Gloom (card game)

Gloom
Designer(s) Keith Baker
Publisher(s) Atlas Games
Players 2-5 (basic deck)
Playing time 30 minutes
Skill(s) required Storytelling

Gloom is a tabletop card game created by designer Keith Baker and published by Atlas Games in 2004. It won the Origins Award for Best Traditional Card Game in 2005.[1] Four expansion packs have been created since the release of the original game called, Unhappy Homes, Unwelcome Guests, Unquiet Dead and Unfortunate Expeditions.[2] Additionally, In August 2011, Cthulhu Gloom, which serves as either a standalone game or a fourth expansion pack, was released,[3] and one Cthulhu expansion pack has been released, called Unpleasant Dreams.

Gameplay

The game is for two to four players who each are given control of an eccentric family. The object of the game is to lower the self-worth points of the player's own family with cards that cause negative events, eventually killing them. At the same time, positive points are played on opponent's family members. After one family is completely killed off, the player with the lowest Family Value (the total points of all dead family members) is the winner of the game.[2]

Other Versions

Expansion packs are available for the game, which each add an additional family and allow for more than 4 players in the game. The packs also include new modifiers and Untimely Deaths. In 2013 a limited number of the TableTop Gloom Promo Expansion was released. Including in the deck are two unwanted guests (TableTop host Wil Wheaton and Felicia Day) that can wander from family to family.[4]

There are also several spin-offs of the game, which are played separately from the original Gloom:

Critical reception

An element of the game that was appreciated by game designer Greg Costikyan was the optional aspect of storytelling involved when playing an event card, where a player can choose to explain the events that happen in the course of the character's life. Costikyan stated that this added "a unique aspect to game play and [made] the game play particularly enjoyable".[7]

References

  1. "Origins Winners of 2005". Originsgamefair.com. Archived from the original on November 20, 2008. Retrieved 14 March 2009.
  2. 1 2 "Gloom: Gloom Products". Atlas Games. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  3. Furino, Giaco. "Dangerous Games: Cthulhu Gloom Board Game Review". Fearnet. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  4. "Gloom: TableTop Promo Expansion". Board Game Geek. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
  5. WORLD OF MUNCHKIN page on MUNCHKIN GLOOM
  6. Fairytale Gloom page on Atlus Games' website
  7. Costikyan, Greg (2 May 2008). "Gloom: The Game of Inauspicious Incidents and Grave Consequences". PlayThisThing.com. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
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