I really like how you teach games. Your explanations are clear and precise. You are very calm and it is very pleasant to listen to your presentation. Thank you very much for providing quality presentations! 😊👍🏻
Wow, this looks like a significant ramp-up in heaviness compared to games from previous years, Messina, Praga, and Woodcraft! A LOT of small, fiddley rules to remember. Seems like a 4+ game in BGG complexity terms, at least from your video. I know it's not that heavy, but at first glance I could easily compare it to On Mars. Thanks for another excellent how-to-play video!
Thank you. ☺️ Actually it's not that complex, I would even say it's less complex than Praga or Messina. Definitely much lower on the complexity scale than On Mars. Once you start playing it is very intuitive, but it's very very difficult to play strategically well!
Looks great. I noticed a couple of misspeaks though. You say that you can pay resources from the old world or the old world fairly early on, and you can settle the tundra or the tundra after passing the first milestone. Also, maybe it's just my monkey brain, but that site you chose as an example for the tundra was quite...phallic. I don't know if I can unsee that now.
Excellent video, as always. Thank you so much! What’s your preferred method of playing: race or points mode? And do you prefer to play with the advanced cards vs. the basic actions? Any modules you particularly recommend?
4:19 inhabitable is the same as habitable. You meant to say uninhabitable. Or inhospitable, which indeed is the opposite of hospitable. Don't ask me, I'm Dutch. 🤷🏼
Well, for experienced gamers I would actually suggest to avoid the points mode completely. :) Race mode is more fun, it requires much higher precision and much better planning.
Yes I do, although it has a learning curve. Our first game was a "race game" and yet nobody reached the end game condition. You have to be bold and plan aggressively, there's a lot to discover in this game. I have even considered the "infrastructure cards" as a little useless, but in the end I understood they're sooooo important to for the victory! So yes, I do enjoy it quite a lot. :)
I really like how you teach games. Your explanations are clear and precise. You are very calm and it is very pleasant to listen to your presentation. Thank you very much for providing quality presentations! 😊👍🏻
Thank you so much. ☺️
So glad you did a video on this, your how to play videos are some of the best out there. This made up my mind to put this on my must buy list!
Thank you. ☺️
Don't normally comment on how to play videos. But thank you for managing to help me parse this rulebook! I found it nigh impenetrable.
Thank you. ☺️
42:33 you say clockwise but move it counterclockwise - the latter is correct. Thank for a great video!
I’m very intrigued by this game! As Underwater Cities is one of my favourite games!
Excellent tutorial as always Branislav. Very tight, puzzly game, easily Suchy's heaviest yet
Thank you very much, Christos. ☺️
Wonderful explanation which makes the rules easier to understand. Thanks very much.
Perfect, as always. Thank you.
Wow, this looks like a significant ramp-up in heaviness compared to games from previous years, Messina, Praga, and Woodcraft! A LOT of small, fiddley rules to remember. Seems like a 4+ game in BGG complexity terms, at least from your video. I know it's not that heavy, but at first glance I could easily compare it to On Mars.
Thanks for another excellent how-to-play video!
Thank you. ☺️
Actually it's not that complex, I would even say it's less complex than Praga or Messina. Definitely much lower on the complexity scale than On Mars. Once you start playing it is very intuitive, but it's very very difficult to play strategically well!
@@nithrania-gameinanutshell I dont doubt your opinion but in BGG the complexity rating of this is currently the higher of all Suchy's games! (3,91)
Maybe I perceive it as less complex because I feel like the actions are quite easy to understand. :)
We love your explanations 😊
Looks great. I noticed a couple of misspeaks though. You say that you can pay resources from the old world or the old world fairly early on, and you can settle the tundra or the tundra after passing the first milestone. Also, maybe it's just my monkey brain, but that site you chose as an example for the tundra was quite...phallic. I don't know if I can unsee that now.
Thx. We've just renamed the game to Ejaculation 😅
Correct, I found them too. 🙂 But I couldn't see that example in the tundra until Peter showed me, and now I can't unsee it too. 😆
Excellent video, as always. Thank you so much!
What’s your preferred method of playing: race or points mode? And do you prefer to play with the advanced cards vs. the basic actions? Any modules you particularly recommend?
Awesome job buddy.
See you at Essen soon.
See you! :)
4:19 inhabitable is the same as habitable. You meant to say uninhabitable.
Or inhospitable, which indeed is the opposite of hospitable.
Don't ask me, I'm Dutch. 🤷🏼
I'm Slovak, and UN-IN-habitable seemed a little too much to me. 😆 Was lazy to look it up in the dictionary. But at least I've learned something new! 😊
Weird question. Are you going to do Shipyard in the nutshell?
Well, it's on my timeline 🙂, but not as a priority, so maybe before X-mas, or maybe in January.
@@nithrania-gameinanutshell that works. We're mostly using your videos before game nights.
So, thank you.
No evacuation! I will stay where Nithrania is…….
Would you suggest skipping the race mode and just jumping right into the points mode on the first game for experienced gamers?
Well, for experienced gamers I would actually suggest to avoid the points mode completely. :)
Race mode is more fun, it requires much higher precision and much better planning.
❤❤❤❤
Do you enjoy the game?
Yes I do, although it has a learning curve. Our first game was a "race game" and yet nobody reached the end game condition. You have to be bold and plan aggressively, there's a lot to discover in this game. I have even considered the "infrastructure cards" as a little useless, but in the end I understood they're sooooo important to for the victory! So yes, I do enjoy it quite a lot. :)