The tabletop fantasy roleplaying game appeared in the popular TV show, Stranger Things. Credit: Netflix

This has been the year of the boardgame. First came lockdown, then a long summer during which most of us are remaining in the UK. Both experiences demanding of something to do to fill those long, empty hours when staring at a screen becomes too much. Time to roll some dice and shuffle some cardboard.
When most people think of games played around a table, they probably think of the staples of childhood: Scrabble, Ludo, Monopoly. Those, according to a scrape of Google data done by a sharp-eyed PR firm, are among the world’s top searches for boardgames online.
Now, don’t get me wrong, I love Monopoly as much as the next student of rentier capitalism, and its lessons are quite relevant to the era of permanent quantitative easing, asset-price inflation and a political class that refuses to address the resultant undercurrent of injustice and anger.
The others are fun too; Ludo, in particular, is delightfully spiteful: the German incarnation — mensch ärgere dich nicht (“Don’t get angry”) is a rather more useful name than the English. Scrabble is OK, but tends to encourage trade in the false coin of sesquipedalianism. Longer words aren’t a sign of cleverness, just proof that you don’t know how to communicate clearly. Short words are good. And can score higher.
Overall though, I’m afraid I can’t get excited about games where the dice have just six sides and you can actually see what’s happening on the table in front of you. Boardgames are OK, but they are not the game.
For the benefit of civilians, the game is Dungeons and Dragons, and it taught me everything I know about politics, government and journalism. Well, maybe not quite everything, but quite a lot. Enough to sustain a 20-year career in and around Westminster, anyway.
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