Not exact matches
Nintendo is still
living their picture of some 1980ies - kiddos, sitting in front of a TV and having fun, treating a videogame as something like a digital version of a
boardgame.
And now, since we
live in a time where various licenses are being used to create great games we're getting a
boardgame version of the movie courtesy of designer Eric Lang and publisher CMON.
Ah, but then
boardgames entered my
life and proved me wrong with its much more peaceful themes, such as running a gallery or smuggling contraband into the market, or in the case of Mystic Vale quietly tending to what will hopefully be a verdant valley of serenity.
Another great
boardgame addition to
live along with Catan.