Re: Board (Bored?) Games!
Posted: Wed Dec 07, 2016 10:52 pm
That's hilarious!
As Collector said - it's a pun (play on words).Rath Darkblade wrote:Who in the world is Terry? *confused*
I think The Oregon Trail was really only known to Americans. For instance, Maia had never heard of the game before I mentioned it.Rath Darkblade wrote:Ah, okay. I haven't played "Oregon Trail", so I've never heard of "You have died of dysentery". Thanks for the explanation.
DeadPoolX wrote:I think The Oregon Trail was really only known to Americans. For instance, Maia had never heard of the game before I mentioned it.Rath Darkblade wrote:Ah, okay. I haven't played "Oregon Trail", so I've never heard of "You have died of dysentery". Thanks for the explanation.
I'm still waiting for TOT to appear on GOG. The closest thing I have to it is The Organ Trail: Director's Cut on Steam, which is essentially The Oregon Trail, but with zombies set in modern day.
BTW, if anyone here is interested in TOT:DC, I wrote a review about it (for an actual review site) back in 2015, so reading it might give you some insight into what's different from TOT and what's similar.
If The Oregon Trail was on GOG, it could be any version. I've seen Apple, Amiga, C64, and DOS.Tawmis wrote:DeadPoolX wrote:I think The Oregon Trail was really only known to Americans. For instance, Maia had never heard of the game before I mentioned it.Rath Darkblade wrote:Ah, okay. I haven't played "Oregon Trail", so I've never heard of "You have died of dysentery". Thanks for the explanation.
I'm still waiting for TOT to appear on GOG. The closest thing I have to it is The Organ Trail: Director's Cut on Steam, which is essentially The Oregon Trail, but with zombies set in modern day.
BTW, if anyone here is interested in TOT:DC, I wrote a review about it (for an actual review site) back in 2015, so reading it might give you some insight into what's different from TOT and what's similar.
I assume, you mean the remake of The Oregon Trail? Because wasn't the original only on like the Apple ][ or whatever? I have seen some screens that show a ... uh, "more modern" look to the game (for lack of a better word, because the graphics aren't modern anymore - but more modern than the original I remember).
I'm not getting'em confused. I have played the Organ Trail before too (I'd say... a year ago?)... there's a web based one... where, for example, you're driving in the car - and you can wait out a pack of zombies, or drive through them?DeadPoolX wrote: If The Oregon Trail was on GOG, it could be any version. I've seen Apple, Amiga, C64, and DOS.
BTW, are you getting The Oregon Trail and The Organ Trail (the latter is about zombies) confused? I was talking about the The Organ Trail when showing a link to Steam and my review.
You should do a "How To Play" video...Datadog wrote:I can see that happening. The worst part about the game is figuring out the battles, and I always dread it when a newcomer becomes the traitor because then we have to keep explaining to them how to defeat us. It's worth getting over the curve just to give it a few goes, though.Tawmis wrote:I have this game (Betrayal at House on the Hill); opened it up, read part of the rules, and closed it. It seems to have a pretty massive learning curve; I am sure once you play it, it's easy. But man. Everyone always talks about how awesome this game is. I may look on Youtube on how to play it.
Hah! As long as there's a good discussion, I am good with it! (And it doesn't stop someone from jumping in about another board game!)BBP wrote:I love how this thread over the course of two pages turns into a video game discussion!
Was this game an inspiration for GoldRush?
That's pretty hilarious. (I frequently do the same thing when I play RPG games that have more than 1 character in the party; I name them after people I know).BBP wrote: I've just played Oregon Trail (at Archive.org) and managed to finish it with 4 survivors. As a banker. Didn't have much trouble besides the fire in the cart and a thief stealing food - the one casualty I'd named after my sister died of exhaustion, the one I named after my boyfriend got lost, the one I named after my father had cholera, the one I named after one of my favourite singers had a broken leg and I had a snake bite.
I've heard Scotland Yard is awesome; but a bit tricky. Not played it myself.BBP wrote: Scotland Yard turned out to be too troublesome - the trouble being that the digits are too hard to read to keep X well-hidden. It can be played with 2 players, maybe Dad and I will try that sometime.
I've not heard of any of these games.BBP wrote: Some games I love that haven't been mentioned yet - possibly because they're a bit more obscure - are Das Nilpferd in der Achterbahn - Hippo In The Rollercoaster, great for girls in the 12-16 age group, sadly never got to play it with more people of the same sense of humour; and Cafe International, where you have to place guests of different nationalities at a limited amount of tables.