Gen Con Brings Boardgamers Together
Photos from Gen Con's Facebook page
I’ve been playing the kind of boardgames called Eurogames or German-style games or just “better than Monopoly, which sucks” for almost ten years now, but it’s almost entirely been a local experience for me—playing with family and friends and occasionally with readers of my work for my day job covering baseball. I’d been to two Toyfairs, industry events aimed at buyers and media, but had never attended an event aimed solely at the gamers themselves. I remedied that last week by heading to Indianapolis for the first two days of Gen Con, playing way more games than I expected—with, gasp, total strangers!—and even enjoying myself, while also still meeting with over thirty publishers and accomplishing something resembling “work.”
Even going to an event like this, with over 60,000 people expected to attend over the four days, is kind of a big deal for me. I have anxiety disorder, and have >written about it several times, so going to a heavily attended event I’ve never been to before could have been a pretty big trigger in and of itself. Getting disoriented has, for me, the unfortunate status of being a trigger of anxiety and a result of it, and the Indiana Convention Center … well, it’s a pretty easy place to get spun around.
I was saved, in a manner of speaking, by how busy I found myself once the doors opened and by how unbelievably friendly the environment was. When you’ve got 60,000 people all in one place because they love the same thing, the atmosphere is going to be welcoming no matter how anxious or shy you might be. (I did have one encounter that served as an exception; in the Rio Grande open gaming room, I went to ask an RG executive about a rules question, and when I introduced myself as a member of the press, he responded, “I can’t help you with review copies,” before I had a chance to even get my question out—and it wasn’t about review copies.) With so many game designers on the floor to talk about their games, I got just as caught up in the excitement of the event as anyone there just to play and buy games.
I’ve been aware for a while that tabletop boardgaming was trending upward and drifting towards the mainstream; we saw it spoofed on Parks and Recreation with Cones of Dunshire and with Ben playing Settlers of Catan during his bachelor party, and you can walk into Target and find a dozen Eurogame titles there, with a couple of new games released exclusively to Target just this summer in a new Codenames expansion and the kids’ version of Ticket to Ride. But seeing this many people in one spot, and the heavy sales of titles here that ran over $50 (some over $100), further validated that this space is exploding commercially in a way that will keep the new titles and creativity coming.