The other title is Charles Chevallier's Cappuccino, which is 180º away from past Matagot offerings like Kemet and Cyclades, Cappuccino being a quick-playing abstract strategy game. The description covers just about all of the rules:
Cappuccino features 64 beautiful plastic coffee cups in four different colors, with each player owning one color. At the start of the game, place all the cups face down on the table, shuffle them, then group them together. On a turn, a player can capture a stack that's adjacent to one of his own stacks as long as his stack is the same height as or taller than the adjacent stack. As long as a player's color stays on top of the stack, he controls that stack. If one or more stacks are isolated from the main group and all of these stacks are controlled by the same player, he can take possession of them, removing them from the game. When all the cups have been captured, players stack all of the cups they captured and whoever has the highest stack wins.
As soon as Hanabi won the SdJ, people wondered whether ABACUS and Bauza would release expansions for the game. Could they even do it? Is it possible to create expansions for a game that's so tight and minimal? Instead of going that route, ABACUS has instead opted to release Hanabi Deluxe, a special version of the game in a wooden box with high-quality tiles replacing the cards and chips in the standard game. Hanabi Deluxe carries a €60 MSRP and will be available at Spiel 2013, along with the other games listed above.
• In addition to the aforementioned Bang! The Dice Game, which it will release in a combined English and Italian version, Italian publisher dV Giochi has two other titles coming out at Spiel 2013, starting with the party game The Great Persuader, which will reach stores in Europe in November 2013 and in the U.S. shortly afterward. Here's a rundown of the game:
The Great Persuader includes 220 offers as well as ten rule variants for experienced players.