Marvel Monday on Wednesday. On Great Games, and Ghastly Casting
It's Marvel Monday, on Wednesday.
Last week was a bit of a Marvel week for me. I played Legendary: A Marvel DeckBuilding Game (LAMDBG) and I took in the premiere of Agents of Shield on
Tuesday night. I intended to write a post about the experience on Monday,
labeling the words, Marvel Monday, but it didn't happen.
Let's talk about the good news
first. LAMDBG supplanted Resident Evil as my favorite deck building game.
First, let me lay the background on you. I'm underwhelmed with Dominion.
Certainly not a bad game, I can see why it sold a bazillion copies. It's
simple, yet engaging, and better still wives play it with their husbands, or
vice versa, or whatever. I don't like it because there isn't any combat in the
game. I mean why have knights if they can't lop
someone's head off?
Resident Evil fixed that. Lots of weapons, lots of combat, and lots of fun.
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| This is what Skye should look like. |
Yet despite its combat, Resident
Evil is still standard deck-building fair. You buy stuff, place it in the
discard pile, draw a hand, and hope for the best. Although LAMDBG follows a
similar format, the victory conditions are varied depending on the scenario.
Another interesting feature is the march of the bad guys across the table. At
the start of his turn, each player draws one card. If it is a villain, it is
placed on the right hand slot of the five-slot villain track. If that position
is occupied, all the villains move one position to the left. If this bumps a
villain off the track, it usually counts against victory. Hence, the game is cooperative. All the players work together to prevent the villains from
exiting the track. Yet despite the cooperation, each villain eliminated awards
the eliminator victory points. If the good guys and gals win, the hero/player
with the most victory points wins the individual contest. It’s a neat mechanic,
and one of many that makes the game interesting.
Less interesting was my other
Marvel endeavor of the week, Agents of Shield. A spin off from last summer’s
surprisingly good Avengers movie, Agents of Shield is poorly plotted, poorly
acted, and even more poorly cast. It's hard to believe that Stan Lee said, "That's EXACTLY what I envisioned."
In the first episode, Shield’s agents, who
look like also-rans from a Gossip Girl casting session, must save a hooded
hero from his own super powers. They do this by firing a high-powered medicine
bullet into his head. I’m not making this up.
The acting is little better,
Grant Ward, who is supposed to be the obligatory loner-tough-guy, comes across
as a pretty boy who can’t shut up. And the casting? Suffice to say that Skye, an underground hacker, looks more like a debutante. Bad stuff
all around. The type of show that gives us geeks a bad name. As if we need help with that.
See you tomorrow.



Comments
Rising Tide sounded just like Red Flag from Alphas. The loner hero w/ hand-to-hand moves, the cute girl with questionable loyalties, the seemingly-ordinary team leader with his own secrets (that he doesn't even know!)... there were just too many parallels there...