PAX Unplugged 2023 – The Full Demos

There’s not enough time to play a full demo of everything at PAX. I think if the show was set up to let you do that, it would probably be one or two months long. I’m not sure I could take that long off work.

That said, I did play a bunch of full demos! So, in no particular order, here are a bunch of things I played that you might not have heard of.

(Okay, in no particular order except Pack The Essentials, which is first because it’s pretty great.)

Pack The Essentials

There’s a lot to unpack about Pack The Essentials. The short version is that I really liked playing this, and I’m excited to see a full release. And while I did play it in the Unpub hall, it already has a publisher: Whacky Wizard games, a new spin off of Wise Wizard games.

Pack the Essentials is a tile drafting and placement game. Players take turns drafting tetromino-like tiles, and placing them onto a personal board. It’s a bit point salad, and your goal is to get the most victory points. You get points for a variety of things, from building chains of certain colored tiles, to surrounding other types of tiles, to using a secondary resource to flip the tiles into cats. Yes, your stuff turns into cats.

Prototype art!

Pack The Essentials was one of my favorite things at the show, and I’m excited to see the full version.

Author Note: If you’re wondering why the board looks completely different from the splash image, that’s because I was playing a prototype version which doesn’t have finalized art. The gameplay was still great.

Crystallo

I am putting Crystallo on this list mostly out of a combined sense of spite, and grudging respect. I did in fact play an entire game of Crystallo, and I actually won, admittedly on easy mode. But let’s back up for a moment.

Crystallo is a single player set placement game. In fact, you could call it a Set-like game, in that it takes the primary mechanic from Set. I don’t think that’s an unfair observation, since the person demoing it to me referenced Set when explaining Crystallo.

It’s a bit easier to see than to explain, so here’s a quick image of my finished Crystallo board.

Did this image help? I hope it did, because it’s eating a non-zero portion of the 10 gigs I have to host this site. A picture might be worth a 1,000 words, but it takes up the memory of like 400,000 words.

Crystallo effectively has two rounds. In the first round you build out a map of cards, one card at a time. You’re trying to surround specific colored emblems. Each time you do so, you complete a set, and you’re trying to complete enough sets to win. In the second part of the game, you try to get one more match of kind each, using all your remaining cards, plus an additional 9.

The thing about Crystallo is that it was not particularly “fun” for me. In fact, the main emotion I remember feeling was immense stress, and mild frustration. There was a palpable sense of relief after I finished, because apparently when a game frustrates me to no end, my response is to sit down and finish the entire thing instead of going and doing something else.

I should work on expanding that skill set to the rest of my life.

Anyway, I do respect Crystallo, but it’s absolutely not a game for me.

Canosa

One of my personal “classic” board games, which is to say a game that I remember from my childhood is Quoridor. Fairly simple rules, but what felt like a complex game to play.

Canosa gave me a very similar vibe. It’s probably easiest to describe it in terms of something like Chess, but that’s still inaccurate. There are two types of pieces: Sailors and Sirens. Each player has one Siren, and your goal is to move four sailors to your own island. The catch is that you don’t own Sailors. Instead, their ownership changes. Sailors and Sirens have colored rings on them corresponding to the player, and there’s a set of mechanics for moving those rings on and off. Which ring is the highest on the sailor determines which player controls it.

Unfortunately, I’m not sure the retail edition has the beautiful wooden pieces, but I can still dream.

Playing it feels very similar to playing something like Quoridor, Connect Four, or Chess to me. The main skill you need to succeed is the ability to look ahead and figure out what your opponent is going to do. But that’s hard enough that it’s fairly easy to missing an option or fail to spot a solution.

I don’t think it’s fair to evaluate a game like Canosa after one play. But I would play more of it! Just preferably not against the game’s creator again, because getting butchered isn’t exactly the best experience. But I would play more.

Skyrockets

Skyrockets is thematically a game about fireworks. Mechanically, it’s a real time sand timer management game. Players have hands of cards with two colors on them, take turns playing cards. Whenever anyone plays a card, you flip the two sand timers that match the card’s colors.

You win by flipping the largest sand timer several times, but you can only flip it after it runs out. Meanwhile, you have to keep all the other sand timers from ever running out. It’s a fairly simple concept, but worked pretty well.

On the whole, Sky Rockets felt like a lightweight game I’d bring to a family gathering, or maybe play as a quick thing at a larger event. It’s not uninteresting, but it also didn’t sell me on itself quite enough for me to grab a copy on the spot.

Shape Invaders

Shape Invaders is a tabletop game, in that it takes up an entire friggin tabletop. It’s a physical dexterity game for two players. Each player has a set of slim plastic pieces that they set up on their side of the table. Then they take turns flicking pieces and trying to knock the other player’s mothership off the board.

It’s actually quite fun, and I really liked it. It also has a sort of comeback mechanic that works really well. Each player has a set of pieces that can’t be flicked, called shields. Whenever your mothership would be knocked off the board, you remove a shield and place the mothership where the shield was. It’s much better than a flat life system, since it’s possible to go after shields early.

Dungeon Drop

Dungeon Drop is another “most of a table” game that has some physical dexterity elements. I’ll be honest, I did not enjoy Dungeon Drop at all. Here’s how the game works.

You start by dropping a large number of small plastic cubes into an enclosed area. On your turn, you drop more cubes in, then select a set of cubes encapsulated by other specific cubes to pick up. There’s more to it than that, and there are some special powers that involve flicking cubes, or different cubes being worth different amounts, but it just wasn’t very interesting.

Most of the game is just spent looking for good patterns on your turn, and hoping no one else spots them. There just wasn’t very much I found interesting about it.