Monthly Archives: February 2014

The Advertising Game By Mongo Industries (3.5/10)

The Advertising Game by Mongo Industries (https://www.thegamecrafter.com/games/the-advertising-game) is a game for 2 to 4 players and takes less than 30 minutes to play. The premise of the game is fairly simple. Story: You are an employee of an advertising agency seeking to get that killer idea. By playing cards you eliminate your competition. The last advertising employee left standing, wins. Now before I get too far, I want to specify that this game is pretty much a direct clone of Love Letter. As I have reviewed Love Letter previously (View Love Letter Review Here), I'm going to give the same review here with my edits shown, so you can see what is different. Components: 16 cards. 1 box. Oxygen with trace amounts of Nitrogen. End of list. Gameplay: The deck is shuffled. Each player is dealt 1 card. 1...

Love Letter by 999 Games (5.0/10)

Love Letter is a game for 2-4 players and takes about 20 minutes to play. However, I will say that once you get the hang of it, the duration of the entire game should take less than 5 minutes. Story: All of the eligible men seek to woo the princess of Tempest. Unfortunately, she has locked herself in the palace, and you must rely on others to take your romantic letters to her. Will yours reach her first? Love Letter is a game of risk, deduction, and luck. Your goal is to get your love letter into the Princess' hands while deflecting the letters from competing suitors. Components: 16 cards. 1 box. Oxygen with trace amounts of Nitrogen. End of list. Gameplay: The deck is shuffled. Each player is dealt 1 card. 1 card is removed from play....

A Change to Reviews

Hello all and welcome back! The Gamers Remorse has gotten a fair number of fans and game designers asking us to review their games! In an effort to better serve everyone, we have decided to pre-play some of the games to determine their applicability to a video review. This has been a long standing concern of ours and we have talked a lot about the best way to handle it. Sometimes we will get a game to review that isn't quite there in quality and appeal. We will film the review then spend 20+ hours editing the content to make sure it is up to our quality standards. Then we will post the review. As the review is less than optimal, few people watch it, as the game designer doesn't want to advertise that it got...