Thursday, February 20, 2020

Worker Placement: Game Mechanics 101

To watch Adam's video lesson click here!

Welcome back to game mechanics 101! Today we are talking about worker placement games. I already shared a little about our experience with Agricola in our lesson introduction. It was our first worker placement game and only our second Euro game. It was difficult for us to learn and understand. Now, worker placement games are among our favorites.

Worker placement games are focused around your worker pieces and where you are going to place them. These games have a shared board with limited spaces to place workers. Each space will provide the player with resources or actions that they need to work toward victory.

In Agricola, only one player can be on each space on the board. This means that players can block each other easily. Viticulture has a limited number of slots open per action, but multiple workers can use each one. The number of available slots is dependent on the number of players.

The Manhattan Project has a main board with actions as well. However, the players can also construct their own board of options to play on. This means that not every player will have the same options by the end of the game.

Are Dinosaur Island and Dice hospital worker placement games? We have had a number of discussions about this. They both use workers that are placed on limited spaces, but the spaces are on the players’ individual boards. There is no community board in which the players interact with each other. What do you think? Share your thoughts in the comments. Join us next week for tile placement games.

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