Game Name: | Agricola | Published Year: | 2007 |
Game Publisher: | Uwe Rosenberg | Player Scale: | 2 – 5 |
Game Designer: | Z-Man Games | Run Time: | 30 – 150 mins |
If I were to tell you this is a game about indirect competitive farming you might not think it sounds particularly good, and with that description of this detailed, strategic, and thoroughly engaging game; who could blame you. But, the theme is integral to the mechanics of this Euro game, and in the currently available edition, the wooden animeeples never lets you forget that this a game about toiling the land to enrich, improve and most importantly feed your family of farmers – which is what Agricola means, it is Latin for farmer. See; games are fun and educational no one learns Latin these days.
You’ll start this game with a plot of land, empty except for your small, two-room farmhouse, which can only manage to fit two people; husband and wife (denoted by very gender neutral wooden discs). Between all the players then lies the game boards which, over the course of the next six stages (broken into 14 rounds), will reveal the various actions your household will be able to undertake to provide resources of some kind or another, or complete tasks; like building some fences so you can then keep some sheep. Now, with only two people in your house, you’ll only be able to take two actions, to take any more you need another farmer on the farm, but to fit another farmer you need a bigger house. And, of course, if you have enough space for three, four or even five farmers on your little plot you’ll have to feed them all, so you’ll have to keep livestock and grow wheat or vegetables but again, all of these are actions, and all of these actions are choices.
And it is in this simple economy that Agricola shines: to do more, you first need more people, which will cost you more, but in turn earns you more. This can lead to some pretty serious analysis paralysis (where a player labours over their decision making), now add to this process that each player can only take actions from the shared board, means that any plan can fall over as soon as an opponent takes that one essential action you wanted; and in Agricola every action is essential.
Agricola presents you with restrictions and limitations with every turn, whilst simultaneously presenting you with more. As Orson Wells once said: “The enemy of art is the absence of limitations.”, and that is how to win at Agricola, there are many, many paths to victory but is in the art of mathematics; everything you have or don’t have on you plot, each room, stable, animal, grain of wheat, etc. is worth something, and its absence is worth a point penalty.
This may all may sound pretty heavy, and truth be told this isn’t the easiest, most accessible game ever made, but, all the information is available to all players, allowing more experienced players to really coach their opponents through their choices (on your first few playthroughs try the “Family mode; which is an ‘easier’ or ‘lighter’ version of the game). In a subsequent game all the same choices will be available, just in a slightly different order; which, believe it or not drastically changes everything, so by game two you’ll have some serious competition.
Player interaction in this game is very light; there is little you are able to actively do to affect your opponents, except “rob” them of the resources or choices, that may not sound like much but trust me – it feels pretty good foiling someone else’s plan, and it is extremely frustrating when it happens to you.
At the end of a game you’ll look down at your previously empty plot of land and it will be teeming with life and colour; your two-room, wooden farmhouse, along with your family will have grown, the wheat will be swaying gently in your fields and there will be the soft baa of the sheep in the pastures; you will have that sense of accomplishment that can only come from building a pretend farm from little pieces of wood. And you’ll want to do it again. You can pick yours up here
N.B. I would strongly recommend buying or if you're a little crafty; making an insert for the game to keep all the pieces stored neatly; this will dramatically reduce your set up time. In true Blue Peter style, here's one I made earlier, and these are the instructions I followed (there are loads of different ways to do this, some include tuck boxes for the cards too, and cover the Farmers of the Moor expansion, so have a look around BGG.com to find which suits your needs best)...or just buy one.
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