I have something of an obsession with Korean publisher Playte Games. I currently live in Korea, so it is very easy for me to buy their games every month thanks to their low price point, but even beyond that they also feel tailor made for my interests. They do lots of reprints of classic games from simpler times (I am curmudgeonly about the current state of many hobby games, if I’m honest with myself), and in small boxes that I can easily fit on my shelf. I hate big boxes, get out of here with that shit. Gimme games that I can toss in my bag and bring with me. I don’t have a huge basement, I don’t drive to my gaming meet up, please don’t give me games that take a boardroom table to setup and weigh 10 kilograms. So yeah, Playte is like laser focused on what I want out of games, even if I don’t love everything they make.
My enthusiasm for Playte has caused me to deviate from my normal reviewing behavior, which is to focus on historical games and wargames, and write about how I feel about their latest and greatest. I usually don’t review these kind of games, not because I don’t like them, but because I struggle to have much to say. I focus on historical games because I am a historian, so I have a lot to say about games that tap into history and try to represent it accurately. My compromise for my inability to say much about traditional hobby games besides “it’s fun” or “it’s not very much fun” is to do a tier list. I already did part 1, which you can read here, this is the Playte Games Tier List (Part 2).
