Dwarven Kibbutz

2025
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Players
2-5
Weight
N/A
Playtime
150 min
Age
13+

📖 About This Game

Dwarven Kibbutz is a strategic semi-cooperative eurogame for 2–5 players (best at 4), where players take on the role of dwarven heirs rebuilding a fallen kingdom — while secretly competing for the throne. Players must develop land, manage specialized workers, manipulate the market, and form temporary alliances to ensure the survival of their shared society. But while the community must thrive to avoid collapse, only one heir will ultimately claim the crown… unless none do. What makes Dwarven Kibbutz stand out? A Semi-Coop Built for Tension and Resilience • Dual Traitor System The game supports two types of betrayal: • A hidden traitor may be dealt at the start, playing in secret from turn one. • Alternatively, any player may openly betray the group mid-game by accepting a loan from Malrik, switching sides, and pursuing a personal Usurper victory. • No Kingmaker Problem Players who fall behind can change their win condition. There’s always a way back into the game — no need to play just to help or hinder others. • True Cooperative Stakes The Prosperity Tracker reflects the group’s stability. If it collapses to -3 and isn’t recovered, a popular revolt ends the game — and everyone loses, including Malrik. No one rules a fallen kingdom. • A Dynamic Market with Political Impact Players influence supply and prices directly. Control the Market Tile to adjust values or trigger a crash — affecting everyone’s strategy and the realm’s prosperity. • Alliances of Convenience Temporary alliances allow shared control over tiles — but may lead to conflict, overpopulation, or internal bidding wars. Collaboration is always strategic, never guaranteed. Victory in Three Layers Group Survival: Did Prosperity collapse? If so, the game ends and no one wins. Factional Success: If the realm endures, determine which faction prevailed — Balin’s loyalists or Malrik’s rebels. Individual Victory: Among the winning faction, the player with the highest VP becomes ruler of the kibbutz. Dwarven Kibbutz combines euro-style precision with social tension and emergent storytelling. It’s a game of negotiation, risk management, strategic betrayal, and moral compromise — where winning means surviving first, and ruling second. —description from the designer