I, on the contrary, just got it to it but I got in deep and dragging my extended family into this hole with me.
My first game was Avalon which is introduced by an unlikely board games evangelist, Dan Ryckert. Since Pathfinder seems a little too needy for my taste. But I love "Acquisition Incorporated" though, both podcasts and live sessions.
A few hundred dollars (exchange rates as of today) later we all addicted to "Ticket to Ride", "Catan", "Pandemic" & "Dixit".
Next on the list is "Lords of Waterdeep" & "King of Tokyo".
P.S. I highly recommend "TableTop" series on YouTube and "Acquisition Incorporated" for fun times alone...all by yourself.
“No, I don’t think CD Projekt Red is racist; Yes, I still wish there were some people of color in the game. Yes, I still like The Witcher 3 a lot. No, those three statements do not contradict each other.”
This part of the article makes me wonder about what do you actually mean by this. I was thinking that it's quite normal to throw it out there on the internet, like you said, it doesn't seem like a forceful statement.
But if you're sitting with the developer(s) in person and said something like "I still wish there were some people of color in the game", what is the situation then? Would the spectrum of influence might have tipped a bit to the right?
From all my years of reading, listening and watching "behind the scene"-type contents, creative people behind every works out there always(or mostly) take it personally when it comes to critiquing comments.
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