276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Stonemaier Games | Wingspan: Asia | Board Game | Ages 14+ | 1-7 Players | 40-70 Minutes Playing Time & | Wingspan: European Expansion | Board Game | Ages 14+ | 1-5 Players | 40-70 Minute Playing Time

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

I know you will have to include the rules in the instruction manual for future expansions, but please include more round-end and game-end powers in future expansions. These bird powers are fun to have, but these powers would be seriously diluted if there aren’t more of them in future expansions. The American Bittern and Common Loon are counting the birds in each player’s wetland and comparing them to other players. The player (or players) with the fewest among all other players (including zero), would get the benefit of those powers.

If you ask a question about a specific card or ability, please type the exact text in your comment to help facilitate a speedy and precise answer. As for the bonus percentages, in the English version they haven’t changed beyond 1-2% for any card, and Elizabeth chooses birds to prevent those percentages from changing beyond that. So I ran into a bit of an interesting situation while playing a game recently. One of the players had an Australian Owlet-Nightjar, and another player took the Gain Food action. After that player finished going through their forest brown powers, the player with the Nightjar rerolled the feeder to attempt to gain a worm, because there was only 1 die remaining in the feeder and it was not a worm. After the reroll, there were no worms, so the Nightjar didn’t gain food. After that, the next player took food, and the feeder ended up with worms remaining at the end of their turn.

Wingspan Nesting Box

As for words that apply to bonus cards, there are lists in both English expansion rulebooks that note any additional words. A number of birds (like the Song Sparrow) have a brown power that lets you move them to another habitat if it is to the right of all the birds in its original habitat: “WHEN ACTIVATED: if this bird is to the right of all other birds in it’s habitat, you may move it to another habitat.”

Wingspan: Asia is therefore a perfect place to begin your Wingspan journey, assuming that the two player count is important to you. If you already have Wingspan and just want the additional cards and content, there is still enough here for you. The card art is perfectly in keeping with other versions, the new eggs mix in well, and the food dice are — at worst — great spares for when your original dice start to wear. For me, this is another delightful expansion — it’s thoughtful, innovative and it adds to all areas of the experience. There’s nothing not to like.

The card and egg generated by the orange arrow spaces fall behind as a general focus because they are not clustered together with other resources in a significant way. They are separated from the nearest food resource by three spaces and the nearest card resource by two spaces. They can work together most effectively with the blue arrow spaces as a part of Grasslands development, forming a snake-like line of contiguous grouping and fueling more bird plays by delaying the need for the lay egg action. Wingspan Asia Duet Mode End of Round Goals

I think that Wingspan Asia is a core set in spirit, even if Stonemaier Games doesn’t want to call it that. You don’t actually need core Wingspan to play it (a feature of a new core set), but it also expands what core Wingspan can do, and you actually need it to play certain ways (a feature of an expansion). I have two questions. First, regarding cards such as the American Bittern or Common Loon, which say “Player(s) with the fewest [wetland] birds draw 1 [bird card].” Should the players be comparing the number of birds played in their wetland versus birds played in their other habitats, or should the players be comparing the number of birds played in their wetland versus the number of birds played in other players’ wetlands. piece custom tray (now made of eco-friendly sugarcane–it’s white instead of the purple shown in older photos and videos)

Wingspan

There is a bonus “Expert on food webs”– birds that eat only worms. 2 points are given for each bird. The bonus applies to birds that do not have any feed symbol other than a worm. How did she come to that decision? What other options did she consider besides handwriting? Was your larger team, including the artists, even coming at this design process from the standpoint of classic ornithological compilations? Or did they come at it from a completely different perspective? You can expand Wingspan Asia with the European and/or Oceania expansions and ignore the core set entirely (another feature of a core set). Although this forces you into Duet Mode since you won’t have access to the traditional end-of-round scoring method included in the core set. It is a standard expansion-sized set of 90 bird cards, which falls in line with the size of previous Wingspan expansions. Hi Shahil. Great questions. The variant is “on top of the existing rules” in that, without the variant… a bird power that is supposed to benefit other players does not benefit Automa. With Automa’s Hoard, she gains some fraction of a victory point from these powers, and over the course of a game this can amount to a few victory points for Automa depending on how often you use those powers. If you don’t use any bird powers that benefit other players, it amounts to 0 VP. The Wetlands restriction on this bird feels kind of awkward. This isn’t the best bird to play in the first column of your Wetlands to get your card drawing started, but that’s probably the best position for this bird to get the most out of its power. If this bird is your only Wetlands bird by round two and you laid two eggs with its power at the end of round one, you’ve got some extra eggs to discard for extra cards with future Draw Cards actions.

Imagine that you have Indian Peafowl and Bonelli’s Eagle in hand. Instead of taking a turn or two to draw the necessary cards to play the Eagle, you could play the Peafowl, draw three cards, then play the Eagle on the next turn. That’s a ponent combination. Solo or multiplayer, if you don’t fulfill any of the goal requirements, you don’t score any points for that goal. It should be noted that the boards in this expansion are two-sided. The other side does have the Oceania version of the board.Hi. If you will make any future Southamerican Expansion, I would recommend some of the following birds, with unique type of species, special habitats and not present in previous expansions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_birds_of_Peru Not sure what game to buy next? Buy a premium mystery box for two to four great games to add to your collection! Buy Premium Box » I have a question about the photographer bonus card. Does the Bald Eagle qualify for this bonus? The word “bald” comes from the old English “balde,” meaning white. Since this spelling is an americanized spelling of a word that means a color, shouldn’t it qualify? We love your game! Could we create Shirts and Sweatshirts about your game and sell them,of course without using your images, only the name “wingspan”? We just encountered a question that means the difference between him winning by two points or me winning by one: there is a bonus card that gives 3 points for each “bird that allows you to score or draw bonus cards.” Does a bird that allows you to copy a white “when played” power (like the rose-ringed parakeet) count for this card, or is that too far of a stretch? I used the parakeet to copy my neighbor’s “draw bonus cards” power and hubby is saying that it doesn’t count toward the bonus card points because it’s not a true card that allows you to draw or score bonus cards.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment