“Don’t over complicate your ideas. Maybe you are designing a complicated game, and that’s legit, but be really honest with yourself about whether or not you need all of the elements you’ve included.”
What makes a “thematic” game thematic:
http://islaythedragon.com/featured/thematics-knizia-and-evocative-mechanics/
What should be in a licensing contract:
http://theforbiddenlimb.com/2015/03/24/publishing-contracts/
SEE ALSO: http://cardboardedison.tumblr.com/tagged/contract-terms
The right way to use player elimination:
http://matthewgravelyn.com/designing-for-player-elimination/
“Be careful listening to what play testers say. The most valuable information I get from play testing is from watching the play testers. What part of the game are they having the most fun with? What part are they frustrated with etc. They will show you this in how they play the game.”
Teale Fristoe (@fristoe) on blind playtesting, game jams, iterating rules, your first design and more:
http://meeplemechanic.com/foxhole-fiver/teale-fristoe-on-designing-birds-of-a-feather/
Preliminary steps to take before moving into board game publishing:
http://hyperbolegames.com/2015/03/20/some-start-up-thoughts/
Michael Coe (@Gamelyn_Games) on preparing for a Kickstarter campaign, salability, using BoardGameGeek, director’s cuts and game design, and more:
http://www.leagueofgamemakers.com/a-tiny-epic-interview-with-michael-coe/
The post hoc fallacy in playtesting: why happy players might not be enjoying your game:
http://nerdstable.blogspot.com/2015/03/the-post-hoc-fallacy-in-playtesting.html
Daniel Solis (@DanielSolis) on exploring games, using your clever ideas, eloquent design, layout, fighting players’ instincts, print on demand and more:
http://theinquisitivemeeple.com/2015/03/18/designing-meeples-with-daniel-solis/
