Hard sell, right? I’ve recently been availing myself of Freebooksy’s daily deals, featuring free e-books from many an author. Though they mostly target Kindle users, other platforms do make an appearance; books are also organized by genre, making it easy to skip to the sections that you like. I’ve been especially delighted by the variety of cookbooks! Regardless of your taste, there’s likely something that matches them – if not today, then tomorrow. As long as you’re willing to peruse the list, of course.
Author: Cassandra
Kittenish Mischief… Now With Magic!
Wizard Kittens asks and answers the question, “What would cats get up to if they had magic?” Which is, of course, making a big ol’ mess and then trying not to get caught. Players are student cats, who have accidentally unleashed a whole host of Curses and have to defeat them before their teacher finds out.
This is an excellent game for Young Gamers! The mechanics come in tiers, so you can introduce whatever degree of complicated is right for your players, and there are no hidden cards. Each kitten has a standard set of actions – Summon, Sling, Swat, and Switch – with the Advanced version replacing one of those with a character power. Progress looks like collecting the right ingredients in your Ritual Circle’s chapters to defeat the corresponding Curses, with a chance that the other players may get to them first. Victory looks like defeating all the Curses, and scoring the most points between those and Extra Credit.
…Usually.
See, getting caught isn’t an idle threat. In the deck, on one of the last eleven cards, is Professor Whispurr, and if the Professor is drawn then the game ends prematurely. At this point, you do not want to have the most points – you want to have the least, so you can plead innocent of being involved! Luckily, Extra Credit only applies if you didn’t get caught, and managed to seem passably responsible; these cards usually award points for cards left in your Circle once the Curses are done. Also available is the Magical Monsters expansion, which doesn’t change too much and does add Monsters. They function a bit like Curses, but with effects pre-defeat!
This game’s adorable, and I love the variety of “pick your poison” in difficulties, character powers, New Rules, etc., as well as the duality of the end conditions. Most especially, however, I love the expansion’s new kitty’s name: Van Meowsing.
The Intricate Dance of Photosynthesis
Tragically, I have not decided to write about the biological process by which carbon dioxide becomes oxygen and water becomes sugar. Rather, I’m here to talk about Photosynthesis the game – a forest-building strategy system with rotating advantages. I’m of the opinion that introducing this to chess players specifically would be highly entertaining – like chess, it’s all strategy, and unlike chess, there’s trees!
The basic principle of Photosynthesis is this: you’re trying to score points by facilitating a complete life cycle for your trees, and to do that, they need sunlight. The sun rotates around the board, however, so which trees shadow each other changes from turn to turn!
Light Points are earned by trees left in sunlight, more points the taller they are, and spent to grow, plant, and purchase. The latter was the mechanic that took the most adjusting to, at least for me. Not so much buying the trees before using them, as a limited pool of next-size-up certainly focused our options a bit, but that when you replace those – when a large replaces a medium, and the medium goes back in the pool – it goes back to the to-purchase section, rather than what’s available for use. I wasn’t particularly fond of this choice, but to each their own.
Something I did like about the mechanics, however, was the incentivization of competition. Players start around the edges of the board, you see, and for the most part we kept to our own, out where we could keep from blocking our own light. However! Trees are worth more the closer to the center they are. And since cashing in large trees is the only way to score points – other than a leftover Light Points exchange, which is not favorable – it got us spreading out.
Each player represents a different type of tree, which the seeds show. As a botany nerd, this of course made me very happy. My favorite part of this game, though, is the art on the backs of the player boards. Isn’t it pretty?!
Staying Grounded In The Face of Magic
If you’re a fan of the fantasy genre and enjoy comedic trope deconstruction, I highly recommend The Dad Who Lived’s “If I Was the Dad in a YA Fantasy” series! It’s an expanding canon of its own, told in a series of TikToks, and calling on elements of Harry Potter, Percy Jackson, and Twilight to implicitly ask The Big Question: Where are the responsible adults? And how different would the story be if there were some?
Christkindlmarket!
Yes, yes, it’s a little early for the Christmas season – as an American, I generally assume it starts after Thanksgiving. But the Christkindlmarket is open, and the weather was good, and I had a great time!
For those who don’t know, the Christkindlmarket is a “German-style outdoor market” that pops up in the holiday season, with locations in both Chicago and Aurora. It’s largely Christmas themed, though not exclusively, with vendors selling everything from ornaments to elaborate wooden puzzles to cakes. They represent locations around the world, also – my lunch was Dutch, my new gloves hail from Ecuador, and there were handmade journals from Nepal! There’s always a combination of well-made staples and novelty items, and a food selection for everybody. The poffertjes pictured below, for instance. Or the vegan empanadas at Fons! Regardless, it’s a great way to spend an afternoon.
My examples are all from the Aurora location, I should note, which also has glassblowing lessons this year.
Wikipedia Is… Actually Well-Organized!
“Don’t use Wikipedia as a source,” the teachers said, which may well have been my first introduction to the platform’s existence. Since then, it’s become a sort of shadow monolith – a baseline for perusing matters on which I know nothing or need very specific details formatted coherently, without extending much thought beyond the individual pages or the search function. It’s served me well! And, rather abruptly, I’ve realized how impressive that is.
In the last couple months, I’ve been doodling plants from different countries, coupling geography practice with gorgeous flowers and some really fascinating ecology – like the fact that there’s a parasitic, ant-pollinated plant growing around the Mediterranean. I’d never have found that out otherwise! It’s a funky lookin’ thing, too. This is the point in my life when I discovered the Categories feature.
Categories have saved this art-science pursuit so many times over, my friends. “Flora of Tunisia” on a search engine? Informational roulette. “Flora of Tunisia” on Wikipedia? An organized list of both species that qualify and adjacent topics, to do with the Mediterranean in general. Some countries have a subset for endemic plants specifically! More importantly, the superset “Flora By Country” guarantees this same lack of headache in the future.
What this is is an exceptionally niche use of a much broader application, I know. And isn’t that what Wikipedia is for?
Pride Knights
Friends, if you’d like pride dragons, pride swords, or pride playing cards, I highly recommend you check out Pride Knights. Their dragon and sword pins currently feature eleven different flags, and they’re working on another! And their playing cards are gorgeous. Each suit has a different theme, and if you lay out cards 2-9 you’ll make a castle – hearts’ theme is animals, clubs’ is flowers, diamonds’ is gemstones, and spades’ is space!
Continuing with those themes, their 10’s are swords, their Aces are shields, and the face cards are the Pride Knights themselves, with dragons for the Jokers. And if you don’t want a deck of cards? You can buy the uncut sheets as wall art, or a large print of a specific knight!
There’s so much thought and care in every piece of their work that it genuinely lowers my stress levels just to look at it. The world is messy – and groups like Pride Knights give me hope.
Faun
Once I’ve been studying a language for a while, I make a mission of finding music in that language that I really, really like – the kind you can happily listen to over and over again until you have all the lyrics memorized. For German especially, I hit the jackpot! The first song I listened to was one of Faun’s.
First off, the vibes are impeccable. I could not understand a word of this and be having a good time. On top of that, it’s like listening to a fairytale! In fact, sometimes it is. Rosenrot, for example, tells the story of Snow-White and Rose-Red. Non-fairytale story-songs, meanwhile, include Gold Und Seide, Feuer, and Federkleid! These three especially have some of my favorite uses of language as a craft, and Faun’s work collectively has become a crucial memory device for the particulars of German grammar. Vocab, too – there’s nothing like humming your way to the word you were looking for!
Alongside all of that, they also delve into Pagan traditions, like the Celtic festival Lugnasadh!
Munchkin Loot Letter
With only 16 cards and some loot cubes, Munchkin Loot Letter is quick and compact, featuring familiar cards from Munchkin and mechanics reminiscent of Knuckle Sammich. It’s a simple “draw one, play one,” with a hand size of one, leaving you choosing between two cards each turn. Each card has a value and an effect – the goal is to be either the last player standing, or the one with the highest value card when the deck runs out!
Effects come in a few different flavors, mostly ways to eliminate other players depending on what’s in their hand. By far the most common card is the Potted Plant, a 1-value card that lets you make a guess at what someone else is holding. If you’re right, they’re out! (You cannot, however, guess Potted Plant.) The higher value cards are deliberately inconvenient, meanwhile, like the Turbonium Dragon which must be discarded if you ever have the Net Troll or Dread Gazebo in hand. For a tiny, tiny deck, it’s impressively well-balanced! You’re meant to play multiple rounds, best-of fashion, with the loot cubes to keep track of who’s winning.
The Wide, Wild World of RPGs
I’ve spoken previously about Overly Sarcastic Productions and their gloriously chaotic educational material, and today I want to specifically recommend Detail Diatribe: TTRPGs That Aren’t D&D (And Why They Slap) The Detail Diatribe series are long-form presentations digging into the real meat of a subject, and in this case it’s nearly two hours of RPG systems, their stories and mechanics! It’s a fascinating variety and you may hear about some of the particulars from me later, once I’ve had a chance to try them.