
Wow, it has been over a year since my last installment of The Analog Gamer. Lots of changes in my personal life, a new career, a new location, and a new addition to the family on the way. Lots of changes to the tabletop gaming hobby as well. Signs of the hobby entering popular culture are everywhere; frequent episodes of The Big Bang Theory feature the gang playing games well known to hobbyists, TableTop, a slickly produced reality-based videocast with host Wil Wheaton and other game playing celebrities, is entering its second season, and games like Pandemic, Ticket to Ride, and Settlers of Catan, once strictly the domain of specialty stores can now be found featured in your local Target.









Halloween marks the one year anniversary of the
Ahoy, it’s 

While not entirely new, advancements in short run manufacturing have made it increasingly possible to design small print-run games using custom dice. You can even have your own dice made in as few as 10 copies. What follows is a brief overview of some games based on very cool looking dice, and a selection of custom dice that can be used to pimp out your favorite RPG or boardgame.
It is the 41st Millennium. For more than a hundred centuries the Emperor has sat immobile on the Golden Throne of Earth. He is the master of mankind by the will of the gods, and master of a million worlds by the might of his inexhaustible armies. He is a rotting carcass writhing invisibly with power from the Dark Age of Technology. He is the Carrion Lord of the Imperium for whom a thousand souls are sacrificed every day, so that he may never truly die.
As a child have you ever built a tower out of blocks or cards with the sole intention of knocking it over with a toy car or train? Maybe it’s just me but if the idea of building a spaceship and then watching it blasted apart piece by piece sounds like fun,
Any game based on a licensed property raises immediate suspicions. More often than not the game is an underdeveloped, cheaply produced knock-off attempting nothing more than to exploit the popularity of the original property. And when that property is a series of 

Richard Garfield revolutionized the gaming industry in 1993 with the introduction of
In 2008 game designer Donald X. Vaccarion turned the collectible card game concept on its head with the release of 
When I began to contemplate writing a post about steampunk board games, I didn’t anticipate any difficulty: there are games on just about every topic, right? I looked at my own collection...none there. I polled my gaming group’s considerable resources...none there either. I widened my search to the global gaming community, and even solicited possible suggestions from them, but I was less than enthused about the responses I received. I was left to conclude that steampunk is primarily a visual aesthetic, and while many games have a bit of steampunk art here and there, very few fully integrate the theme.


















