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How Settlers of Catan can help you achieve early retirement - Episode 43

Episode 43 Published 7 years, 11 months ago
Description

As a kid, family holidays meant board and card games. Canasta was very popular, as was Monopoly, Cluedo, Squatter, and various other games. As an adult my love of games has continued and fortunately I've been able to convince my home tribe to join me (and usually crush me). Of the various games that we play, Settlers of Catan has to be my favourite, and I know I'm not alone.

So today's episode, is a bit of a nerdy self-indulgence, but I hope you'll enjoy it. For those fellow Settlers of Catan lovers, hopefully these musings help bring your early retirement dreams closer to reality, and for those who've never had the pleasure of a great game of Catan, I hope this inspires you to put the word out amongst a few friends, and give it a go.

One of the hottest trends circulating around the globe at present is board and card games in cafes and bars. Perhaps we've started to reach a tipping point with social media and screen time, where the appeal of getting out of the house, not a screen in sight, holds enormous appeal. The opportunity to talk and have fun with actual people in the same room as you satisfies a deeply entrenched need for connectedness.

The game in a café also solves another potential social obstacle – what to do if we run out of things to talk about. I'm not in the dating phase of my life, but if I were, I think I'd go with a game in a café pretty early as a really low-stress ice breaker. You'd certainly get to know someone a whole lot better than sitting next to them at a movie.

Settlers of Catan, the German game released in 1995 has undoubtedly been an essential element of this rise in board game popularity. Some refer to Settlers of Catan as the modern day Monopoly, though whilst I enjoyed many hours playing Monopoly as a child, now that I've experienced Catan, Monopoly just wouldn't get a look in.

Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn's founder, Microsoft board member, and a board-game aficionado, says that Settlers of Catan is "the board game of entrepreneurship".

So how does Settlers of Catan help with your early retirement aspirations? I believe many of the game elements have parallels in the planning and investment process.

Let's start with Settlements. To have success in Catan, you need a) to have settlements in good locations, and b) to have as many settlements (and cities) as possible. The order of those two factors is not by accident. Broadly speaking, the more settlements you have the better, but as with investing, quality matters.

For the uninitiated, Settlers of Catan requires players to gain resources in order to build or buy things. You gain resources either through the placement of your Settlements, or through trade. In some cases claiming a particular port that links to a resource you are well endowed with provides you with a solid path to victory.

So when thinking about planning your Early Retirement, before you make any investments, think about what your broader goal is, and as with the placement of your settlements, remember that quality, especially early on, is more important than quantity.

Another really important aspect of building wealth to enable early retirement is recognition of the importance of compounding returns. All of us, when we start investing, start small. And sometimes it can feel like progress is glacial because the incremental gains month to month are perhaps only in the single or low double digits. But reinvest those earnings, and you start to get earnings on those initial earnings, and like a snowball rolling down a hill, as time progresses your investments get larger and larger. The magic of compounding! It's important therefore to not be put off by the early slow progress.

We see the parallel of this in Settlers of Catan. Early on we have only two settlements, and so the accumulation of resources can be a little slow. But as the game progresses, we eventually build extra settlements, and ultimately cities, and

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