“Pretty much any game you can play with one person is technically a solitaire game, but the wealth of game styles, games played, games strategies is so diverse,” says Scott McNeely, author of Ultimate Book of Card Games: The Comprehensive Guide to More Than 350 Games. We said no solitaire, and we’re sticking to that, but there are other card games that can be played with just a traditional deck of cards.
In fact, Yurko says, “I’ve been in games of this with over a hundred people before, so I can say for certain that it can handle that.” This was also recommended by George Georgeadis of Oniro Games as a good Zoom game one person must own the game to display the cards, and everyone else just needs a pencil and a score sheet, which they can download and print for free here or download a free app onto their phones for a digital version. Where do you build fences? Should you put in pools? What about a park? Balancing all this to try and get the highest-scoring neighborhood is very challenging.” If you want to share in the struggle, you can play this over Zoom. “The complex part is deciding what other features of your neighborhood should be added. “To do so, you’ll number houses every round to try and have them in increasing order, left to right,” Yurko says. Something at the more challenging end of beginner games is Welcome To, where players act as ’50s suburban planners trying to build three neighborhoods. Davidson also finds that “for a tiny game, it is incredibly frustrating and puzzle-y, but that’s what makes it fun.” (Plus it can be played by up to four players, when you can spend time with friends and family again.) With other players, you’re passing the cards you don’t use once your turn ends by yourself, you’re just trying to beat the target score and win.” What makes it particularly interesting for solo gaming is your score target will be different every time you play, so it won’t get repetitive. “You reveal three scoring cards and use the remaining 15 to build up a city. “On the front of each card is a two-by-two-inch grid of districts with some roads, and on the back of each card is a scoring condition,” Yurko says. You are trying to build a city with the goal of getting the highest score. “This 18-card game may not seem like much, but it’s an excellent execution of a simple concept,” says Yurko. (We’ve even noted some that can be played over Zoom if you do get a little lonely.)Įric Yurko, an American Tabletop Awards committee member and game reviewer for his own site, What’s Eric Playing?, calls this one of his all-time favorite games, and Davidson recommends it too.
So to find out how to play multiple characters or how to just try to beat your own score, we talked to Davidson and two other gamers about the best solo games, from crime solving, to escape rooms, to city-building games. She adds, “It’s something that was already a growing trend, and it’s actually just gotten bigger in quarantine.” In recent years Davidson has also noticed more and more game publishers introducing solo modes to games so they can be played by yourself or in a group. “The one-player guild on Board Game Geek is actually one of the largest with more than 13,000 members, and the Solo Board Gamers Facebook group, which is a very friendly place to go if you want to talk solo board games, has more than 20,000 members as of right now,” she says. Liz Davidson, who has been reviewing solo games on her site Beyond Solitaire and on Dice Tower since 2016, says that one-player games are actually a very popular gaming category. If you’ve done enough puzzling for a lifetime (or maybe even just want to take a break from your pod), there are plenty of board games that you can have a lot of fun playing all by yourself. Families quarantining together have nearly endless options for isolated fun, including four-player board games, and couples have two-player board games, but those of us who are going it alone right now might be starting to run out of ideas.