The Search for Lost Species Finds a Solid Deduction-Based Board Game

The Search for Planet X was my #1 game of 2020, and stands as one of the best deduction games I’ve ever played. Players gather clues to try to find the missing tenth ninth planet, but with points available for finding other objects on the celestial map, so it’s more than just a race to get a single answer. It’s remained a huge hit, both because it’s very well designed (with high replayability) and because that’s a genre without a lot of great games in it.
The sequel, The Search for Lost Species, ups the ante with a harder challenge on an actual map, bonus cards, and some rules tweaks, producing a game that runs longer and at least taxed my brain more than the first one ever did. That could go either way for you, depending on what you want in a game and if you’ve played the original.
The Search for Lost Species is based on some actual science history, as the first game was; in this case, you play as scientists looking for a lost species on an island in one of the archipelagos in southeast Asia where many “lost” species have been found in the last few decades. You search for one specific species, which will be in one hex of the 16 on the island map. Five hexes are empty, while the others each contain one animal type of the other four. You get the most points, by far, for finding the lost species first, but you can also gain points by correctly identifying which species is in any of the other hexes on the board. Every game is different—you use an app that gives you a unique four-character code for that specific setup and solution.
You gather clues by moving through a number of hexes, tapping those hexes within the app, and then selecting one animal type to search for in that region. The app then tells you how many hexes in your chosen set contain that animal, an answer that could be zero, and that doesn’t tell you where the animals are—you need to deduce that from other clues or later searches. You can also move to a town to ask for one of that specific game’s six research clues. You can also use your camera token to get a specific answer to what’s in one hex, although if that hex contains the lost species, the camera won’t show anything (if it was that easy to catch, it wouldn’t be lost). All of the information comes through the game’s very slick, easy to use app, which works best if all players have it on a device but can be used on a device that’s shared among several or all players. You choose your action, enter the required information, and get the clue. The app saves your move history, so you can go back and find information you may have forgotten or double-check something you noted earlier.