Detective Holmes… the Cat

That’s right! The cat, the myth, the legend: Purrrlock Holmes! Purrrlock Holmes: Furriarty’s Trail is, you’ll surely have deduced, a deductive reasoning game. The goal is to work together to catch Furriarty before he can escape London, while simultaneously competing to be the best Inspector!

It comes down to a lot of smaller cases, like pulling threads. Each player has an Investigation, stood facing away from them so only their opponents can see. This card, like all the rest, features one of five characters, and one of twelve times. The goal is to guess one or both correctly. Not without evidence, of course! Each turn, you’ll Investigate two cards from your hand, revealing them to the other players, who will tell you if each is a Lead or Dead End. A Lead is a card that has the same Suspect, same Hour, or an adjacent Hour to your Investigation. You also draw and Investigate two cards when you draw a new Investigation, so you always have something to work with!

You may guess once per turn; if you’re right, you take tokens from Furriarty’s trail equal to the aspects you deduced and place them on the Investigation, discarding the Leads and Dead Ends. Note that if you guess both, you must get both right; otherwise, you’re incorrect, and your opponents are disallowed to tell you why. If you guess incorrectly, the Investigation stays open, and you draw no cards this turn. Usually, you end your turn by passing your two remaining cards, then drawing two new ones; instead, you’ll have no choice but to Investigate the cards you’re given next turn. This isn’t always the worst thing – I’ve found that if you’re down to two times and you know the suspect, or vice versa, it’s often worth taking the guess and, if necessary, taking next turn’s guess before you Investigate.

The goal, ultimately, is to catch Furriarty, who functions like a token and moves one spot forward each time everyone’s had a turn, revealing the token he passed. Furriarty is worth three points, while the other tokens range from one to three. Once closing an Investigation snags him, the game is over, and whoever has the most points is Scotland Pound Chief Inspector! If Furriarty reaches the end of the trail, though, and one last round isn’t enough to catch up, Furriarty escapes, everyone loses, and the player with the least points is… Litter Box Inspector. *shudder*

The timing is well-balanced, so it tends to be pretty close. You can call on Holmes for help, once per game, to take an extra guess and a one point penalty. Absolutely worth it, to not get stuck on box duty. And to catch that crook!

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Spring…?

It’s been unusually warm for “winter” these last couple weeks, in between drops below freezing. I very excitedly went to curate a plant photos post accordingly, and realized I focused all my pictures on the same plant, so I’ve expanded the criteria to “green things,” featuring: purple crocuses, pea soup, and Ramen Fury! (There are vegetable cards, it counts.)

A cluster of five purple crocuses grows in mulch, with striking orange stamens just visible in their centers. Their grass-like leaves are dark green and have light green stripes, qualifying them for this post.
A bowl with a leopard-print rim holds a thick, pea-green soup with diced tofu, darker on the crispy sides, and almond slivers. Given the nature of the soup, this has no trouble qualifying as a green photo.
A worn wooden game board features a deck, a face-up selection of vegetable, protein, and flavor cards, and one player's "bowls of ramen." One has a red protein card, one only has nori garnish, and the third has nori and two chili peppers. While the sole vegetable card and nori garnishes do have green on them, calling this a "green photo" is a stretch.
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