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Stronghold Games Beyond The Gates Paper Tales - Strategic Card Game for Adults & Teens | Perfect for Game Nights, Family Gatherings & Board Game Enthusiasts
$22.44
$29.93
Safe 25%
Stronghold Games Beyond The Gates Paper Tales - Strategic Card Game for Adults & Teens | Perfect for Game Nights, Family Gatherings & Board Game Enthusiasts
Stronghold Games Beyond The Gates Paper Tales - Strategic Card Game for Adults & Teens | Perfect for Game Nights, Family Gatherings & Board Game Enthusiasts
Stronghold Games Beyond The Gates Paper Tales - Strategic Card Game for Adults & Teens | Perfect for Game Nights, Family Gatherings & Board Game Enthusiasts
$22.44
$29.93
25% Off
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SKU: 31566750
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Description
PAPER tales beyond the gates contains new units and new buildings that both preserve the balance of the base game and enhance the game's possibilities and replay value. With paper tales beyond the gates, players now start with seven buildings available out of eleven, and these buildings are different every game. Each new building opens new strategies, as does the impact of the new units. PAPER tales beyond the gates includes all components needed for supporting up to seven players. It also includes a solo mode in which a single player has to face the powerful armies of the lich. This mode comes with specific necropolis and lichen King cards.
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Features

New buildings and new units open up many new strategies

Great replayability offered as different buildings are mixed and Matched each game

Components now for up to 7 players

Solo mode now available to play against the lich King and his Army of evil minions

Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
We really enjoy Paper Tales around here, and this expansion is super great. I would almost say that it's kind of mandatory, because it includes a couple of new cards that help balance the game around the fact that the Relic card from the base box is a LITTLE bit broken. There are some new and more interesting ways to win here that make it well worth the cost.Plus, the solo game variant is so much fun! The Lich King is a pretty tough enemy, and you can make him even tougher by adding in some other cards from his little set (if you want). It's not the same kind of depth you can find in some of the more complex solo games (Scythe, Mage Knight, etc), but it's more than enough to kill 30-45 minutes. One cool thing about the Lich King mechanic is that unlike a lot of solo variants that basically just replace a player with some kind of card/dice AI, his deck is completely different from what a player would have or do.You can even run co-op into LK if you make a few simple modifications! If you already like Paper Tales, this is a no-brainer.The expansion to play paper tales solo. Such a great game, fantastic set and the Automa is a nice challenge with even harder tiers of you wantThe expansion is great which adds more unit cards, buildings, adds a 6th and 7th player, and a solo mode.If you have the base game you might as well get this too. Gives you more variety in the game and other strategy plans.You need the base game for this expansion.New cards have great abilities. The solo play works very well!Paper Tales (2017) is a very fine addition to the ranks of drafting games, and while it owes much to its predecessors like 7 Wonders, it has enough unique elements to help it stand on its own as a terrific card game. There's a decent amount of replayability in the box of the base game, but if you are looking to extend things further, Beyond the Gates (2018) is a very fine expansion. First of all this adds more cards, which helps give extra variability and interest. It also adds a solo mode of playing that is very satisfying and enjoyable. Altogether this expansion is terrific, and a "must have" for anyone who really enjoys the base game.I received a copy of Paper Tales from Stronghold Games in December and our family has really enjoyed playing the game. You can read my full review of Paper Tales on ThatsWhatJenniSaid.com. Because we had so much fun with the base game, we were eager to dig into the expansion, Paper Tales : Beyond The Gates, which Stronghold Games began shipping late last year in 2018.Beyond The Gates provides 20 new unit cards (13 different cards, some with multiple copies), 30 new building cards (6 different buildings, 5 copies each), 7 building tiles that allow for the randomization of building selection during game setup, components for a 6th and 7th player, and components for solo play. All components and artwork are of the same high quality as in the base game.Let’s walk through all of this game goodness, starting with a roundup of the new unit cards. The most expensive of the new cards is the Princess, which single handedly brought my husband back from his trailing position in our last game. Coupled with a powerful building strategy, it can provide double digit bonuses during each round. The Lost Soul offers up 7 legend points upon its death. A beautiful card to draft, so long as you are able to grab it before the last round. The Noble nets up to 10 legend points when it is deployed and that can be triggered up to two more times if combined with both copies of another new card from the expansion – the Shadow - which I’ll touch on in just a bit. As for the Relic of Light, it has the potential, when deployed in combination with other Relics or other cards that forestall death on one or more units, to boost Legend points by 4 each round.The Grand Intendant provides a decent amount of war strength, a direct cash boost when deployed, and also serves as a source of food (which gives a strength bonus when deployed in combination with the Manticore, a gold bonus when played with the Smuggler, and legend points when used in conjunction with various buildings). The Relic of War can be deployed with the Young Sorcerer or other cards that lead to the buildup of aging tokens to boost strength and award legend points. Jinn allows for free upgrades of a building and also provides gold. Like other cards with deployment bonuses, it can be retriggered by the Shadow. Its requirement to place an aging token seems like a penalty but can cleverly be used in combination with the Relic of War for additional benefits. I’ve relied on Jinn in almost every game of Paper Tales I’ve played since adding in the expansion and it’s one of my favorite cards. The Jeweler provides ore and gold and smidgen of battle strength.The Shadow is a fantastic card and I try to grab it whenever I can. It only costs one gold yet can be used to retrigger powerful deployment bonuses on top of its battle strength. My favorite move to pull off if I draft the Shadow is to bank it and wait until I am able to draft the second copy of the card. Then I deploy the Shadow on the same turn as a card with a deployment bonus such as the Noble, then deploy the second copy of the Shadow on my next turn to trigger the deployment bonus for the 3rd time. One, two, three, BAM. Takes my opponent by surprise. The Dryad is a card I’ve made use of several times as I tend to accumulate a wood surplus and this card plays off of that, as well as providing battle strength. There are two zero cost cards in the expansion and they are the Young Sorcerer and the Smuggler, whose strategic use I’ve already outlined.Last but not least, I present the Imp. This card gives you two gold at deployment and two battle strength but you better use one of those aging token shifter cards to avoid a 2 legend point penalty. Not worth it if you ask me.The new unit cards would be reason enough to spring for Paper Tales : Beyond The Gates but there’s more in this expansion still to cover. Next up: the new building cards. I really like these clever additions. My favorites are the Port (which offers up to 6 points each round) and the Back Room (which makes constructing level 2 buildings a breeze). I am a bit indecisive about which buildings to make available in each game (since so many of them seem like good strategy choices) so I am glad Stronghold included the randomizer tokens to make the selection for me.I took a little time one afternoon to play a few games of Paper Tales in solo mode, made possible by this expansion. In this mode, you’re pitted against the Lich King, whose battle strength and legend point bonuses each round are determined by values on the new Necropolis cards. You draft cards for yourself, then pass your leftovers to the Lich King before facing off in battle. Lich King cards can be employed to increase the difficulty level of the game. I felt the game in solo mode was able to mimic the experience of playing against a live opponent and was neither too easy nor impossibly difficult. I will definitely play again.Win condition: have the most legend points at the end of the gameInputs: wars won, value of buildings constructed and upgraded, supplemental legend points awarded by unit and building bonusesStrategy Tip: If at all possible, nab the Princess. Either deploy it yourself or destroy it to prevent it from falling into an opponent’s hands.It’s not a stretch to say that Paper Tales: Beyond The Gates doubles the value of the base game. I would automatically include the expansion in any purchase of Paper Tales I made with the intention of giving as a gift to a friend or family member. And if you’ve got Paper Tales in your game library already, you’ll want to pick up Beyond The Gates for yourself.-------------------------------------------------Publisher: Stronghold GamesPlayers: 1-7 (We played with 1,2, 3, and 4)Actual Playing Time (vs the guideline on the box): About 30-40 minutes per gameGame type: card drafting, hand managementRating: OUI OUI OUIJenni’s rating scale:OUI: I would play this game again; this game is ok. I probably would not buy this game myself but I would play it with those who own it and if someone gave it to me I would keep it.OUI OUI: I would play this game again; this game is good. I would buy this game.OUI OUI OUI: I LOVE THIS GAME. I MUST HAVE THIS GAME.NON: I would not play this game again. I would return this game or give it away if it was given to me.

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