• In early 2021, Chinese publisher Jing Studio ran a Kickstarter campaign for an English-language edition of Pingyao: First Chinese Banks, a game for 1-4 players from designer Wu Shuang that had debuted in 2017.
Here's an overview of the design, which is being co-published with Board Game Rookie and is due out in Q4 2021:
Pingyao: First Chinese Banks is an economic dice-as-workers placement game in which players assume the role of famous Jin merchants in the Qing Dynasty. During the blossoming age of banking, players expand from Pingyao to open agencies across China, offering remittance services to businessmen in order to earn profits. The goal of the game is to build up money over eight rounds and be the wealthiest player by game's end.
Throughout the game, players must recruit reliable managers to oversee their agencies, which can grant powerful abilities. With cash in hand, players may deposit their earnings to gain interest or offer loans in exchange for government favors and fame.
Pingyao: First Chinese Banks also includes a solo mode in which you are challenged by a series of quests.
During a round, on the count of 3 you all simultaneously point to the fish card on display that you want, and if you're the only player to point at a card, you take it; otherwise, you don't. Collect cards to score points, and whoever scores 6 points first wins.
• A more recent title from Homosapiens Lab and designer Chen Chih-Fan is Mandora Fever, about which I know nothing other than what's depicted here. I can tell you, however, that a "mandora" is a cross of mandarin and orange grown on Cyprus. Now you know what I know.
• Designer Tony Chen of Monsoon Publishing debuted in 2017 with two titles — Iberian Rails and Warriors of Jogu: Feint — and in February 2021 he noted that "we are almost ready to release the next five factions" for Warriors of Jogu. Aside from that, he's been working on a heavy Eurogame design titled "Quemoy" that he described in November 2020 as "One island, four workers, and many buildings."
Perhaps you can decipher some of the game from this image:
Testing Quemoy. pic.twitter.com/EdJrLidUZ3
— Monsoon Publishing (@Monsoon_Publish) March 22, 2021
• We'll close with Rolling Dice, a 2-6 player dexterity game from Peter Wichmann, Karl-Heinz Schmiel, Albrecht Werstein, Klaus Zoch, and German publisher ABACUSSPIELE.
I'm a bit surprised not to have heard anything about this title yet, but I suspect that's due to events like Spielwarenmesse being cancelled. Otherwise we'd have video to share of lots of dice-chucking action. In any case, here's an overview of the gameplay:
Each round in the game, you roll three or four dice onto the ice floe. If you rolled four dice, then you choose one die to leave on the floe, removing the other three dice from play. If you rolled three dice — because one of your dice was on the ice floe from a previous round — then you must choose a just-rolled die that has a higher number than your previously-placed die or a just-rolled die that has gone farther on the ice floe than your previously-placed die. If you throw all your dice too hard and land in the "water" around the ice floe or you fail to roll higher or farther than a previously-placed die, then you place one die as a penalty on an ice block to the side of the board.
Once all players have rolled in a round, whether with three dice or four, players score. Whoever has a die on the ice floe scores points equal to the sum of the pips showing on their die AND all the pips showing on dice that didn't go as far on the ice floe AND all the pips showing on dice out of play on ice blocks. Score bonus points if you're on a fish net and lose points if you're on an ice hole. (If you have a die on an ice block, you do not score this round.) Thus, the farther you roll on the ice floe, the greater your scoring potential — not to mention the potential of landing in the water.
After scoring, start a new round beginning with whoever was first to place a die on an ice block, with all players once again rolling either three or four dice. The game ends the round that a player reaches or exceeds a certain point threshold, then the player with the most points wins.