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A Game Night Survival Guide
Description
When the holidays roll around, many of us romanticize the idea of a cozy game night—only to remember the part where someone has to read the rules, explain them, and keep the vibes going while everyone tries not to flip a table. If you’ve ever sighed at the sight of a board game box (or struggled through a four-hour strategy game you didn’t sign up for), this episode is for you.
James Austin, Wirecutter’s staff writer covering games and hobbies, shares how to host a game night that actually stays fun, how to pick games that match your group’s vibe, and which games work best for kids, adults, mixed-age families, multilingual gatherings, or friends who are already a few drinks in.
If you crosswords and other NYT games, check out Puzzle Mania! from The New York Times Games editor Joel Fagliano.
James’s favorite resources to learn new games:
- If you don’t want to read the rules, Watch It Played and Good Time Society have videos explaining how to play many board games
- BoardGameGeek can tell you how to play a game your interested in
- Board Game Arena is a great resource for playing digital versions of board games
- Pagat.com explains the rules to every card game
Games for kids
- Rhino Hero (age 5+) and Rhino Hero: Super Battle (age 5+)
- First Orchard (age 2+)
Games for mixed-age groups or families
- A Fake Artist Goes to New York - especially good for avoiding awkward conversations
- The Gang - cooperative but silent play
- The Crew - no talking!
- Sushi Go! - adorable and easy to play
- Monikers - great for big groups
- Anomia - a great starter game
- Dixit - a visual game without reading, good for kids and non-english speakers
- Carcassonne - interactive and easy to understand
- Coup - quick to play
Party Games for adults (including boozy groups)
- Codenames - match words by meaning
- Wavelength - opinion-based fun
- Anomia - lots of shouting!
Strategy games