Caverna: The Cave Farmers

Caverna: The Cave Farmers

by Uwe Rosenberg
Publisher: Z-Man Games
Games
Current Retail Price: $97.00
Not in stock

Please note that this item may not be shipped using USPS Media mail.

Following along the same lines as its predecessor (Agricola),Caverna: The Cave Farmers is a worker-placement game at heart, with a focus on farming. In the game, you are the bearded leader of a small dwarf family that lives in a little cave in the mountains. You begin the game with a farmer and his spouse, and each member of the farming family represents an action that the player can take each turn. Together, you cultivate the forest in front of your cave and dig deeper into the mountain. You furnish the caves as dwellings for your offspring as well as working spaces for small enterprises.

It's up to you how much ore you want to mine. You will need it to forge weapons that allow you to go on expeditions to gain bonus items and actions. While digging through the mountain, you may come across water sources and find ore and ruby mines that help you increase your wealth. Right in front of your cave, you can increase your wealth even further with agriculture: You can cut down the forest to sow fields and fence in pastures to hold your animals. You can also expand your family while running your ever-growing farm. In the end, the player with the most efficiently developed home board wins.

You can also play the solo variant of this game to familiarize yourself with the 48 different furnishing tiles for your cave.

Caverna: The Cave Farmers, which has a playing time of roughly 30 minutes per player, is a complete redesign of Agricola that substitutes the card decks from the former game with a set of buildings while adding the ability to purchase weapons and send your farmers on quests to gain further resources. Designer Uwe Rosenberg says that the game includes parts of Agricola, but also has new ideas, especially the cave part of your game board, where you can build mines and search for rubies. The game also includes two new animals: dogs and donkeys.

Did you find this review helpful?
Customer Reviews
Write a Review Click here to write a review
  Agricola Revamped
Joseph F of Oregon, 9/24/2014
This is a huge an expensive game. If you're looking at this game, you should be looking at Agricola as well. They are both pretty heavy (in-depth and complicated) Euro games that center around farming (which is more fun that it sounds).
In each game, you are managing a "family" trying to build up an estate from nothing. Each turn you send your people out to accomplish tasks trying build your house, plow, harvest and sow crops, fence and accumulate animals, and in this game, mine ore and rubies from your cave.
Agricola and Caverna are very similar in gameplay with some differences:
There are lots of unique cards in Agricola introducing more randomness and unique combinations. It can unbalance the game, but it also makes each play different. Caverna has lots of different rooms you can build into your house instead of unique cards. But there are all available to all the players unlike Agricola. Evens the playing field, but less unique in each play of the game.
Agricola plays up to five (which takes a long time), and Caverna plays up to seven (which I imagine would take forever...). Both play well with two players.
In Caverna you can equip your dwarfs with weapons and send them on light-hearted raiding parties with different rewards depending on your weapon level. Nothing like that in Agricola at all.
In Agricola, players need to have a little of everything (grain, vegetables, sheep,pigs etc.) to do well. In Caverna, you can specialize a little more and not get penalized as harshly for ignoring one or two areas of the game.

Overall, I would recommend playing Agricola before jumping into this game, just because this builds on the success of Agricola (long rated one of the best board games ever by hobby gaming nuts).
This is a huge and heavy box with lots of different components and enough of each to play up to seven players. So its expensive, but really worth what you get in the box.
This is a great, in-depth game that will give you evenings full of enjoyment.