![]() |
|
|||
![]() Above is the view looking to the left as you enter... that wall of tie-dye conceals our little kitchen space wherein we toast the tarts. |
![]() And this is the view from the back, looking forwards. |
||
![]() As usual, we were playing lots of games with pyramids, particularly IceTowers and Volcano (big and small, as seen on the left) and cards (for example, Nanofictionary on the right.) |
|||
![]() The Cafe was only open on Saturday (from late afternoon until late at night) so at other times, Looney games were usually being played next door in the Stranbro Room. Our wonderful Boston-area rabbits were always ready to teach you to play! Most of the tournament games were also run in here. (Events included a Fluxx tournament, an IceTowers tournament, and a Volcano tournament.) ![]() |
|||
![]() The IceTowers tournament was actually run a little further down the hall, in the Imperial Ballroom, using giant cardboard pyramids. It was a great place for it, as you can see. However, Joshua (who ran the tourney) tells me the games had a tendency to go on too long... whereas IceTowers is usually a 5 - 15 minute game, he had one round that went on for an hour! People tend to take things far more seriously when you call a game a tournament, and the competition here was pretty fierce. So, we're considering taking a tip from the original real-time pyramid game and adding a timer, at least for tourneys. (When the timer goes off, you just score the game as it stands.) Thoughts? |
|||
![]() Speaking of tournaments, the many events at Arisia even included an Aquarius Hairdown! Shown here are the finalists, but many others with long hair were there to show off their tresses. Aren't they all beautiful?
![]() |
|||
![]() ![]() Experimental new games have often been tested and debuted at the Pop-Tart Cafe. On the left, we see an Aquarius/Icehouse hybrid that was described as being something like Carcassonne, and on the right is a Fluxx/Icehouse blend being playtested by the girl who had that day invented it. Both seemed quite intriguing, but I haven't have a chance to play either one myself as yet (I was kept pretty busy serving pop-tarts.) I also saw a miniatures-style wargame being played with Icehouse pieces, and What's My Sign? (a fascinating new twist on Aquarius), and right at the end I heard about Fluxxing, a variant inspired by Falling.
|
|||
For the first round, all contestants (of whom there were dozens)
were issued a little rabbit shaped "bunny box" just
big enough to hold several little pieces of candy. Subsequent rounds thinned the contestants still further with various tests of obscure knowledge, but since we will probably pull this out and dust it off the next time we get to be Guests of Honor somewhere, I'm not going to reveal any of the actual questions, nor even any more of the game show's structure. (And if you were there, please don't blab too much about these details. Thanks!) |
|||
Congrats Michelle, and thank you to all who participated! |
|||
![]() This is Heather Keith,
a big fan of Volcano who spent a huge amount of her time hanging
out playing it (and Mega-Volcano!)
at the Pop-Tart Cafe. Imagine our surprise when we succeeded
in buying the one painting |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() ![]() Thanks again to the entire Boston Warren... if they hadn't been causing such a stir by being so enthusiastic about our games, we probably wouldn't have been chosen as Guests of Honor this year. You rabbits rock! |