Games Recently Played
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Gaming Session: Another visit to the Village
Tonight we got to play Village, a great game I haven't been able to play that often. I again went for the points by building wagons and traveling, but could not overcome the points I missed by not selling at the market that Nate concentrated on. There are many good choices to make in this game, but the coolest part are the generations of your family that pass away and trying to get them into the Village chronicle instead of the unknown graves.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Sarah and Silent Phantom
My daughter Sarah and I had a rare treat this weekend, we had some time to ourselves and watched Phantom of the Opera together. This has always been a treat that we have shared, we both loved the movie adaptation of the musical and have often sung the songs together. But this occasion was different as I had recorded the original 1925 silent film version that starred Lon Chaney as the Phantom. I didn't know if Sarah would be able to sit through the whole thing with no dialogue except for occasional text slides to read that were shown intermittedly. But we were both enthralled with it! It was captivating and we found ourselves singing some of the musical dialogue at the appropriate times during the movie as part of the storyline. It is actually a pretty good movie, and I have always been an admirerer of Lon Chaney, the "Man of a Thousand Faces" who was in so many monster movies. Growing up as a young kid I would read about him and even create and put on my own monster movie make-up to be like him.
When it got to the masquerade ball, the film had some color in it, rare in those days. It was striking as the Phantom appeared in a red costume and a skull mask. The coolest part was the rooftop scene with Christine and Raoul, with the Phantom on a statue and his red cape and costume billowing in the wind.
We performed it together at a family reunion in Southern Utah once, and even used it to try out for a stake musical together. It has kind of been "our" song. Of course it became a couple costume for us at Halloween time as well.
When the musical came locally to the Segerstrom Performing Arts center, I gave her tickets for her birthday for us to see it together. We got all dressed up as a formal daddy-daughter date, she felt so regal walking into the theater. It was an AMAZING musical that we will not forget, with the crashing chandelier and disappearance of the Phantom in the end. These will always be special memories that I have shared with Sarah.
When it got to the masquerade ball, the film had some color in it, rare in those days. It was striking as the Phantom appeared in a red costume and a skull mask. The coolest part was the rooftop scene with Christine and Raoul, with the Phantom on a statue and his red cape and costume billowing in the wind.
This Phantom story and the music have always been something that Sarah and I have shared over the years. When she was quite young (age 3) we would play the DVD with the subtitles on (I didn't know the words as well as she did) and we would sing and act out the scene on the roof between Christine and Raoul, singing "All I Ask of You." Sarah would always have a rose in hand, and would kiss me as Christine (Shell would also fill in as Phantom when needed!).
We performed it together at a family reunion in Southern Utah once, and even used it to try out for a stake musical together. It has kind of been "our" song. Of course it became a couple costume for us at Halloween time as well.
When the musical came locally to the Segerstrom Performing Arts center, I gave her tickets for her birthday for us to see it together. We got all dressed up as a formal daddy-daughter date, she felt so regal walking into the theater. It was an AMAZING musical that we will not forget, with the crashing chandelier and disappearance of the Phantom in the end. These will always be special memories that I have shared with Sarah.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Gaming Session: Protecting Odin's Palace
I think one of the coolest co-op games to arrive in the past few years is Yggdrasil. Of course its cool to me as it centers on Norse mythology and the great tree that connects all of the 9 realms together. In this cooperative you each play one of the Norse gods who collectively are trying to keep the evil forces (Loki, Fenrir, Hel, etc.) from breaking through the walls of Asgard and into Odin's palace. To do so on your turn you have a few actions to visit the various realms to recruit Elves from Niflheim and dead warriors from Valhalla, slay frost giants, move the Valkyrie, enhance your weapons, etc. all in order to push back the individual monsters from advancing. The mechanics utilize the mythology well, and it is a tense game. I played Heimdall (guardian of the bifrost bridge) and wasted my special ability to recruit warriors by making horrible rolls. I really cost my team, and it came down to me trying to slay a frost giant that would complete a rune set that would enable us to push back 3 enemies . . . and I again blew the roll for reinforcements. AAAHHHH! I think I have only defeated this game once, but I must say we did play on a higher difficulty level than usual. Fun.
With more of a group that gathered we played an intense gane of Shadow Hunters that came down to a Shadow & a Hunter facing off in the end. The Hunter won (my team) so it was all good. We followed that with some Danish 21 and then a few good rounds of Werewolf (I moderated them).
With more of a group that gathered we played an intense gane of Shadow Hunters that came down to a Shadow & a Hunter facing off in the end. The Hunter won (my team) so it was all good. We followed that with some Danish 21 and then a few good rounds of Werewolf (I moderated them).
Labels:
danish 21,
games,
shadow hunters,
werewolf,
yggdrasil
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