The Great Board Game Nidavellir Lets You Build a Workforce of Dwarves

Nidavellir made my ranking of the best board games of 2021, coming in at #3 for its clever bidding mechanic and quick gameplay. It offers a great mix of fun and strategy, just about perfect for a midweight game, with a high degree of player interaction as you compete with other players to ‘recruit’ cards of rough-and-ready dwarves from three taverns for your own armies.
Nidavellir is a set collection game at heart. In each of six or eight rounds, depending on the player count, you’ll get to bid on three rows of cards, and will end up with one card from each row as the bidding is resolved. That means you’ll end the game with 18 or 24 base cards from the bidding, plus some bonus cards you can earn along the way. Those cards, which depict different dwarves, come in five different colors, each of which scores differently and can earn you bonuses at midgame as well.
The bidding mechanic is by far the standout element of Nidavellir. Every player starts with the same five coins, worth 0, 2, 3, 4, and 5. The four coins with positive values work as you’d expect—players pick one coin to bid on each of the three rows (“taverns”), and players then choose cards from each tavern, going from the highest bid to the lowest. Ties are resolved by crystals that are passed around when used, so if you win a tie in this round, you won’t win the tie in the next round. You can bid the 0 coin on one of the three taverns, and if you do, you take a new coin worth the sum of the two coins you didn’t use in that round, returning the higher of the two back to the supply. The available coins go up to a value of 25, and they are limited—if the coin representing your sum isn’t available, you get to take the next higher one. Thus it’s often to your advantage not to bid your highest coins, because you’d rather have more powerful coins for the rest of the game.