We’re Bearish on the Tile-Placing Boardgame Bärenpark

Bärenpark is a lightweight tile-placement game along the lines of Patchwork, both of which take the basic concept of Tetris—take a tile, possibly with a weird shape, and place it on your board, with the goal of filling all the open spaces—and turn it into a multiplayer game. Patchwork is strictly a two-player game and limits your tile choices to the next three tiles available in the central market, while Bärenpark plays up to four (it’s best with four players, really) and gives you a broader choice of tiles without penalizing you for spaces you don’t fill at the end of the game. As a light family game, it works very well, but there’s a hiccup in the rules that would allow someone to get cutthroat and make it a lot less fun or fair for younger players.
Players in Bärenpark start with one 4×4 park board apiece and take tiles from the central supply to try to fill out that board. Some spaces on the park boards are marked with icons that, once covered, give the player the right to take tiles of specific types from that supply. Greenspace tiles are just fillers, occupying one, two or three squares on park boards without awarding any points. Houses for the four bear types (pandas, polar bears koalas, and gobis) in the game range from 7 points down to 1, with the tiles atop each stack worth more; each house type has a unique shape. Enclosures are unique, worth 6 to 8 points each, and are larger with more irregular shapes, so they’re harder to place—and harder to obtain. Each park board also has a construction crew icon, which allows you to take another park board from the supply to expand your personal park, adding up to three new boards; the added boards have excavator icons, which you need to cover to take an enclosure tile. Placing a large tile may cover two or three icons and allow you to take multiple tiles at once. On a turn, you must place a tile if you can; if you don’t have any tiles, you take one greenspace tile as your entire turn.
The biggest bonuses come when you fill 15 of the 16 spaces on any one park board, with the final space, called a pit, reserved for the bear statue you’ll take as a reward for filling your board. In the four-player game, there are 16 bear statues, with point values from 16 down to 1. Any player who finishes a board takes the highest-valued statue still on the table, so there’s a benefit to finishing early—but you may choose to wait to fill a board so that you can cover certain icons and gain higher-valued enclosures or houses instead.