Prevent Books from Being Destroyed by the Illiterati

Prevent Books from Being Destroyed by the Illiterati
Board Game: Illiterati
Given the news of Art Spiegelman's Pulitzer-Prize-winning graphic novel Maus being banned by a Tennessee school district, this game announcement seems timely.

In 2022, U.S. publisher Gap Closer Games will run a Kickstarter campaign for Illiterati, a 1-5 player co-operative design from Gary Alaka, Rob Chew, and Jon Kang. I mean, check out the introductory paragraph from the rulebook:
Quote:
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. It was the age of illiteracy, it was the age of...the Illiterati. The ancients tell of a time when anyone could freely ascend to a mythical building called a "library" and acquire any book for one's personal literary pleasure. But that all changed when an evil, secret organization called the Illiterati emerged from the shadows and took over the world in the blink of an eye. Their mission: to spread illiteracy. Their means: the destruction of all books. Their motive: because reading is hard.
As for how to play, here's a detailed overview:
Quote:
Your job as a member of the League of Librarians is to save the world's books — one word at a time.

Illiterati is a real-time, co-operative word game in which players work together to form words and bind books. Each player starts the game with five letter tiles and a red torched book that shows a condition that player must achieve to restore that book, e.g. using 8+ tiles with at least 3 green symbols, create words that are all animals. A library of three random tiles is placed in the center of the table. The game takes place in three-minute rounds, and before the round begins each player draw seven letter tiles from the draw bag.

Board Game: Illiterati
Sample blue book, with the individual challenge at left and the Final Chapter at right

Once the countdown begins, players can talk and trade letters as much as they want with one another and the library to try to achieve their goal. Once time ends, if the library contains too many letters — and this threshold is based on your difficulty level — then you trigger a burn event. Flip all of these letters face down, then remove one of them from the game, then discard excess letters to the discard bag. If you burn too many letters, you lose the game. If you didn't burn any letters and you've completed your goal, flip your red book face down and draw a blue waterlogged book to give yourself a new goal.

At the end of the round, draw an illiterati villain card and resolve its effect. If you've drawn this villain previously — and the deck contains five copies of five villains — then all of the previous effects from this villain also resolve in a chain attack from newest to oldest. Villain attacks often strip letters from words, which means you'll need to create new words with what's left during the next round to avoid burning another letter.

From gallery of W Eric Martin
Illiterati villains

Once all players have completed two books — or three or four depending on your difficulty level — draw one more book, the Final Chapter, with all players needing to complete this challenge in the same round, e.g., using 12+ tiles, create words in which all of your vowels are the same color. If all players meet this goal during the same round, you win; if even one person fails, another villain attacks, then you draw new tiles to start another round. You can discard and redraw up to seven tiles at the start of a round, but you must draw a second illiterati villain card that round — and if the villain deck runs out, you lose.
By the way, if you have not read Maus, I highly recommend it. Spiegelman details his parents' life in Poland in the 1930s and 1940s, as well as their experience at Auschwitz and in the years following World War II.

Board Game: Illiterati

Related

Command Cute Robots in Quirky Circuits: Penny & Gizmo's Snow Day

Command Cute Robots in Quirky Circuits: Penny & Gizmo's Snow Day

Jan 28, 2022

Have you been looking for more opportunities to tell robots what to do?If so, you're in luck as Quirky Circuits: Penny & Gizmo's Snow Day is coming from Nikki Valens and Plaid Hat Games. This...

Experience the Beginning of the Vietnam War, Explore British Counterinsurgency, and Shape Urban Life in the South Bronx

Experience the Beginning of the Vietnam War, Explore British Counterinsurgency, and Shape Urban Life in the South Bronx

Jan 28, 2022

• It's probably no surprise that I'm a big fan of Volko Runke and GMT Games' COIN series, especially if you read my post in January 2021 covering VPJ Arponen's All Bridges Burning, the first...

Dominion: Seaside to See Second Edition in April 2022

Dominion: Seaside to See Second Edition in April 2022

Jan 27, 2022

In 2016, U.S. publisher Rio Grande Games released second editions of Donald X. Vaccarino's Dominion and Dominion: Intrigue, each of which replaced some of the original Kingdom cards in those sets...

As d'Or Nominees for 2022

As d'Or Nominees for 2022

Jan 26, 2022

The Festival International des Jeux, held annually in Cannes, France at the end of February, has announced the nominees for the 2022 As d'Or — France's game of the year award.For 2022, the...

Break Out the Peanuts for Blaseball: The Card Game, and Cast a Spell with Similo

Break Out the Peanuts for Blaseball: The Card Game, and Cast a Spell with Similo

Jan 26, 2022

• Are you familiar with Blaseball? If not, here's a description of this "baseball simulation horror game" courtesy of Wikipedia:Quote:Blaseball centers on an absurdist simulation of baseball,...

ads