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2009 Games 100 Award Winners

Games 100 Each year since 1980, GAMES Magazine has published a Buyer's Guide to Games in their year-end holiday issue. The article lists and reviews one hundred games each year, and is therefore known as the "Games 100". The list features the very best games published in the last year.

The following is a complete listing of the Games 100 for 2009 (courtesy of Games Magazine and Funagain Games).

Game of the Year
 
TZAAR

TZAAR is a game about making choices. Both players have 30 pieces, divided in three types: 6 Tzaars, 9 Tzarras and 15 Totts. The 3 types of pieces form a trinity: They cannot exist without each other. The aim is either to make the opponent run out of one of the three types of pieces or to put him in a position in which he cannot capture anymore.

The tricky question the players will have to ask themselves on each of their turns is: "Shall I make myself stronger or my opponent weaker?" Meaning: will you capture an opponent's piece and make him weaker, or will you jump on top of one of your own pieces and make yourself stronger? If you choose to jump on top of your own pieces too often, you will probably leave your opponent with too many pieces on the board. On the other hand, if you capture too often, you may end up with pieces that are not strong enough at the end of the game. What to do? It's up to you to decide!


Best Abstract Strategy Game
 
Ponte del Diavolo

With Ponte del Diavolo, Martin Ebel honors Alex Randolph's most famous game, Twixt, by bringing new elements to this excellent game. In this game, the players build stone bridges over the many canals of Venice. Players score for each successful bridging and for each connected island. Alternative move options and modified target conditions give Ponte del Diavolo its own character, which serves only to remind us more of Twixt.


Runner-Up: Arktia
Nominees: Angel Wars, Black Box+, Octego, Spectrangle, Triple Triumph

Best Advanced Strategy Game
 
Key Harvest

The object of the game in Key Harvest is to score the most points. Players score points by placing tiles on their own country board. One point is scored for each field tile in the player's largest group of connected field tiles and two points for each tile in their second largest connected group.

Points are also scored for the worker tiles a player places on their country board. The number of points scored for each worker is equal to the number on the worker tile. Worker tiles do not count as connecting tiles when calculating the largest group of tiles. When played, a worker enables a player to take a special action. Each player has their own team of six workers, known as farmhands. There are also six townsfolk who can be acquired by any player.


Runner-Up: Brass
Nominees: Amyitis, Cuba, El Capitán, Hamburgum, In the Year of the Dragon, Jantaris, League of Six, Nefertiti, Phoenicia, Tribune

Best Family Game
 
Pandemic

Four diseases have broken out in the world and it is up to a team of specialists in various fields to find cures for these diseases before mankind is wiped out.

Players must work together, playing to their characters' strengths and planning their strategy of eradication before the diseases overwhelm the world with ever-increasing outbreaks.

A truly cooperative game where you all win or you all lose.


Runner-Up: Marrakech
Nominees: Aquaretto, Antler Island, Bacchus' Banquet, Big Points, Carcassonne: Abbey & Mayor, Cash a Catch, Catan: Dice Game, Chateau Roquefort, DartWars, Gipsy King, Hula Hippos, Geominos, Patrician, Pearl Fisher, Surf's Up, Dude!, Senet, Set Cubed, The Hanging Gardens, The Princess Bride: Storming the Castle, Tiki Mountain!, Wadi, Yahtzee Free For All

Best Family Card Game
 
Palastgeflüster

There's discontent in the courtyard of the king, and intrigue abounds: The courtyard marshal has vanished with the treasurer, and the maid is whispering with the magician. Whoever remains will be rewarded with the favor of the king.

Rules in English, German, French, Italian.


Runner-Up: Perry Rhodan
Nominees: Animalia, Chicago Cribbage, Chicago Poker, Lascaux: Exploring Ancestral Art, R-eco, Reels & Deals: The Movie-Making Card Game, Scripts & Scribes, Ticket to Ride: The Card Game, Traders of Carthage

Best Family Strategy Game
 
Stone Age

The times were hard indeed. Our ancestors worked with their legs and backs straining against wooden plows in the stony earth. Of course, progress did not stop with the wooden plow. People always searched for better tools and more productive plants to make their work more effective.

In Stone Age, the players live in this time, just as our ancestors did. They collect wood, break stone and wash their gold from the river. They trade freely, expand their village, and so achieve new levels of civilization. With a balance of luck and planning, the players compete for food in this pre-historic time.

Risk and grow as your ancestors did. Only then the victory ring sings to you!


Runner-Up: Jamaica
Nominees: Airships, Chang Cheng, Darjeeling, Dragon Lairds, Fagin's Gang, Galaxy Trucker, Gangster, Ice Flow, Kingsburg, Metropolys, Oregon, Pillars of the Earth: Expansion Set, Race for the Galaxy, San Quentin Kings, The Market of Alturien, Thebes, Tinners' Trail, Toledo, Utopia

Best Party Game
 
Go Nuts!

Take your cheeky chances on this quick playing dice game of nut gathering nuttiness. Pile up points by rolling the dice and adding up acorns, while avoiding any cars along the way. If you roll all squirrels, scurry to score as many nuts as you can before your opponents’ dogs chase you away! The player with the most points wins.


Runner-Up: What?
Nominees: Be•Rhymed!, Eye Know, Mad Scientist University

Best Puzzle
 
Doris

This totally amazing set of 24 octagonal tiles with all combinations of 3 colors on their edges has millions of solutions! Or only 2, or 8, depending on what you attempt.

Notice how the centers are sometimes squares, sometimes diamonds. Such mixed solutions are much more challenging. Many ways to match edges: single edges, double-color edges, hybrids, even corners. A huge repertoire of cool figures will keep you enthralled, plus rules for two games of space ships on rescue missions -- Space Tow and Space Crossing -- played on a 3-part sectional engraved vinyl game grid.


Runners-Up: Maze Ways: Cat & Mouse, Maze Ways: Mummy Mystery
Nominees: Carta Blanca, Dazzle, Fire Escape, Intarsia, North Pole Camouflage, Oops!, Pillars of Atlantis, Safari Undercover, The Enigmatic Temple, Zen Benders: Race Track, Zen Benders: Dachshund, Zen Benders: Dragon, Zen Benders: Quilt

Best Word Game
 
Jumbulaya

Jumbulaya is an addictive, multi-faceted word strategy game in which each player works with five letter tiles on his/her tray and all the letters on the board, rearranging, adding, and trading them, building and claiming longer and longer words each turn.

Simultaneously, as players build words horizontally, they also look for a Jumbulaya. A Jumbulaya is a seven-, eight-, or nine-tile word that can be spelled vertically on the board. Players strategize and plan multiple moves ahead to create longer and longer words. A player earns points for all lines he/she claims, bonus points for using "letter-combo" tiles, and even more points for being the first to find a Jumbulaya. The player who earns the most points, wins!


Runner-Up: Obscurity
Nominees: Scrabble Express, Word Blur

Best Historical Simulation Game
 
Pacific Typhoon

Pacific Typhoon is a strategy card game for 4-6 players, ages 10 to adult. The game uses the same system that first appeared in the popular 1998 Avalon Hill card game Atlantic Storm.

The game setting is the naval and air war in the Pacific theatre during World War II. Pacific Typhoon depicts the history of the air-naval battles of the Pacific War with 40 battle cards, each of which represents an historical naval or air battle such as Pearl Harbor, Midway, Surigao Strait, etc. Players compete by fighting a non-sequential series of twenty of these battles. A battle lasts for one round of play, so each player gets to play once per battle. The round-leader starts by picking one of two battle cards (he discards the unpicked one). The chosen battle card determines the year of battle. The battle card is also worth a certain number of victory points and resources to whoever wins it. The round-leader alternates after each battle, and the game ends after 20 battles (when the Battle Card deck is exhausted).


Runner-Up: Kutuzov
Nominees: B-29 Superfortress: Bombers Over Japan, 1944-1945, Blackbeard: The Golden Age of Piracy, Manoeuvre, Tide of Iron

Games 100 winners from previous years:

Game images & descriptions courtesy of FunAgain Games


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