Brass: Birmingham board game box art

The Network-Building Mechanic Explained: From Ticket to Ride to Brass: Birmingham

Every round of Ticket to Ride ends with the same quiet satisfaction: your railway connects two distant cities, the route card flips face up, and you bank the points. Simple. Clean. Deeply pleasant. Now look at Brass: Birmingham - the #1 game on BGG. Your coal mines feed your ironworks. Your canal links carry goods to distant markets. The network you build isn’t just about geography; it’s a living supply chain where every connection either opens new possibilities or exposes a dependency your opponents will immediately exploit. ...

10 July 2026 · 7 min · The Dice Drop
Modern Art box art  -  Reiner Knizia, CMON

Mechanic Deep Dive: Auction & Bidding - The Purest Form of Player Interaction

Every board game mechanic is, at some level, a system for making decisions interesting. Worker placement gives you scarcity. Deck building gives you growth curves. Area control gives you territory pressure. But auctions? Auctions give you people. No other mechanic forces you to read the table quite like bidding. There’s no optimal play you can calculate in a vacuum - every decision depends on what the person across from you is thinking, what they can afford, and whether they’re the type to bluff on an empty wallet. It’s game theory made visceral. ...

19 April 2026 · 8 min · The Dice Drop
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