same time. And any individual move acts on all boards at the same time.
More details about the game are on the Quantum Realm Games website.