5 Fantastic Star Wars board games 1694u

For tabletop Star Wars games that you should check out, you can thank us later. g453g

Star Wars: Armada

Want to plan your own spaceships course? Look no further than Star Wars fans will love it!

Armada might seem a bit overwhelming (and a bit too geeky) at first. You use a plastic stick with a series of ts to plot the course of your ships. There are shields to consider on each side of your big ships, with dials to turn as you take damage. Do you want to use an action to transfer shields from starboard to the bow? Is it time to brace and minimize damage from a frontal attack? Should you use your special action token to improve your yaw for one turn? It’s a lot to take in, but it will start to feel natural (and cool) in no time.

Star Wars: X-Wing

game has a similar play style to Armada but with different rules for single fighters and two-person fighters.

Before there was Armada, there was every other ship in the Star Wars universe.

Unlike Armada, which is meant to show large-scale battles, X-Wing is about the fight in the galactic trenches. It plays similarly to Armada, but with rules more suited for single- and two-man fighters, not enormous, heavily shielded ships with loads of firepower.

Star Wars: Imperial Assault

In Star Wars: Imperial Assault the Death Star has been crushed and the Empire is went through a large attack, however the war has just begun.

The play a series of missions with the hope of stopping the Empire. But one additional player is involved, and she plays for the Empire, doing whatever she can to stop the Rebels and ensure victory for Vader and the Emperor.

Imperial Assault is based off the very popular dungeon crawler Descent 2nd Edition. What’s a dungeon crawler in tabletop ? Each mission is set on a map made of modular pieces (sort of like puzzle pieces), meaning that no two scenarios will have the same layout. You move miniatures on the map, roll dice to fight the Imperials standing in your way, and attempt to accomplish the goal of the mission. It might be to kill an important Imperial or to stop a beacon signal or keeping critical intel out of the hands of the Empire.

Whether you succeed or fail, the campaign continues. If the Darth Vader, bounty hunter IG-88 and others. Oh, and deploy AT-STs into missions, which can really turn a battle in her favor. And is just awesome. Like, seriously. You’re stomping Rebels with an AT-ST. That is cool.

Star Wars: The Card Game

The main component and key to part of Star Wars, the card game is the right option for you.

The pull of the Dark Side and the struggle to restore balance to the Force is a key Light Side that comes out victorious.

Each round, players place cards representing Luke never finds out the truth about his father, Leah dies thinking she’s found her soulmate not her brother, and Chewbacca fails to get the last roar.

Fortune favors the Dark Side can protect its objectives, the Light Side will have a hard time finding victory. No one said the struggle to defeat the Empire would be an easy one.

Star Wars: Edge of the Empire Role-Playing Game

If you favor miniatures Star Wars: Edge of the Empire Role-Playing Game is as awesome as it sounds.

If combat-focused miniatures Luke Skywalker or destroying the Empire.

You get to explore the larger Star Wars universe and create your own adventures in a system that is fairly rules light. Edge of the Empire and its sequel, Age of Rebellion, use a narrative-driven system that’s less about direct results and more about creatively deciding what a “bad result” actually means in a given situation.

There are numerous sourcebooks providing rich details on the galaxy we’ve all dreamed about exploring. And as with the movies, the existence of Jedi is limited to, well, this one guy who blew up the influence of the Empire encroaching on everyone’s activities.

If you want to be more involved in the Rebellion, you can jump straight to works as a standalone book focused on the Rebel’s fight against the Empire.