Tag Archives: board games

City of Zombies Board Game – Giveaway

One of the fab things about having another life as an accidental games shop owner is we get to play loads of games ‘for work’. It’s obviously not possible for each of us to have played every single game on our shelves, but between the team of five who work on the shop floor, we do have a fair amount covered, which means we can give genuine advice to the people who shop with us.

Since we have a ready made testing panel in our house, it falls to us to road test the kids’ games that come into the shop. This is something of a relief for me as my brain just does not work well enough these days for most of the grownup stuff (I live in hope that my marbles will one day return but as time goes by that is looking increasingly unlikely, ho hum).

Though we primarily play for fun, the kids learn a lot from game playing. Turn taking, negotiation, losing gracefully, thinking ahead, and if we’re playing a co-operative game, teamwork – all skills which will stand them in good stead in later life. Because I think they learn so much from board games already, I never really seek out ‘educational’ games for them. They love playing as things are and I don’t really want to spoil their or my experience by trying to bundle something in which is ‘good for them’.

So when I had a call from games designer Matthew Tidbury of Thinknoodle, telling me about a game suitable for age 8 and above that he had created to support his kids’ maths skills, I was initially slightly reticent. But then he started talking about a game featuring a city overtaken by zombies, and that sounded like a whole lot more fun. Ok I said – I’d love to trial the Zombie game in the shop, and maybe we’ll look at the Maths one at a later point? At which point Matt kindly said to me ‘ummm, sorry, you’ve misunderstood a bit – the Maths game is the Zombie game, at which point I got a bit flustered and pretended that I had totally not got the wrong end of the stick, and he politely let me pretend, before offering to send a copy to the shop to try out.

City of Zombies

The game happened to arrive on a day when my daughter was on a sleepover and my youngest was poorly, so we played it first off with the eight year old. It was refreshingly easy to set up and start playing – there is an instruction video available but the booklet that comes with the game is so well set out that you can easily manage without it.

Setting up City of Zombies

Once set up, the game is centred around a band of zombies advancing on a city – with a small bunch of heroes fighting them off, and (hopefully) destroying them before they make it over the fence. To get rid of a zombie, you use the three very dangerous weapons at your disposal – yep, these three dangerous weapons right here. Scary, aren’t they!

Zombie Killing Dice

On your turn, you must use the dice to get rid of as many zombies as you can, by using the numbers on the dice in any combination to create a number matching that shown in the red circle on the bottom right of the Zombie cards.

explore-here-they-come

So, if you throw a 2, a 3 and a 6, you can kill off a zombie in the following ways…

fighting-zombies-some-examples

This is the bit where a strange thing happens…yep, everyone gets very, very excited about, er, Maths! It was quite a revelation watching my eight year old bubbling over with different ways to try the numbers to kill off the most zombies possible, coming up with combinations that (whisper it) his father and I hadn’t seen. And it’s not just my boy – the exact same scenario was repeated with a whole bunch of children when we played at a family games event in the shop the next day…and the beauty of it was the kids didn’t even really realise that they were practically doing Maths homework!

Once everyone has grasped the basics of the game as above, you can have all sorts of fun by using optional special abilities and power ups, combining the two zombie decks to include extra-mean ones,  and using the advanced rules which mix the game up a bit – in short, there’s enough going on here for the kids to want to play it over and over again, and crucially, for the adults to enjoy it too.

Despite my reservations about ‘educational’ games, this is a game I’ve already bought for my kids to have at home – considering we already have a demo copy we could borrow from the shop, this says quite a lot about how frequently they want to play it! I’ve also been lucky enough to secure a free copy from Thinknoodle to give away here on the blog – entry is via the Rafflecopter below so why not try your luck – and see how much fun Maths can be!

If you’re not lucky enough to win a copy, they’re on sale at Rules of Play in Cardiff – or if you’re not local, you can also get a copy direct from the City of Zombies website.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

**Disclosure – I’m a co-owner of Rules of Play; we were sent a City of Zombies free of charge for the shop to try out; Thinknoodle also supplied me with a copy to give away here on the blog. I have not received any payment for this post, and as always, this post reflects my honest opinion**

Independent retail – three myths – busted

It’s not something I tend to mention on the blog, but one of the things that keeps me busy outside of my kids,  my day job and LearnerMother is Rules of Play, the games shop that I co own with my husband and a friend.

As an independent retailer, we spend a fair amount of our time challenging myths and assumptions, and after yet another conversation earlier in the week about ‘the high street being irrelevant’ I’ve been having a bit of an internal rant, to tell you the truth. And what better thing to do with an internal rant than to blog it out! Stand by for Independent Retail – three myths – BUSTED!

Independent shops are ALWAYS more expensive than chain stores/online.

Errr, nope.  I can tell you right now that EVERY SINGLE ONE of the board games in a well known chain toy shop, 10 minutes away from us, are on sale for between £3 and £5 over RRP. And you know what? They keep selling them. They’re selling them to people who are buying there in the knowledge that they’re getting a better deal than an independent shop.  Just the same as the people buying their toys there…except that technically they are actually getting a better deal than the local independent toy shop, because, uh, there isn’t one of those in the city centre any more. I wonder why…

Independent shops will sometimes be more expensive, because chains can afford to run loss leaders – i.e. cherry pick certain lines that they think will sell well, and sell them at heavily discounted prices or even at a loss. They count on the fact that you’ll be blinded by the light and make the assumption that everything else they sell is also automatically cheaper than elsewhere. Not so.

There’s a second aspect to this that isn’t often considered. If you know what you want, walk in, pick it up, pay for it and walk out, then all you need to take into account is the price of the product you walk out with. However, if you walk in, pick up what you want, ask some questions on it, decide whether it’s the right or wrong product for you, discuss alternatives or upcoming releases, even have a quick demonstration of a couple of products before making your purchase, and THEN grumble about the fact it’s £2 cheaper down the road or online – well, you are not comparing like for like. You pay for what you get.

Independent retailers are all very well, but their variety of stock isn’t as good as I can find in chain stores/online. 

Let me tell you a story. Our shop is in one of Cardiff’s historic arcades, very close to the Castle, which is pretty much a must-do tourist stop. And we sell board games. So you’d think it would make sense for us to sell Cardiff Monopoly, right? Hell, yes it would. We could shift that day in, day out. Do we stock it? No. Why don’t we stock it? Because every single copy of Cardiff Monopoly in the WORLD is piled up by the tills at a well known supermarket. Because they have the muscle to buy it as it comes off the lines and stockpile it until it sells – which means we can’t get it. This isn’t an isolated case by the way – each of the last four Christmases have seen us unable to get hold of one or more ‘must have’ games, and having to send customers elsewhere to buy them. But we do that, because we think it’s our job to help our customers get what they want. That happens online/in chains too, right?

So yes, we are sometimes locked out of key product lines. But independent retailers will usually love what they sell – or at least have a keen interest in it. They’ll also probably have a very strong idea of what their customers want (as opposed to telling them what they never knew they needed, a classic chainstore advertising tactic). This means they’ll be continually seeking out new and interesting product lines for their customers, actively sourcing more unusual items and also they’ll have the product knowledge to sort the wheat from the chaff.  So while you might not be able to get this week’s hot product from your local indie shop, you’ll probably be able to get something that’s a whole lot better.

I don’t care about anything but price, and I don’t need help choosing, so I’m not losing anything by shopping online/in a chain. 

You are, actually. And you are ultimately losing something a LOT more crucial than the £2 or £5 extra you’d spend by buying from an independent retailer. What you are losing, bit by bit, is your ability to choose where you buy you stuff from. And once you have lost that, once the retail giants know that they have the monopoly on the market, what do you think they will do? Yep, they’ll rack the price up. And they will keep doing it up to the point where the demand curve levels off (you see Mr Bond, you DID teach me something in ‘A’Level Economics!) And at that point, you’ll have to make a decision on whether you continue to buy this particular product at its inflated price,  or whether you live without it.

This might not be a disaster when you’re talking about board games. It might bother you a bit more if you’re talking about books. Or clothes – and lets not forget the supply-side effects of huge buying power in the textiles market – remember  Rana Plaza?  And a little further down the line, what are you going to do when there’s only one place to buy food, and you can’t afford it?

Think it’ll never happen? Ask your elderly next door neighbour how many butchers, bakers and candlestick makers were on your local high street 40 years ago. And then take the story forward another 40. You see? This, THIS is what we all stand to lose when our independent retailers all disappear. It’s so much bigger and more scary than your 10% saving that you’ve made by sweating over a hot computer.

So there you are – three myths busted! Thank you for reading, as always – but please don’t just read and run…even if you only change one small buying choice as a result of this article, you WILL be making a difference.

Michelle, co-owner, Rules of Play, Cardiff
Photo credit – Amy Davies