Featured image of post March 2026 Plays

March 2026 Plays

Hello everyone!

March was a really good month for board games, 15 plays across 10 games, two of them brand new to me, spread between home and a lovely local board game café. Let me take you through the highlights!

March 2026 by the Numbers

  • 15 plays (compared to 13 in February 🎉)
  • 10 different games
  • 2 new-to-me games
  • Most played: Dice Throne Adventures (4 plays)
BGStats summary for March 2026: 15 plays, 10 games, 2 new, 12 hours

March 2026 in numbers

New Games Discovered

Dice Throne Adventures

Designed by Gavan Brown, Nate Chatellier, and Manny Trembley, published by Roxley.

The star of the month with 4 plays! Dice Throne Adventures is a cooperative campaign expansion for the Dice Throne universe, playable solo or with up to 4 players. The campaign has 6 chapters in total, alternating between three exploration chapters and three boss combat chapters. I’m currently halfway through, with Chapters 1 and 2 completed, two plays each, and already in love with it.

I have terrible luck with dice but Dice Throne Adventures gives you so many ways to manipulate your rolls that you never feel completely at their mercy. The adventure side adds a wonderful discovery element, and the rhythm between exploration and combat keeps things fresh. I’m playing solo with the Barbarian, and the game is challenging without feeling unfair, that sweet spot that makes you want to keep going. Can’t wait to see what the next chapters bring!

If you’re already a fan of Dice Throne, this is the expansion you need.

Dice Throne Adventures

Dice Throne Adventures

Alhambra

Designed by Dirk Henn, published by Queen Games.

The other new game this month, and what a wonderful surprise! My partner and I tried it at a warm, cosy little board game café, the kind of place that feels like a perfect escape. We had no idea what to expect about the game.

What immediately won us over was how easy it was to get into: the rules clicked quickly and we were playing confidently within minutes. I had heard of Alhambra before but never watched a playthrough, so everything unfolded naturally as we discovered it together. We only managed one game before time ran out, but we are definitely going back for more. The puzzle of fitting your palace pieces together, combined with the point management pressure as the game progresses, is just fantastic. And it works really well at 2 players!

Alhambra

Alhambra

Games I Continued Exploring

Dawn of the Zeds

Designed by Hermann Luttmann, published by Victory Point Games.

Dawn of the Zeds is a 1–2 player tower defence game, and it is ruthless, in the best possible way. You play a group of ordinary citizens trying to hold back waves of zombies from reaching the town centre. If even one Zed gets through, it’s game over.

I played at the Outbreak difficulty level, and it is already quite hard, and I haven’t won a single game yet. But honestly? I don’t mind at all. There is something deeply cinematic about this game, every play feels like surviving the opening act of a disaster film, where things go wrong in the most plausible, horrible ways. The dice rolls are brutal, the events are relentless, and your characters feel appropriately fragile. I love everything about it except my dice luck!

Fair warning: this is not a game for players who shy away from rules. The rulebook is split across several levels of increasing complexity, and even at Outbreak level there are plenty of small details to keep track of. It gets smoother with plays, but it does ask something of you. Absolutely worth it.

Dawn of the Zeds

Dawn of the Zeds

Viticulture

Designed by Jamey Stegmaier and Alan Stone, published by Stonemaier Games.

Viticulture is a game that I love. I played twice and managed to win one of the two games, but it was incredibly tight. On the last round I had to count every single point I could possibly gain before committing to my actions. A narrow win, but so satisfying precisely because of that!

I enjoy the balance between summer and winter, and the constant question of how to deploy your workers across both seasons: should I use this worker now in winter, or hold it for a summer action I might need more? With so few workers and so much to do, every placement decision carries real weight. If the winemaking theme has ever put you off, I’d encourage you to look past it, the design underneath is really beautiful.

I still want to try the challenges included with the base game, where you play eight games under different conditions and compare your results. That is firmly on my to-do list!

Viticulture

Viticulture

Aquatica

Designed by Ivan Tuzovsky, published by Cosmodrome Games.

I’ve already written a full review of Aquatica, you can read it here. It was great to revisit it this month. Sliding ocean cards under your board as you explore the depths remains one of the most satisfying mechanics I’ve encountered. Still a gem.

Aquatica

Aquatica

Legacy of Yu

Designed by Shem Phillips, published by Garphill Games.

A pure solo campaign game about constructing canals to hold back the floods threatening an ancient corner of China. Between managing construction, fending off barbarians, and racing against the ever-rising waters, there is a lot to juggle, and I am almost at the end of the campaign now! One of my favourite things is unveiling the story paragraphs as you progress and discovering the surprises waiting for you.

This month also gave me a good laugh at my own expense. I started one session and thought, hmm, this feels suspiciously easy. Something was off. Sure enough, I had completely forgotten to pay the provisions needed to fight the barbarians. That one small detail changed everything: the moment I started a fresh game correctly, the difficulty jumped right back up where it belongs. I had been suspecting something was wrong the whole time! 😅 The deck-building component woven through the whole game is genuinely clever and keeps things fresh even deep into the campaign.

Legacy of Yu

Legacy of Yu

Imperial Miners

Designed by Tim Armstrong, published by Portal Games.

Another game I’ve already reviewed, you can find it here. Imperial Miners is all about building your mine card by card, finding clever combos, and enjoying some of the most charming illustrations in my collection. Always satisfying.

Imperial Miners

Imperial Miners

Coffee Roaster

Designed by Sung-Soo Choi, published by Sit Down! Games.

Coffee Roaster is a solo bag-building game about doing one thing perfectly: making the ideal cup of coffee. You start with raw beans, roast them across a series of rounds at increasing temperatures, and try to find the right moment to stop, because over-roasted beans will ruin your cup just as surely as under-roasted ones.

When you’re ready, you move into the brewing phase: you draw tokens from the bag one by one and decide whether to keep them in your cup or discard them. The final balance of values determines how good your coffee is. It’s tense, it’s fun, and it’s a perfect example of Push Your Luck done right. Will you squeeze in one more roasting phase and risk the bag, or play it safe with what you have? Best enjoyed with an actual cup of coffee beside you.

Coffee Roaster

Coffee Roaster

Other Notable Games

March also brought some welcome time with two more games from the Oniverse series.

Sylvion and Castellion are honestly not my favourites from the collection, but that’s starting to change. After several plays I’m beginning to see the strategies, and I’m genuinely enjoying both more than I did at first. In Sylvion you protect your forest from a devastating fire; in Castellion you build up the defences of a city under siege. They’ll be getting more table time!

Sylvion

Sylvion

Castellion

Castellion

Looking Ahead

April is shaping up nicely already. I want to continue the Dice Throne Adventures campaign and see what the next chapters bring. I also have a new acquisition I’m very excited about, Fromage, and I’d love to get it to the table soon. And more Viticulture is definitely on the plan. Wine and cheese: a perfect pairing on and off the table!

What About You?

Have you played any of these games this month? I’d love to know, especially if you’ve made it through a full Dice Throne Adventures campaign or found the secret to surviving Dawn of the Zeds! Come share your thoughts on Mastodon

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