January 26, 2004

German Board Games?

In a couple of places recently I’ve found references to an apparently thriving German board game industry. For example, here:

Why “German” games? As it turns out, German families spend a great deal of their time doing things together (no, watching TV does not count!) . . . This, coupled with some very clever game designers, has produced games that are simple, highly interactive, games that can be played and enjoyed within 1-2 hours. These games are very colourful, and span a wide spectrum of themes. The mechanisms are also varied, from clever use of geometry to bidding systems, bluffing and negotiations.

Anyone have any more insight into this trend or information about the games?

Posted by mgk at January 26, 2004 06:09 PM
Comments

I'm told that the game that began the German games craze is Settlers of Catan - which, I can attest, is an absolute marvel of balance and playability. Tikal (pictured on June's webpage) is also fun, though Settlers is a far more enjoyable game. (FWIW, it's a resource-trading/city-building game with a healthy dose of diplomacy and just enough randomness to level the playing field.)

I've nothing to say about the wider industry, but it's a bit like French New Wave cinema, I imagine - a convergence of talented people doing linked work for an appreciative audience in the right kind of commercial atmosphere.

Posted by: Wally at January 26, 2004 07:14 PM | Link to Comment

Thanks, Wally!

Posted by: MGK at January 27, 2004 10:09 AM | Link to Comment

I'm fascinated by how cultural traits can eventually lead to an overwhelming push towards one form of entertainment or another. There's the German example. The Japanese are nearly obssessed with video games of every form (to the extent that it's common for Japanese mothers to say 'Cura' as they comfort an injured child - Cura being the common name for a healing spell in video role playing games...)

There's also the fairly well known Korean example. Online computer gaming has a saturation to an almost unbelievable level, with literally millions playing the popular games, and even small cities may have multiple public centers connected to the internet solely for playing games. Playoffs in top games like Starcraft are televised, and players can recieve corporate sponsorship. In 2002 it was estimated 26 million people played such games, out of a combined population for North and South of around 75 million.

Posted by: James Simonds at January 29, 2004 10:30 AM | Link to Comment

Very interesting James, particularly in light of the extreme political divide between North and South Korea. Are there controls or other forms of censhorship on the northen gaming population?

Posted by: MGK at January 29, 2004 12:53 PM | Link to Comment

Wow, thank you!

Posted by: MGK at February 1, 2004 09:49 PM | Link to Comment

it is interesting to see, that german games are recognized in the usa. i am a german student and we are playing tikal, the settlers of catan ... regularly

people meet for one evening only to play catan.
the game i appreciate most is carcassonne. it is structered like the settlers of catan. you have to build houses and castels, control streets and lakes ...

http://www.hans-im-glueck.de/ - the site for the game carcassonne
http://www.die-siedler.com/index2.htm - the official site for the settlers of catan
both only in german

Posted by: chris at February 16, 2004 04:49 AM | Link to Comment

That's a very interesting topic. I'm a real gaming fan but I've never played german board games. Now I will - thanks for information!

Posted by: Multiplayer Game at March 19, 2004 05:06 PM | Link to Comment
Due to the proliferation of comment spam, I've had to close comments on this entry. If you would like to leave comment, please send email to me at mgk =at= umd =dot= edu. Thank you.