Yesterday we played a six-player game of
Tales
of the Arabian Nights, which was new to four of us. (It's produced
by the same folks who make Pandemic.) It's a cross between a board game
and a choose-your-own-adventure book, with fairly entertaining stories
and reasonable mechanics. When the owner of the game initially described
it I guess some of us looked dubious because he said "it plays way better
than it sounds", so we played and he was right. So I'll just say that up
front in case my description is having the same effect.
The game is played on a map covering the middle east, Europe, northern Africa,
and Asia through the Indian subcontinent. Cities, towns, and spots in the
seas are marked and connected via lines; these indicate legal movement.
Players (who are assigned character names like Ali Baba) move around this
board fulfilling quests and seeking adventure, which can alter your
scores on two tracks (destiny and story), bring new skills, bring treasure,
and cause status changes like "wounded" or "blessed" or "married" or
"grief-stricken". Ultimately the winner is determined by the destiny
and story points; the rest serves to affect your adventures along the way.
After you move you draw a card from the encounter deck, which typically
has a noun like "sorceror" and a number. This number is looked up on a
table against which you roll a die, which results in an adjective like
"angry" or "friendly" or "foolish". You can choose one of about 8-10
actions from a list (there are several different lists; the table tells
you which to use), like "aid" or "question" or "hide" or "attack".
The table cell where the adjective and the action meet produces a
cross-reference into the big book of stories. (There's another die
roll that can tweak this cross-reference a bit, so it's not completely
predictable.) Someone else then reads the corresponding entry, which
provides a usually-entertaining narrative of what happens. Sometimes this
is affected by the skills your character has or further decisions you get
to make. This entry also gives you a resolution such as "story +1 and
wounded" (you got a good story to tell but it hurt along the way).
For the most part characters do not interact, though they can under
some circumstances. What keeps this from being parallel solitaire,
though, is that at least three people are involved in each turn: the
player, the person to his right (who does the table lookups), and the
player to his left (who reads from the book of stories). This sounds
tedious (and cries out for a software adaptation), but it really wasn't
bad once we got the hang of it. Players not engaged in any of this
were helping to pull out the right status cards or skill chits as needed,
manage treasures and quests, and so on.
The game rules seem to assume that you'll run through the deck of encounter
cards two or three times, but even with six players we only barely started
the second time. (I think we drew three cards after reshuffling the
discard pile.) I don't know if we were supposed to be having more
encounters, but there didn't seem to be a lot of ways to call down
additional ones. Maybe players are supposed to try to interfere with
each other more, but again, there aren't a lot of opportunities for that.
Though I note that an unfortunate encounter with a disgruntled wizard
cost me the win by giving control of my movements to another player for
two turns. I had already satisfied the victory condition in points, but
you have to end the game in Baghdad. When I wrested control back I was
somewhere in India, IIRC. Oops.
I forgot to time it, but I think our game was around four or five hours,
including teaching. That's a lot longer than the two hours advertised
on the box, but four of us were completely new to the game and the
other two had played a few times. I think our next game would be a lot
faster, but with six players who've played once or twice I'd plan on
three hours, not two. I would definitely play this again.