DeepFUN.com
Bernie DeKoven
October 2002
USA |
 |
Poison Pot is one of those sweet little
2-3-player strategy games with just the right balance
between the kind of strategic depth that makes you
want to play again and again, with the sheer, dumb
luck you also need to keep you from taking it too
personally when you lose.
In this well-made wooden game a turn consists of
moving a piece that is already on the board, and
then adding a new piece. Pieces come in three colors.
Since the unplayed pieces are turned so that the
color is on the bottom, you never know what color
you'll be playing until you play it. A piece can
be moved in any of six directions on the hexagonal
board. The object is to position as many of your
color pieces so that they are adjacent to each other.
There is another piece, the Poison Pot. The Poison
in the Poison Pot, though not lethal, is just noxious
enough to make any adjacent cluster worthless. Since
the Poison Pot can be moved, a lot of the beginning
strategy is aimed at trying to make sure the Poison
Pot doesn't get moved near one of your clusters.
Of course, as the board gets filled, strategies change
(which helps keep the game so interesting). You might
find yourself trying to break up your largest (and
highest scoring) cluster, just to avoid poisonous
proximity to the pot of pointlessness.
Though the game is definitely easy enough for an
eight-year-old to play, with enough luck to make
the eight-year-old want to keep playing, the strategic
depth might be better appreciated by someone a bit
older.
All in all, this game is just the kind of strategy
game that the Major FUN Award was created for.
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