Play (and Fish) Alone with the Single-Player Board Game Conservas

Solo-only games are still something of a rarity in the board game world. Many games come with a solo ‘mode’ or variant, often with separate components to allow you to simulate some kind of opponent, but truly solitaire games just aren’t very common. I don’t see any good reason for this: If you might play a video game by yourself, why not play some kind of board game the same way? It’s probably better for your eyes, at the least.
Conservas is a new solitaire game from designer Scott Almes, best known for the Tiny Epic series of games. It borrows a bit from what I think is the best purely solitaire board game—Coffee Roasters—but applies that to a mechanic that asks you to figure out how long to wait before pulling the metaphorical trigger. It’s appropriately difficult, and the kind of game that will make you want to try again when you fail.
In Conservas, you’re fishing for different species to sell to canning companies to create the Iberian delicacies known by that name, and you start small, with one boat and just a little cash. You then load up the game’s cloth bag with tokens representing anywhere from two to four species along with some water tokens, drawing from the bag to represent your fishing haul on each turn. You’ll decide how many fish to keep and how many to throw back so that you don’t deplete the seas, selling most of your catch for cash, using some fish to buy upgrades, and using cash to add boats to your fleet.
The game comes with a book of 12 ‘months,’ each of which poses a new challenge, with a unique starting arrangement of cash for you and tokens in the bag, and then a different marketplace grid where you’ll place the fish you catch. January is pretty straightforward, with just two species, a simple grid that lets you sell one, two, or three fish at a time, and requirements that after seven rounds you have $40 on hand and at least four tokens of each species still in the bag. After that, it gets more complicated, as you’ll add species, be required to have a certain number of upgrades or boats, and will have to keep the sea well-stocked with all of the species you’re fishing.