Kingdomino: Age of Giants Expansion

Kingdomino: Age of Giants Expansion

RRP: $17.99
Now $18.02(SAVE 21%)
RRP $22.99
Expected Restock Date 01/01/2025
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Kingdomino is a wonderfully simple, fun and quick game, with interesting drafting and pleasing domino like tile placement. In the game you will choose a tile that you want from a column of four by placing your colour meeple on it. This simple action dictates the turn order for the next round though, with players who selected less useful dominoes higher up the column getting the firs…
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Awards

Dice Tower

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You Might Like

  • Great additions including fifth player and a domino tower.
  • Increases Kingdomino's options giving a good idea if you'd like Queendomino.
  • Completes the box art panorama.

Might Not Like

  • Nice but not really needed.
  • Added tiles adds faff to the draft.
  • Not needed in Queendomino.
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Description

Kingdomino is a wonderfully simple, fun and quick game, with interesting drafting and pleasing domino like tile placement. In the game you will choose a tile that you want from a column of four by placing your colour meeple on it. This simple action dictates the turn order for the next round though, with players who selected less useful dominoes higher up the column getting the first picks next time around. Kingdomino was followed by Queendomino, which added a lot more to the game in terms of complexity. For serious gamers this was welcome but some of the pure simplicity of Kingdomino was, of course, lost. Enter the Age of Giants Expansion which can be added to both previous games of mixed in with both of them for some sort of extreme royaldomino smorgasbord. The expansion adds in a domino tower which dispenses the dominoes via the gift of gravity and the required components for a fifth player. That’s the relatively standard bits out of the way, the rest of the stuff adds to the gameplay. Firstly, rather than choosing out of a couple of bonus scoring objectives from the rulebook, these are now formalised in tile form. At the start of a game you will deal two of these new challenge tiles to give everyone some extra goals to aim for. The last addition is the giant tiles themselves. These get added into the main lot of tiles with some special rules about how to do this at the different player counts. When a player takes a tile with a giant on it they must immediately take one of the wooden giants and place it over one of their stars in their kingdom. If it is still there at the end of the game it cancels out this star for scoring, but if they draw a tile with footsteps on they can send this giant into another player’s kingdom, giving them the scoring penalty. Age of Giants, therefore, adds some more player interaction into the game. It wasn’t exactly lacking in the first place but it is nice to have a bit more direct interaction. Age of Giants adds a little more complexity to Kingdomino for those who want a bit more, but aren’t yet ready for the full Queendomino experience. It fits in nicely with Queendomino’s options without over cooking the egg. If you already own both then this is a little bit of a no brainer! Player Count: 2-5 Time: 15-20 Minutes Age rating: 8+

 

Kingdomino is one of my favourite ‘gateway’ or ‘entry level’ games. It’s easy to teach, looks great, and gives you a good level of decision making. Queendomino upped the ante and became more of a ‘gamers’ game, adding more options yes, but also more complexity.

Fans were split on the newer game, liking the decisions but lamenting the loss of approach-ability. Age of Giants is a expansion for both games, but will it ruin the simplicity of the Kingdomino and does Queendomino need more?

Previously on Kingdomino

Kingdomino is a tile-laying and drafting game of Kingdom building. Each round a number of tiles are placed out in a column and players take turns choosing one. The tiles at the top of the column are generally less useful but the top to bottom order determines the player order for the next round. Once selected your tile is added to your kingdom following domino rules – one of its terrains much be placed next to a matching terrain. You are also constrained by a 5×5 grid in a four player, or up to a 7×7 grid in two player.

The terrains are key to scoring. Each touching square of the same terrain will be multiplied by the amount of crowns within it. So, if you have a line of four grass tiles with two crowns you will score eight points. When the tiles run out you tot up scores and the player with the most points wins!

Age of Giants

Age of Giants adds three more gameplay elements and a domino tower. The domino tower is a thing of beauty, well made with a magnetic close, occasionally dominoes get a little stuck but for the most part it works well. Next we have the components needed to add a fifth player. Adding a fifth player doesn’t add any time to the game as you are all pretty much playing at the same time. It also means that with the added tiles from the expansion you can just play using all the tiles whereas with 2-4 players you need to discard at least one tile from each selection.

The next edition is a set of tiles that add opportunities to score extra points. At the back of the Kingdomino rule book you could add some scoring variants and now they have made it official. Tiles let you score for arranging your kingdom in certain ways, like having your castle in the exact middle.

Lastly are the giants of the title. Six wooden giants and tiles with either a picture of a giant or giants footprints on it. When you take a tile with a picture of a giant you must add a wooden giant to your kingdom, covering one of your crowns – this stops it from scoring at the end of the game. However, if you add a tile with a footprint on it to your kingdom you can move one giant from your kingdom to another players kingdom.

Kings and Queens

So how does it play? I have played Giants mainly with Kingdomino and I have found it to be a welcome edition. It adds just enough without being overly complex. I would always use the scoring tiles in games, as these just seem like a no brainer. If I was teaching to beginners it would depend a lot on who I was teaching but in most cases I would throw everything in.

For Queendomino I would also always use the scoring tiles, but I think I would leave the giants out unless playing with a very experienced group. I just don’t feel like Queendomino needs the extra mechanic or the faffing with discarding tiles from the draft. But that’s totally forget the fact that Age of Giants expands not one game but two!

So while it is perhaps not an ‘essential’ expansion, it is a very nice one. If you are loving on King and Queendomino then how can you not get this expansion which adds to the box artwork panorama? If you have Kingdomino and want to add more then again this is a good option, as it also will give you a good idea whether you want the added complexity that Queendomino brings.

In fact, the only people who might not really benefit from the giants addition are those who only own Queendomino, but you still get the scoring tiles, fifth player components and domino tower, so you would probably benefit too!

Bottom Line  – ‘A small but worthy expansion to both previous domino games. If you liked either of those you are guaranteed to get mileage from Age of Giants.

Zatu Score

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You might like

  • Great additions including fifth player and a domino tower.
  • Increases Kingdomino's options giving a good idea if you'd like Queendomino.
  • Completes the box art panorama.

Might not like

  • Nice but not really needed.
  • Added tiles adds faff to the draft.
  • Not needed in Queendomino.