The last board game review was about the two-player game Lord Of The Rings: The Confrontation. Since the game was a big success at our home, I decided that there is always room for more board games in my cupboard. The lates additions are Odin’s Table and A Touch of Evil. Today we concentrate on Odin’s Table.
In Odin’s Table, you join the Gods of Asgard in a game of strength and strategy. The game, designed and illustrated by Mindwarrior Games, is a strategic board game where two players struggle for victory with the help of Viking gods. What this really means is that you try to put your tokens (three of them) to the enemy fort. The winner is the one who manages to do that. The game is simple and quick (it takes about 10 minutes each game) but still it provides fun for hours of gameplay.
Once I opened the box I was surprised that it was so “empty” since it includes the small board, a deck of cards and twelve tokens. Once I got the hold of the game, I realized that it is all we need to enjoy the game. If you plan to play the game countless times, I think somekind of protection for the cards would be nice. It would be disastrous to see your cards “marked” since that would absolutely ruin the game. The visuals however look great. I found the simple Viking themed illustrations very appealing.
Each player has six tokens and both players begin from their own side. You move the tokens one square at time in any direction you wish, but the last attack to the enemy fort must be made straight forward and you cannot move athwart past the enemy tokens. When tokens collide (they move to the same square) a battle emerges. Each column in the board has a card representing it, once the battle begins the cards are shown and the one with the bigger value wins. The losing token is removed from the board, but can be returned to the game on your turn. Once the battle has been played and cards are shown, they’re removed from the table and replaced with new ones. Both players have the same deck of cards.
So there it is in all of its simplicity. While the game seems to be simple, there is just the right amount of strategy and luck in the game which makes the game fun. I’ve played numerous games yet the game tends to be getting better as the players evolve. Waiting for the right cap to move or aligning your tokens in a right way is really fun and once you win/lose, you will demand another go on the game. A good and cheap game for two. Thumbs up.







You have four different maps in the box. The map size varies according the number of players you have. This way, the world stays small and the game still has appeal even with two players. The map is set up with some lost tribes tokens which are neutral race tokens in several predetermined regions. Normally when you conquer empty regions, it’ll cost you two race tokens, but if you conquer what that is already occupied i.e. with lost tribe token, it costs additional race token. Thus the difficulty of conquering the regions increases according to tokens already on the board.





