The Oxford Meeples had another
quarterly games day, and I had a great time again.
First up was Sea Salt &
Paper
introducing two new players (one of whom plans to buy it straight
away).

Then on to
Courtisans
which I don't think I've played since the last Tabletop Scotland. Some
of us got positive scores this time! (And that new player intends to
buy this too.)

Mini Rails,
even more abstract than most train games: during your turn, you build
some "track" (claim a hex which tweaks a share value up or down) and
buy a share, constrained by available discs though they'll average out
over the game. I did very badly but enjoyed myself anyway.

After lunch, Steampunk
Rally
with my new play aids making life
easier. A very hard fight this time.

And finally
Lemminge,
which I still regard as a forgotten game: hardly anyone has seen it,
and yet almost everyone loves to play it.

Note that I will only approve comments that relate to the blog post itself, not ones that relate only to previous comments. This is to ensure that the blog remains outside the scope of the UK's Online Safety Act (2023).
Your submission will be ignored if any field is left blank, but your email address will not be displayed. Comments will be processed through markdown.