Stonemaier Games Tapestry Board Game

Stonemaier Games Tapestry Board Game




Dimensions: | 29.54 x 29.54 x 10.16 cm; 2.6 Kilograms |
Model: | STM150 |
Material: | Cardboard |
Colour: | Brown |
Pack Quantity: | 1.0 |
Batteries Required: | No |
Batteries Included: | No |
Age: | 3 years and up |
Assembly: | No |
Dimensions: | 29.54 x 29.54 x 10.16 cm; 2.6 Kilograms |
Material: | Cardboard |
Quantity: | 1.0 |
I love this game. We’ve played it well over a hundred times since buying it a year and a half ago and have all the expansions. It has not grown old. My husband and I most often play at 2-player, but we’ve played up to 5 with our teens and tweens and everyone enjoys it. I think of this as a medium-weight engine builder with infinite variability rather than a more realistic civ game. Combat is not the focus of the game and most actions are rewarding. I’m always happy to win, but I also come away from the game feeling good when I don’t lose because I know I did my best to maximize the potential of my situation that game. I don’t see this one ever leaving our collection.
Easy to get started but infinitely variable and has lots of strategy paths to follow. Mostly we play with 2 people and it’s good fun. Takes about 2 hours
I’ve enjoyed Civilization games since the original boardgame came out in the early 80s. This is nowhere near as complicated, but you still get a little sense of Civ building by why of tech improvements and adding buildings to your city. My wife enjoys this one too so we play it a lot just the 2 of us. Plenty of replayability with the number of civs, cards, etc. You can always try a different blend/combo of tech advances. We tried it first on Board Game Arena, loved it, bought it. If you’re an avid boardgamer, this is a must for the collection in my opinion. Will probably get the expansions soon 😉
This game is amazing. Amazing concept, well executed. The quality of the components is 10/10. If you like Stonemaier games, you’ll like this one.
I’ve really enjoyed playing this game since we got it. The rules aren’t entirely intuitive, and I’d recommend not using the civilisation cards in your first play through so as everyone’s playing by the same rules. It’s a good 2 hours to play a game, but it goes quickly.
Slightly annoyingly the box isn’t very well designed for storage compartments, so set-up and pack-up take longer than is ideal.
Love the strategies, the buildings and houses are really good quality, worth the price
Seller was very quick sending this, pleasantly surprised. Also a great game!
oh my god such an amazing game, played 5 times today! love i
I’ve played the game four more times as a two player game and once as a three player game. My friends and I had a lot of fun. It has lots of replay ability b/c of the 16 different civilizations you can play. And not only that but the randomness of the different tapestry cards and tech cards you may get.
I’m excited to see they have an expansion that adds 10 more civilizations and other things for even more replay-ability. I will definitely be getting that in the near future.
One note, I wish that on the bottom or on the base of each building that they had put the name of the building. It would be much easier to determine what building is which when setting up the game, and from the buildings that are on the tech cards. And the bases don’t quite fit the squares it shows they cover. So when you are placing them on your capital mat, make sure to keep that in mind. Don’t go by just the building itself when placing it. Go back the helpful picture that is provided on the building mat and the tech card. B/c you might short-change yourself on a couple of squares.
Other than that this game is great and my friends and I love it!!!
Lovely game with lots of fine detail. A bit complicated to get started but once you get going its quite fun.
Overall, it is a fun Euro style civic engine building game with alot of choices. Moreover, there are so many ways to win this game that it never gets booring. Each time i play this i end up discovering a new strategy.
In Tapestry you’ll follow very simple rules to advance and build your own civilization from just discovering and making fire to eventually launching spaceships or creating AI singularities. It sounds like quite a journey, and it is, you’ll get the chance to advance however you want along 4 different tracks. This is a very fun option and one that seems very well enjoyed by everyone we’ve played this with. All the time while advancing on these tracks you’ll use your civilization’s special abilities to help grow and expand your territory and build up your city.
There are a lot of fun parts of this game that play off of one another, and can generate unique ways for you to score victory points. With so many ways to score points in different areas of the game board even new players will find themselves competing in score with experienced players. So there is a nice balance between everything, unless you choose to spread yourself too thin on all the tracks you’ll find it very competitive.
We have a lot of fun playing this, my wife perhaps more so than me. I do have a few problems with it that drop my personal thoughts on it a little. It’s a simple game, this is not the issue though, I love a simple game, they are fun and exciting. My problem is, this is a huge box game with so many things in it, so many abilities, possibilities, options, ways to score, ways to play. There is just so much possible in this game, that for it to play so simply then kills it for me just a little bit. I wanted more from it, being such a great put together game with great quality components and it being so vast in possibilities I just want a bit more complexity from it.
My larger complaint with the game is the Rulebook; I am not satisfied with that at all. It is not as descriptive or full as it needs to be. There are many icons not explained, you can reference through an included sheet and match up things and eventually learn what something that isn’t represented means. The Warp Space tiles for example are not explained at all. It could also have benefitted from a few play examples, or at least a simple setup guide. Our very first game of this was a struggle of referencing rules online and referring to the Rulebook for answers we hoped we’d find but didn’t. You can learn the whole game this way, but the turnaround time on your first game or two could be decreased a lot with a better Rulebook.
I still recommend this game and like to show it to new players. It is not at all that I don’t enjoy it; this one just falls slightly lower on my list as far as how much I like it. I’ve enjoyed many of the other games from Stonemaier much more than this one, but my wife rates this one at the top of her lists, so again you can see it comes down to just personal preferences.
It is for sure one to own and enjoy playing, I think it plays best with at least 3 players. 2 is a doable and works well but the added players do increase the tension and enjoyment for me. There is an alternate Automa set of rules for playing a 3rd in a 2 player game. I’ll be sure to update once we’ve given that a try.