Well, it could be wargaming, But as far as I know, are not most wargames set in semi-modern wars? as in Napoleon and Beyond? How many "Mace and Axe" Wargames are there?
I went with AT because the weapons are crossed, signifying direct confrontation, and because Fantasy as a theme shows up fairly often in AT games. Larping because of Boffer weapons. On Dec 13, 10:29 pm, Shatner <[email protected]> wrote: > I thought the Mace and Axe were wargaming? > > On Dec 13, 11:25 pm, Timothy <[email protected]> wrote: > > > That's a Lion Rampant. > > > On Dec 10, 9:54 pm, Arcana <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Feel free to correct me or add your own interpretations. > > > > From Bottom Left, to Right > > > > 1) The Heraldry symbol... Not really sure what this one is. Ren Fest? > > > Anachronists? > > > > 2) Poker Cards - Pretty obvious, Poker and other traditional card > > > games. > > > > 3) the d20 - Roleplaying games, Specifically a tip of the hat to D&D > > > > 4) A Meeple - Also obvious, Eurogaming, Specifically a tip of the hat > > > to Carcassone (But I dont know a ton about Euros, did an earlier game > > > use the Meep?) > > > > 5) A Pawn sitting on a Pentagram (or star) - Not really sure, Sort of > > > reminds me of "Sorry" ... Could this really be for Traditional > > > Mainstream American Hobby Games? Or is it for Historical Boardgames > > > like Goose? > > > > 6) The Crossed Mace and Axe - Either for LARP or AT, or... well you > > > tell me? > > > > 7) Stones on a Grid Board - I'd like to say Go, but the stones have a > > > hole in the center, and they are all the same color too. Anyone? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "BGG Down" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/bgg_down?hl=en.
