Tabletop Gaming

WELCOME TO THE MOON

Ascend to the moon and mark yourself among the stars

- Designer: Alexis Allard, Benoit Turpin | Publisher: Blue Cocker Games ALEXANDRA SONECHKINA

After teleportin­g players to the suburban bliss of 1950s America and to the blitz of Las Vegas casinos, the Welcome To… series takes us to the next logical destinatio­n, the moon. This trip, however, will be a lot less glamorous because the survival of humanity is at stake. An asteroid storm is threatenin­g to obliterate Earth, and you along with your fellow players are on the first rocket out to establish the moon colony. While you are all working on the same tasks, the organisati­on that funds your heroic endeavour believes that competitio­n is the key to success and therefore will be pitting players against each other to see who performs better. There will be plenty of tasks to try your hand at: launching the rocket, plotting the course to the moon, building the colony, mining resources, just your typical everyday to-do list.

Like the other Welcome To… games, Welcome to the Moon uses a variation of the roll-and-write mechanic, flip-and-write. Instead of rolling dice and recording the result on the player board, in Welcome to the Moon players flip cards from different piles to create three sets of two cards, with a number and an action in each. Players then pick a set and write it down on their boards, ensuring that any numbers recorded are arranged in ascending order. Each task within the game - whether creating a flight path through space or extracting minerals from the moon’s surface – has its own dedicated board and slight twist on the basic game formula. Each board is its own puzzle, that gets more layered and complex as players progress through each mission. These missions can be completed individual­ly, as a group or in a solo-mode, or as a part of a story campaign, where players can also make narrative choices that will influence the gameplay.

Although the core mechanics

– flip-and-write numbers in ascending order – remain constant through every mission, the variation in mission rules and different boards keep the game feeling fresh and exciting every play. Some missions are more strategic by allowing players to focus on various power combos, while others challenge players to create long sequences of numbers in a row, which require both pre-planning and some luck. Although you are essentiall­y doing the same thing each game, it never feels like it.

It, of course, helps that every board looks visually exciting. Each setting is distinct and able to carry a story based on its illustrati­on alone (although, slightly cheesy campaign text is a delightful bonus), making it immediatel­y clear which part of the moon colonisati­on process you are engaged in right now. Each board is littered with symbols that are cleverly integrated within the context of an illustrati­on and players will interact with almost every element of the board. Although across some boards, interactab­le elements can be too densely populated. During the game, players will be asked to circle and then cross out elements, over-cluttering the board with markings to the point it can be hard to keep track. In those cases, neat penmanship is an asset!

With only eight different scenarios that take about half an hour each, Welcome to the Moon campaign won’t take too long to complete. Yet once you are done, you can wipe off the markers from the boards and go again. There will always be something exciting to return to, whether you are replaying the campaign by making different story choices or picking alternativ­e objectives for the round. Perhaps, the biggest challenge Welcome to the Moon presents is how to pull yourself away from it!

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