Boardgame Cafes are becoming more and more common. Do you have any close by? Have you been there? How did it go?
We live in Madrid, Spain and have one boardgame cafe in the city center. Its called Replay
We have gone a couple of times, usually just because we were in the area and jumped in to play something quick. The collection of games is pretty massive. Many casuals but lots of deeper games too. There is also an outlet section to buy games at a discount. The food is OK, nothing special but fine for a session.
Since its downtown, we do not go that often. Wednesdays they even organize an english-speaking evening which is handy if you want to meet a more international crowd.
My post earlier about the “Evolution of Boardgames” is painted on the wall of this cafe.
deleted by creator
There’s a few in my city. Both cafes and bars. They’re packed all the time. I personally can’t get into them but I’m glad people are enjoying them.
There’s a bar and grill with board games near me. Never been. Honestly didn’t know about the place until your post. Thanks for the date idea. ;)
awesome! Feel free to update us on how it was. Maybe another Lemming is from the same area and would love to check it!
https://www.thecornerferndale.com/
That’s it there.
damn! That collection looks impressive!
Unfortunately not. Until just now I wasn’t aware of any in my country but it turns out there are in some now but the closest is 1.5h away.
shoot, 1.5h is maybe a bit steep for a quick game. Maybe in the future there is something closer. Unless of course you are out in the sticks :)
Fortunately I have a very loyal gaming group and the local toy library does regular game nichts as well. So I’m well covered what gaming is concerned. Just not with boardgaming cafes.
Vancouver has a boardgame pizzeria out of all things: https://www.ludica.ca/
You’d think that handling pizza slices and handling boardgame components at the same time would be a recipe for disaster but it works pretty well somehow. They have a good collection of games and the pizzas are great too.
Sounds like an awesome combo!
The city I used to live in had a couple, one was more focused on trading card games and running tournaments and just had a smallish board game collection, but the other was a proper cozy little cafe with walls full of great games. Sadly the latter one has had to shut down because of increasing rents.
My current town is a bit too small for something dedicated like that, but we do have a sort of hybrid place that hires out console time as well as has a small collection of board games for the cafe area. Since it’s a small town and not exactly moving with the times, a lot of the games are your basic family classics but I appreciate them trying. I’m sceptical that the place will last long though, most new businesses round here don’t.
Generally I do really like these places but our local one now isn’t the friendliest. And anywhere with a big focus on trading card games like the one in our previous city does, as much as I wish it wasn’t true, tend to attract a crowd with less than amazing hygiene. Plus they often seem more hostile to women than dedicated actual board game spaces, in my experience. It’s hard to attract a wider customer base when your core clientele are actively putting people off.
deleted by creator
sounds cool! We have some boardgame shops that have some get-togethers once every weekend. These are nice but most that we have gone to have a very limited selection of games.
deleted by creator
We have a board game bar near us, there’s one my friend group has gone to and there’s elements that are fun and also not great. Most of my issues are this bar specific and not a issue with the concept in general, but they’re things to watch out for I suppose:
The Good:
- They have lots of games, an entire wall devoted to them. Many games you’ve probably never seen or played
- They oftentimes have a ‘board game somalia’ who knows most the games that are hanging up, and it’s really good at helping you pick out a game, and teaching you the rules. This is obviously better for games that are simple and quick
- There are sealed games you can buy and take home with you, ofy you looked one of the games
- They well have events with game companies and other companies to promote different things. We went one night when a board game marker was feeling their new game, looking for opinions and feedback, which was cool to do. Another was actually sponsored by bobs burgers, which just was fun
- There menu is pretty straightforward and simple, which makes it so you’re not spending too much time wasting on that
- It’s pretty casual atmosphere, where you really don’t feel like the waiters and waitresses are trying to boot you to get your table for the next group
The bad:
- A bar is a terrible place to try to play games generally. While luckily everyone is in the mentality of playing games, so people aren’t trying to dance or whatever that could disrupt your games, it’s just loud. We first went there to play DND, and if you have a group of 5+ and are at a bigger table, it’s impossible to hear each other. It gets annoying real fast trying to explain rules, talk to other players, or just ask someone to move your piece, when it’s so loud
- The service is terrible. While I realize that that’s lately location specific, I find there are some elements that are probably inherited from the idea of a Boardgame bar. We would see our waitress maybe once every hour, leaving you oftentimes wanting just a glass of water especially when playing games where you talk a lot, and they were no where to be found. I feel like this is in part that oftentimes tables would be there for 4 hours, and after getting initial food and drinks, they would only order some alcoholic drinks, maybe 1-2 per hour per table, after they got their initial food. As someone who talks a lot and doesn’t drink, I need a lot of water. Getting a ‘fancy glass’ of water, meaning a nice looking glass that’s only half the volume of what other restaurants would use, every 2 hours, is really annoying. There’s is a bar, but the bar really comes off as only serving people who are sitting at the bar, or ordered a fancy mixed drink. When I’ve gone up to them to get water or a soda, it’ll be like 4 min of waiting.
- Board games, food, drinks, and tables they use at bars don’t really mix. You have to eliminate one. I think almost every time I’ve gone I’ve seen a table break some glassware just because someone bumped something on the table. This does go back largely to the issue of the waitresses, where you have a bunch of dishes on your table, where it’ll be 2 hours before it gets bussed. Maybe we should be more bold and just hunt down a server, and ask them to bus the table, but that seems really rude to me and way more bold than I’m willing to be. So you end up with dirty dishes you’re maneuvering around. I honestly wish there was like a place we could move the plates to ourselves when we’re done so we don’t need to ask for the server to remove dirty dishes when we just want the space for gaming
- The place also does axe throwing, which in of itself is cool, but I could see how it for be distracting for some. Again pretty bar specific, but still something to think about if a place offers multiple things.
What it comes down to is in my opinion, they’re a really fun concept, that if they’re run like a traditional restaurant, are gonna have potential for some serious issues. Bad or busy service is normally okish when you’re just going out to eat and plan to leave in an hour. When is been 4 hours of you playing a game, regardless of how understanding you are, the bad service starts to really bug you. We went to another bar once where someone rented out a section to demo their game that were working on, and had similar issues. There seems to be an element of 'they aren’t ordering anything that will get us money, so we’ll just check on them very very infrequently '.
I’ve been to one coffee cafe that wasn’t exactly a board game cafe, but they had tables that were really good for board games that you could reserve. That was not too bad because they just had the coffee counter you could walk up to and get food and drinks, they had a soda dispenser for refills, they had trash cans and places to put dishes so you could keep your table clear. The music also was much more like a coffee shop, so you didn’t find yourself trying to talk over everything. This was a much much better experience.
I’ve once been to a board game store in another state that had a HUGE gaming area and a ton of open games you could sit and play. They sold some really basic food, lots of candies and chips and soda and energy drinks, and a few microwavable things. But the atmosphere was great because everyone there seemed to want to game and seemed much more open to pulling in strangers to play there games. Much more like a GenCon vibe. This was in another state though, and at the time there was a lot of COVID restrictions. Would have loved to go back and see what it’s like now
So I guess the biggest thing Id say is look at how they handle their foods and drinks. While it would be nice if you didn’t have to get up from the table all the time, it just doesn’t seem to work that way, at least not in every case. Id much rather just have a place I can walk up to and grab what I need, rather than wait for someone to come to you
They are decently often in Greece, either as boardgame cafés, or (more often) cafés with boardgames. On the latter it’s rare to have someone to suggest a game or explain the rules so you have to read them yourself. Used to go very often while a student
Sounds cool. What kinds of board games are played there? Classic card games, modern strategic Euro games, party games or any of those?
If you mean in boardgame cafés, they have pretty much everything. In cafés with board games, it is mostly faster card games, some games like Jungle speed or 7 wonders and similar, maybe Catan as well
If you mean in Greece in general, all of those that you mentioned I would say. It depends on the group
Thanks for elaborating. I’m just generally curious what is being played in other countries. As a German, I always played lots of board games and I for myself prefer complex Euro games.
It’s interesting that you distinguish between those café types since here in Germany, there is no such distinction. I only know boardgame cafés.
It’s very usual for many cafés to have a couple of board games, especially if they are near a University
I would say there is that distinction here too, depending on your city. In Hamburg we have at least one of each kind.
Ok, it might be the case that I just didn’t realize they exist where I live. In Hamburg, I just know the boardgame café Würfel & Zucker.
My wife and I’s first date was at a boardgame cafe. We haven’t had a chance to check out any of the cafes in our new city yet, though.
sounds like a new date is in order!
We have two near us and both are a great time! My wife is more into board games than I am but the food is delicious usually and their selection has both old favourites alongside new board games to try for the first time as well! It’s a really great outing idea whether for a date, a social get together with friends, etc. Highly recommend going if one’s close by!
for sure! Nice of you to support your wifes passion! And as a bonus you get some good food :)
Unfortunately no. I’d love if there was a place where I could try a game before buying it but unfortunately the local scene is really scarce where I exist.
I do have some LGS 20-30 mins away (by car) but with a 30 euro markup I don’t see the point of even going.
https://ragnaroek.cafe opened in my city (Kiel, Germany) last year. Been playing Magic over there a lot and a few of their games. Great experience so far and they have a great palette of games.
Their website is cool :) how is the food?
Pretty good and lots of vegan options (relevant for me). I especially like the milkshakes
nice, very progressive! So its Almondmilkshakes?
I think they have different kinds of plant milk, but I always get oatmilk
There’re plenty of boardgame cafes, and plain straight out boardgame playing spaces here in Singapore. I’ve been to quite a few, the latter I much prefer because the staff/owner are invested in the games, are long-time gamers themselves, and are very good at recommending and introducing games. Being able to concisely introduce rules and mechanics and have a group of people understand them is not as easy as it looks!
One just opened not too far, planning to check it out soon.