Adventure board game
An adventure board game is a board game in which a player plays as a unique individual character that improves through gameplay. This improvement is commonly reflected in terms of increasing character attributes, but also in receiving new abilities or equipment.
History
1970s
Adventure board games often integrate various role-playing game mechanics, such as experience points and character creation into the board game format. The origins of these two types of game are related. In the early 1970s, Dave Arneson introduced his role-playing game, Blackmoor, to a group of players. One of those players, Gary Gygax, collaborated with Arneson to create Dungeons & Dragons. Another member of that gaming group, Dave Megarry, translated the experience into the board game, Dungeon!, the first adventure board game. In fact, the term "adventure gaming" in the 1970s referred to what later became known as tabletop role-playing games, and only later became associated with board games.1980s
The genre saw a particular boom in the 1980s, when its key subgenres had been codified by three major releases of the decade:- Competitive fantasy adventure games, codified by Dungeon! and particularly Games Workshop's Talisman,
- Cooperative investigative adventure games, pioneered by Chaosium's Arkham Horror, and
- Cooperative fantasy adventure games, a combination of the other two directions, first produced in GW and Milton Bradley Company's HeroQuest.