Advance Play Report: Temple of Elemental Evil Board Game

A poster over at BGG got the opportunity to play the new Temple of Elemental Evil boardgame at the Miami Boardgame meetup organized by Tom Vasel. The game isn't due out until April, so this is a great little sneak peak! Here's what he had to say!

A poster over at BGG got the opportunity to play the new Temple of Elemental Evil boardgame at the Miami Boardgame meetup organized by Tom Vasel. The game isn't due out until April, so this is a great little sneak peak! Here's what he had to say!

Classes - There are five playable classes that apparently match up (name and class) to the Icons of the Realms starter (minus Drizzt). I played the cleric and my daughter played the Rogue so I saw what they had. I know some of what the others played but didn't see everything. The classes play as you'd expect them to. Reminded me of the WoA & CR heroes.

- Cleric, Dwarf - Felt like playing a dwarven cleric. Gets a nice warhammer and a light crossbow as starting equipment/at-will powers. Special powers gets rid of disadvantage when on same tile as other heroes, gives 1hp to others when he uses a daily/utility power. Gets a big heal, can reveal traps, and some other powers I can't recall at the moment.

- Rogue, Halfling - It's a rogue. Lots of positional damage, trap disabling (very important in this game), can do a three attack daily power, can take 2 non-attack actions per turn (similar to Drizzt).

- Wizard, Elf - Blows stuff up. Teleports. Burns things. I think it was mostly elemental-focused magic but not 100% on that.

- Fighter, Human (or barbarian?) - Has a big axe. Swings it pretty well. Kills things. Can swap places with another hero within one tile.

- Ranger, Elf - Moves fast and shoots things. Can do well in melee if needed.

Campaign - Yes! There's a campaign feature! The adventures are recommended to run in order and utilize the campaign system. Still only goes to level 1 & 2. But you can spend gold to level up and purchase upgrades (like +1 damage), buy/sell stuff and things like that. You can re-spec your powers. And there were some other things that I can't recall at the moment.

How do you do this?

Why it's simple really… you go to the town.

What?

Yes, there's a town. With a tile and everything! Unfortunately I didn't get to play it. But I got a quick look and did some fast perusal of the rules. It looks fun. Doesn't go as far as some of the fanmade stuff but hey, it's officially there!

Monsters - As you might expect, many of the monsters are elemental-based. There are cultists for each element, empowered cultists for each element, and an elemental for each element. Gnolls are the main monster race found in the dungeon. There is also an ettin, a bugbear, firebats, and a dragon. Elemental monsters also seem to like to move around between player control.

Map Tiles - They look really nice. The background art has a nice look & feel to it. The spawn symbols are elemental symbols. Not sure if there is a mechanic to the different element symbols are they just put them on for flavor. There are also dragon symbols on the tiles. Not sure what they're for but my guess is they're not there for fun. Lastly, many of the tiles have traps built into them. Traps are individual squares and (assuming we played them correctly) they trigger when you move onto/through them. This is where the cleric's ability to reveal traps on a tile and the rogue's ability to take a 2nd non-attack action come in handy. We drew several traps that were harmless but some hurt pretty bad.

Conditions - I like what they did here. They took advantage/disadvantage from 5th edition and made them the conditions. So when you have the condition you roll twice. If it's advantage keep the higher number, disadvantage keep the lower number. Cool to see them add in a new edition mechanic while keeping the core game the same. Nicely done IMO.

Encounters - Oh joy, the encounters. The ones we faced were mostly unpleasant (as you might expect). Some were attacks, some spawned monsters, one pulled a character off the map (similar to that one Ravenloft event), some had multiple effects. Didn't see them all but we got a good feel for it.

Treasure - Treasure was sort of disappointing and I think it was because we were just playing a single scenario. A lot of the treasure was coin. In the campaign game coin is very important. In a single scenario we would have liked multiple items. As we get used to this game we'll make the call if we want to sub in another treasure deck for single scenario play. I think Ashardalon's treasure would be fun in here as a first thought. But I'm sure in a campaign setting it will be really fun.

Quality - I had big concerns here (heroclix player, used to WizKids quality) but I'm happy to see everything seemed rock solid. Tokens punched correctly, figures were good, even the flight stands on the dragon and the firebats were solid. I'm optimistic now.

Overall - Loved it. It'll be a day 1 purchase for me. It seemed to fit seamlessly (tile look/feel of course is different) with the other games. I could see making a case that the heroes are very similar to previous heroes but there are differences. Are there enough differences? Not sure, need more time with the characters.


You can see the original post here. Also see this look inside the boardgame, complete with photos, from the New York Toy Fair last weekend.

WZK71818.jpg

 

log in or register to remove this ad


Icon_Charlie

First Post
It confirms about investing into boardgames considering that there market share in profitability has increased in 7 years straight. CCG's are doing as well and certain ones such as MtG are in the double digits.

Looks like this could be a quality product to pick up.
 


Li Shenron

Legend
Sorry but this review is not very useful to me... it mention many details but completely misses the main thing: what is the game about?

From what I read, this could be just the same as a game of D&D with simplified rules, packaged into a box, but this is not clarified, it's just assumed that everybody already know.
 

Kurzon

First Post
Sorry but this review is not very useful to me... it mention many details but completely misses the main thing: what is the game about..
It's not a review. It's someone sharing as many details as they could remember from playing the game once. These details have proven very useful to a lot of people already.

From what I read, this could be just the same as a game of D&D with simplified rules, packaged into a box, but this is not clarified, it's just assumed that everybody already know.

Well, you read right. That's what the D&D Adventure System boardgames are: a simplified version of 4E D&D in a boardgame format. The original report came from a forum on Board Game Geek specifically dedicated to the Adventure System games, where most people are already familiar with the previous games in the series. So obviously it was written with that audience in mind.

You should be thankful that the poster decided to share so much of his experience, rather than complaining about what he left out.
 

Saxon1974

Explorer
Interested in the town tiles, I wonder how many there are? Are they just for buying and selling or are there missions that go with them?
 

Li Shenron

Legend
You should be thankful that the poster decided to share so much of his experience, rather than complaining about what he left out.

Nope. I would be thankful for something useful, instead reading it just wasted my time. Maybe my mistake to misinterpret the title. At least you made it somewhat useful by confirming what the whole game is about.
 

Kurzon

First Post
Nope. I would be thankful for something useful, instead reading it just wasted my time.

Seems like you're the only one who didn't find it useful. And I'm pretty sure "will this news article waste Li Shenron's time?" isn't something Morrus considers when deciding what news to post.

Maybe my mistake to misinterpret the title.

Yes it was. The title says "Advanced Play Report", and that's exactly what it is.

At least you made it somewhat useful by confirming what the whole game is about.

What, that it's "a simplified version of 4E D&D in a boardgame format"? A simple click on the link or Google search would have told you that.
 

Morrus

Well, that was fun
Staff member
Nope. I would be thankful for something useful, instead reading it just wasted my time.

You're not going to be personally interested in every bit of news. I'm sorry you felt I was wasting your time. If you're not interested, why not move on and maybe the next news item will interest you?
 

Remove ads

Remove ads

Top