Players will each be building tiles directly off their player board with increasing gains for doing the same tile again, only the tiles don’t actually benefit the player until they are flipped. There are plenty of cotton mills in Manchester, docks in Liverpool and steel mills in Preston, the attention to detail really makes the theme come to life. The board itself shows players which tiles can be played in which locations, accurate to the history of each town and city on the map. Brass features elements that any euro-gamer might find familiar, an individual player board, building tiles and a steadily increasing income of cash as the game progresses. Players each adopt the role of a rival industrialist building mines, mills and docks, as well as the transport links that connect them all together. I’ve had a chance to play both games at every player count now and thankfully they were worth the high price tag.įormally known simply as Brass, Brass Lancashire features a map of the North West of England which was the birthplace of the industrial revolution. I ordered both games as deluxe editions shortly after the Kickstarter campaign ended for a fairly sizable sum of money. The Roxley releases both came with a standard edition and a deluxe version, upgrading the cardboard money for clay-style poker chips, and making the cardboard tokens and player matts much thicker. I never got a chance to try the original 2007 edition of the game, but I was always curious to play it while at the same time put-off by the awful graphic design and artwork. Brass: Birmingham is a sequel which takes the better elements of the original game and introduces a few new mechanisms, while leaving some of the clunkier rules behind. Brass: Lancashire is a new edition of an older game with a complete visual overhaul and slightly more streamlined rules which also includes Brass: 2-player board, originally created by members of the Brass community. Reviewing Brass Lancashire, Brass Birmingham and the Alternative Two Player Boardĭuring the first lockdown I managed to get my hands on Roxley’s hugely successful Brass: Lancashire and Brass: Birmingham after hearing so much positive praise for both games.
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