🎁 GST/HST Holiday Tax Break 2024/2025 Updates (Read More)

🍁Canada Post Strike Updates (Read More)

Tasty Minstrel Games  |  SKU: TTT2028

Gentes (Standard Edition)

$56.95 CAD $63.74 CAD
This item is available for pre-order. Orders will be fulfilled in order received. We will contact you if the item is unavailable.

Delivery and Shipping

For more details, please refer to our Shipping and Order Information.


Description

Designer Stefan Risthaus
Publisher Tasty Minstrel Games
Players 2-4
Playtime 90 mins
Suggested Age 12 and up

Gentes is an interesting civilization game with an innovative timing mechanism.

"Gentes" is the Latin plural word for greater groups of human beings (e.g., tribes, nations, people; singular: "gens"). In this game, players take the role of an ancient people who are attempting to develop by building monuments and colonizing or founding new cities in the Mediterranean sea.

The game is played in six rounds, each consisting of two phases: action phase, and tidying up. There are three eras — rounds 1-2, 3-4, 5-6 — with new monument cards entering the game at the beginning of rounds 1, 3 and 5. Each player has a personal player mat with a time track for action markers and sand timer markers. In the action phase of a round, the players take their turns in clockwise order, conducting one action per turn. Each action requires an action marker from the main board that is placed on the time track. Depending on the information on the action marker, you have to also pay some money or take sand timers that are placed on the time track. When you have no free spaces on your time track, you must pass for the remainder of the round. Therefore, the number of actions per player in a single round may vary significantly if, for example, you choose double sand timers instead of two single ones or take action markers that require more money but fewer sand timers. Single sand timers are dropped in the tidying up phase, while double sand timers are flipped to become single sand timer markers and stay for another round. The actions are:


Buy new cards from the common display
Build monuments (playing cards from your hand to your personal display for victory points and new options)
Train/Educate your people
Build/found cities
Take money


To play a card, you must meet the requirements printed on that card, such as having specific persons on your personal board (e.g., two priests and four soldiers). These requirements are why training — i.e., getting specific people — is important, but that is not that easy because there are six different types of people — three on the left and three on the right side of your personal player board — and you have only six spaces in total for the two types in the same line. If you have three merchants, for example, you move your marker for counting merchants three spaces toward the side of the soldiers and thus you have only three spaces left for soldiers. By educating a fourth soldier and moving your soldier marker forward to its fourth space, you automatically lose one merchant because that marker is pushed back to its second space.

It is crucial to generate additional actions by using the specific functions of monuments in your display and cities you have built. Cities are expensive, but they create benefits at the end of each round or provide new options for taking an action without acquiring an action marker, gaining only a sand timer marker instead.

Try to have a steady income to avoid wasting actions to take money. Pay attention to the display of common cards, which is new in every single game, because the monument cards are shuffled randomly within the decks of eras I, II and III. Collect identical achievement symbols on the cards to benefit from the increasing victory points for a series of symbols. Build cities to enlarge your options!

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
100%
(1)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
L
Luke Piefer
Very innovative game with cool mechanics and tough choices.

I've played a lot of different games and it can be hard to find something that feels unique and fresh, but this is it. I love the way some actions cost more "time" to complete, thus making it hard to do as many actions. Is it worth it? Sometimes! Or not! But that's the fun of it. Also, there's just the right amount of competition for action spaces. My games usually seem pretty close and I have to pay attention to what everyone is doing. There isn't much king-making or hate drafting, but it is competitive. My only complaint is the starting player mechanic. It's a fair cost and a difficult decision, but I think turn order should be variable because it seems like being lucky enough to be left of the person who took starting player (so you don't have to take that action but still get to go second) can easily be deciding factor in games. I know that's true of a lot of games, but it's more true of this one. Working on a house rule for my next game!