Shadows Over Camelot First Impressions

Shadows Over Camelot is a co-op game with a King Arthur setting with a traitor mechanic?

What’s not to like?

In Shadows Over Camelot, each player represents a knight of the Round Table and they must collaborate to overcome a number of quests – ranging from defeating the Black Knight to the search for the Holy Grail. Completed Quests place white swords on the Round Table; failed Quests add black swords and/or siege engines around Camelot. The knights are trying to build a majority of white swords on the Table before Camelot falls.

So this game is essentially a card game played on a board. You’re trying to ‘win’ mini-games vs the game-controlled opponent. A win gives you a number of White Swords on the Round Table, a loss Black. Majority wins.

Swords on the Round Table - Shadows over Camelot

But, you’re each given an allegiance card and 1 player may be a traitor trying to win on his own. There is only 1 traitor card and only 1 more card than players so while there may not be a traitor, odds are there will be.

For tips on spotting a traitor, check out my social deduction games video!

Turns

Turns work like this. You have 1 of 3 “Progression of Evil” options to start your turn…

– Lose a life point

– Draw a Black (Bad) card and perform the action. It usually involves advancing one of the mini-games in the bad guy’s favour but some can be really harsh.

– Add a Siege Engine. You can reduce the number of Siege Engines but if the Siege Engine track fills up you lose. (you also lose if all non-traitor people die)

Siege Engines - Shadows over Camelot

Actions

Each player also has a character card in Shadows Over Camelot. One could play action cards for free, another drew an extra White Card when drawing cards, a third could trade one card and I could move away from the Round Table for free. They don’t sound like much… BUT!

1 – You only get one action per turn so playing a card for free is great. Also, being able to move from the Round Table to an area THEN take an action is great.

2 – You have to go to the roundtable to draw cards for your action, you draw 2. Cards in hand are always a good thing so drawing an extra one is pretty cool.

3 – Having a card traded to you means you can take an action on your next turn, which is a great time saver.

Character Card - Shadows over Camelot

So with your one action, you do whatever you can do in the area you are in or move. As I said if you’re at the Roundtable you can 2 draw White cards. These cards have abilities or are number cards used to win mini-games.

So what are these mini-games? They differ in a few ways…

Mini-Games

The Saxon and Pict game needs you to add runs of cards (1-5) to an area one action at a time before the bad Black cards fill up the bad guys’ area with Saxon/Pict miniatures.

Excalibur needs you to discard a card to move a Lad of the Lake mini on the track one way, the Black cards move it the other way.

You can fight and try to remove Siege Engines which requires a die roll.

Other tracks need you to lay pairs and 3 of a kind of cards down vs another track of Black cards that are being placed in that area. When one track is full, the higher value wins. The Black cards can be played face down to allow you to draw a card, masking the running total of the Black cards and letting the Traitor bluff.

The Grail is a fight back and forth between the good White Grail cards and bad Black grail cards…

Grail Track - Shadows Over Camelot

Shadows Over Camelot Summary

It really is a good game. I’m hoping I get to be the traitor at some point in the future but I’ll be happy to try and win as the good guys. The traitor won in our game.

Jesta ThaRogue

Summary
Shadows Over Camelot First Impressions
Article Name
Shadows Over Camelot First Impressions
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Shadows Over Camelot First Impressions
Jesta ThaRogue
JestaThaRogue
JestaThaRogue
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