When the the traitor is the person with the highest speed.

seen from China
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Türkiye

seen from Philippines
seen from United States
seen from China
When the the traitor is the person with the highest speed.
I know I'm way late to the party on this one but I finally watched Supernatural and I loved it. Then I was playing Betrayal at house on the hill with @itschelseytoo and we both realized how pretty much any of the haunt scenarios could be a supernatural episode. Mix that in with me looking for a project to learn how to use 3d printing while I don't have any cosplays in the works and.... the result is custom Supernatural BaHotH characters! I'm pretty happy with how my first foray into 3d printing turned out and I couldn't decide on which 6 characters to make so I made 7. Bobby and Rowena are doubled up on a card but the rest got joke pictures on the back side, it just seemed appropriate. I am so ready for Sam and Dean to get turned into mice and have to escape on a toy plane from the traitor cat Crowley. This amuses me way too much...
On the 🚆 to HKI rewriting game rules for easier reading #carbonara #bujo #bahoth
Ending the year with betrayal (at House on the Hill)
I spent New Year’s Eve trying out some new (to me at least) board games with friends over drinks in what was a great evening. We played two games: Betrayal at House on the Hill, and another game called ‘Boss Monsters’
Boss Monsters didn’t impress me all that much. The game lacked interaction between players and I felt like there was too much information to track in order to maximize your resources. It always sucks in games to find out a choice you made was incorrect just because you didn’t notice something across the table.
However, the other board game I played that night left me very impressed.
Betrayal at House on the Hill is a board game for 3-6 players, which I played in a group of 5. You each play as a character tasked with exploring a haunted house that is randomly assembled by using tiles to represent each room you enter.
As you play, the house gets slowly bigger as you uncover items, stat changing effects (both positive and negative) and more rooms. While this is happening, you creep ever so closer to the end-game... the haunting itself. Most of this review is going to be discussing this haunting mechanic, as it’s this feature that lead to me being as impressed as I was with Betrayal.
You begin each game working together until a ‘traitor’ is revealed when the haunt begins. When this happens, all the players are given a condition they must meet in order to win, and the traitor is given their own win condition, which often goes directly against the win condition of the rest of the players. These win conditons vary depending on the haunt, and there are over 50 different kinds of hauntings to play through, most of which drastically change the game rules.
Often, games with as many random elements as Betrayal fall foul of leaving players feeling as though they are having no impact on what happens in the game. Betrayal gets around this by making the ‘Haunt’ where the primary decision making takes place. As these later decisions are heavily impacted by the random elements of the early game, it makes these early elements feel more exciting. When you find a powerful item, you’re not excited about what it means right now, you’re excited about the implications this discovery will happen once the haunt begins.
The social element of the haunt is also something I’d praise. You go into each game knowing there will be a traitor in your midst, and the anticipation for the reveal adds to the fun. Turning against your former allies carries a sadistic form of pleasure that’s hard to deny.
I was impressed by how much the haunt was willing to change the core mechanics of the game too. Whole new gameplay mechanics can be introduced for the sake of a single haunt, adding to that ‘no two games play the same’ draw. This is a feature that heavily encourages repeat playthroughs, greatly increasing the value prospect of picking up a copy of this game.
While the haunts that we ended up playing didn’t seem like the best the game had to offer, the fact that the strength of the game shone through regardless is a testament to the quality of Betrayal.
As anyone who’s read one of my video game reviews will have picked up by now, I’m a huge fan of rogue-likes. Games with a strong core that encourage repeat playthroughs appeal to me immensely, and Betrayal takes that idea and perfectly transitions it to the medium of board games.
I’m definitely going to keep an eye out for chances in the future to play Betrayal again. The fact that each haunt will play differently depending on who the traitor is means that I can imagine this game staying entertaining for a long time - as long as the playgroup is right of course.
Amir Valor
Nova
Ms. Sybil Cassie
Rusty