Let's start with a half-dozen games from IELLO, kicking off with the company's SPIEL '20 release:
We didn't record an overview of Khôra: Rise of an Empire as IELLO has many other titles debuting prior to it, so for now we have only this short description:
King of Tokyo: Dark Edition has a worldwide release date of April 24, 2020.
I already covered Eric B. Vogel's Kitara in a Nov. 2019 post highlighting game previews from SPIEL '19, but (1) the game has now been bumped from a SPIEL '20 release to a Gen Con 2020 release (with Khôra now in that latter release slot) and (2) this image doesn't have a guy's butt in it, which might make it better (or worse) for some viewers.
Flyin' Goblin was another title debuted in that earlier Nov. 2019 post.
Royal Visit is a new version of Reiner Knizia's Times Square, a.k.a. Auf der Reeperbahn nachts um halb zwei, a funky, two-player, hand-management, tug-of-war game that got tagged with an unfortunate title and look when it first appeared in 2006.
Another Knizia title in the IELLO 2020 catalog will be Schotten Totten 2, a standalone sequel to Schotten Totten that fits the "same but different" category you might expect of such a title. Here's an overview of this September 2020 release:
The defender has three boiling oil tokens available to them to clear out the attacker's cards. The deck consists of cards numbered 0-11 in five colors, along with ten tactical cards.
Détective Charlie wasn't included in the IELLO catalog, and I didn't see a LOKI, and we didn't record an overview of this title — perhaps at FIJ 2020? — so for now I can offer only this image.
Swiss publisher Hurrican will debut Paolo Mori's Via Magica at FIJ 2020 in late February 2020, this being a new version of Mori's Rise of Augustus from 2013.
I knew nothing about the TV series "Peaky Blinders" before stopping at the Just Games booth to get an overview of Peaky Blinders: Under New Management, and I know just the barest amount of information possible about it, namely that it's "a gangster family epic set in Birmingham, England, in 1919, several months after the end of the First World War". Thanks, Wikipedia!