Heroes for Dungeonquest explained

Heroes for Dungeonquest is a supplement published by Games Workshop (GW) in 1987 for the fantasy board game Dungeonquest.

Contents

Heroes for Dungeonquest is the first expansion set that was published for Dungeonquest, adding twelve new heroes[1] with new mechanics and special abilities, and a handful of additional cards and tokens.[2] Twelve metal miniatures from Citadel Miniatures were also included in the game.

This is only an expansion and is not playable on its own; the original game is required for play.[3]

Publication history

GW's Dungeonquest boardgame is an English-language translation of the Swedish game Drakborgen (Dragon Fortress) created by Jakob Bonds and Dan Glimne,[4] and published by Alga AB in 1985. Alga released an expansion called Drakborgen II in 1987. GW published an English-language version of this expansion, but divided it into two supplements:

Reception

Reviewer John Woods for The Games Machine had not been impressed with the original game, feeling that the inherent randomness of events trumped any player skill.[5] In reviewing the Heroes for Dungeonquest expansion, he found it similarly flawed: "Whilst the game is fun to play a few times, there's very little depth to it and even worse no scope at all for cooperation or enmity between different PCs." He also questioned the relatively expensive price tag, and the inclusion of metal miniatures, which he surmised must be the reason for the high cost.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Role Play. Chicago Tribune. 146. November 25, 1988. August 21, 2021.
  2. Web site: Heroes for Dungeonquest . BoardGameGeek . 2021-05-19.
  3. Woods. John . June 1988 . Never Cross the Beams. The Games Machine. Newsfield. 7. 115.
  4. News: Gustavsson . Anton . Mannen bakom Alga-spelen . Svenska Dagbladet . December 9, 2009 . Swedish.
  5. Woods. John . March 1988 . West End Strike Back. The Games Machine. Newsfield. 4. 115–116.