MK SPORTS INDIA Blog Best Board Games Run a Laboratory from the Palm of Your Hand, and Avoid Piranhas, Bullheads, and Deadly Cocktails | BoardGameGeek News
Best Board Games

Run a Laboratory from the Palm of Your Hand, and Avoid Piranhas, Bullheads, and Deadly Cocktails | BoardGameGeek News

Run a Laboratory from the Palm of Your Hand, and Avoid Piranhas, Bullheads, and Deadly Cocktails | BoardGameGeek News


6 nimmt! Baron Oxx: AMIGO describes this 2-10 player Wolfgang Kramer and Michael Kiesling design as “the slightly different 6 nimmt!“. Hmm. More details to come for this and all other releases in January 2025.
Pim Pam Pum: A dice-rolling memory game for 2-5 players aged 4 and up originally released by Argentinian publisher Maldón.
Pick a Pen: Hacker: The newest title in Reiner Knizia‘s “draft a pencil and draw stuff” series from Dutch publisher <a href="https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgamepublisher/267/999-games“>999 games.
Schatz des Phönix: A 2-6 player card game from Knizia in which you want to collect the phoenix’s treasures.
Fischfutter: In this Michael Modler card game for 2-5 players, you must escape the piranhas or become fish food.

Another title seeing a German-language edition is Jon Mietling‘s Palm Laboratory, which KOSMOS will release at Palm Lab. As with Mietling’s 2018 game Palm Island, Palm Lab is a solitaire game played with a deck of cards that never leaves your hand:

Creating unique monsters, powerful devices, and fantastic potions is a dangerous business. As you gain power and succeed in your experiments, you must also maintain your laboratory to prevent catastrophe. Take on the many challenges of Palm Laboratory anywhere you go with this handheld resource management game.

Palm Laboratory uses a small deck of four-sided cards and deck-transforming mechanisms to flip and rotate cards. As you improve each card, each will increase your resource production, gain more points, or make progress on the goal of your current game — a goal that you choose and that defines the rules for victory or defeat. Some goals add additional cards to generate new resources or other goal-specific objectives.

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Each turn, you review the top two cards of your deck and take an action listed on the top section of either card — or you discard the top card by placing it at the back of the deck. When you take a card action, you do so by paying any required cost, then following the action type: rotating it 180º, flipping it over, or storing the card by rotating it 90º so that it sticks out from the other cards. After manipulating the card during an action, you place it in the back of the deck; stored cards provide resources you can use on future actions.



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