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Be The Science Fair Champion With Gizmos Board Game

By Christopher Guyton | October 22nd, 2018 | Categories: Board Game Reviews, Board Games, Product Review

Be The Science Fair Champion With Gizmos Board Game

Looking for a lighthearted game that won’t bore you to death? Check out Gizmos, and be crowned champion at the science fair!

Gizmos is a 2-4 player game designed by Phil Walker-Harding and published by CMON games. Gizmos plays in roughly 40-50 minutes and is a lightweight engine building game.

Gizmos: $34.99

Get yours for less at Miniature Market

gizmos

 

The Great Science Fair Approaches!

You, the brilliant minds of our generation, will compete to build the most creative and powerful Gizmos in your homemade labs. Can you master the four energies and construct the best combos to bring home the first-place prize?

In this clever engine-building game, utilize energy from a unique dispenser and power various types of inventions as you compete to generate the most victory points, claiming the science fair’s top prize! In Gizmos, you’ll play again and again to discover just what crazy combo-machines you can come up with next!

Contents:
112 Gizmos Cards
1 Energy Dispense
52 Energy Spheres
1 Rules Leaflet
1 List of Effects
1 Dispenser Assembly Guide
4 Energy Rings
4 Player Dashboard
20 Victory Point Tokens

Ages: 14+
Players: 2-4
Game Length: 40-50 minutes

 

Be The Science Fair Champion With Gizmos Board Game

In Gizmos you play a science fair contestant trying to be crowned champion. Each player builds machines to create combos and score the most points. Think of it as building a Rube Goldberg device, where a chain reaction causes multiple actions triggered by a single action.

gizmos

Since Gizmos is an engine building game, everything you do can create extra actions. The idea is to create as many extra actions or combos as possible in order to get the most efficient engine running. You can only take one action a turn but can chain as many bonus actions as possible during a turn.

This is the most fun aspect of Gizmos. The moment you start chaining multiple actions is very satisfying.

gizmosThe main attraction of Gizmos has to be the marble dispenser. Very similar to the one in potion explosion, the energy marbles are filtered into a tray in order to be taken and used by the players. It looks like a hopper or a gumball machine. Its table presence isn’t fantastic.

 

There are four basic actions you can take in Gizmos. You can file a gizmo into your archive to reserve it for later or to prevent someone else from building it. You can take a pick action which lets you take one of the six energy marbles in the dispenser tray.

You can also build a gizmo as long as you have the required energy to build it. Lastly, you can take a research action by picking one of the three gizmo stacks. Then you take cards up to your research level and choose one to either file or build.gizmos

As you build more gizmos you’ll gain points and bonus actions. Some let you pick an energy from the tray or draw blindly from the hopper. Some give you bonus victory point chits that go toward your final score.

There are also some gizmos that just upgrade your stats. These stat bonuses upgrade the amount of energy you can hold in your energy bank, the number of gizmos you can store in your archive and the amount of cards you draw when you take a research action. There are also some gizmos that allow you to convert certain energy types into any type you wish. Another gizmo lets you make one energy of certain colors count as two of that type.

gizmos

Finding the perfect balance of different gizmo types is the key to victory. It’s fun to experiment with different combo styles in order to find what works best for you. With so many different combinations the possibilities are endless. No two games are the same, thanks to the many different cards and the randomization in each deck.

I definitely recommend Gizmos if you like engine building games that reward creating effective combinations. Plus, Gizmos is such a lightweight game it’s perfect to use as a gateway for novice players or non-gamers alike. The gameplay is creative and fun enough to keep advanced gamers entertained as well. Of course, the table presence, while it may seem a bit much, is very endearing to me.

It’s honestly what caught my eye when it was announced. The marbles are unfortunately plastic, but they have these air bubbles inside which actually gives them a pretty cool visual effect so they look really nice overall.

Plus I’d imagine glass marbles would wear the dispenser out faster in the long run. I picked up a copy early at GenCon, but this should be available at your FLGS as this article is published.

And don’t forget, you can get it for less at Miniature Market!

board game wrapper

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About the Author: Christopher Guyton

When not driving forklifts for a living Chris can be found pushing cubes and chucking dice at Gamer’s Guild in Spring Lake, NC