Inferno (board game)
Inferno is a combat board game that was published by Global Games Company in 1996.
Description
[edit]Inferno is a miniatures-based game for 2-5 players that is set in Dante Alighieri's Inferno.[1] Each player chooses an Archfiend and arms it with spells and weapons, and also chooses and arms several lieutenants.[2] After each player has created their group of demons, they battle each other for control of the Abyss. Once a group has been defeated, that player is eliminated from the game. The last player to survive is the winner.
Components
[edit]The game comes with
- two hex grid maps
- four cardstock sheets of cutouts that include counters, chits, and circles
- a 64-page book of Fiendish history titled "The Tome of the Abyss"
- a rulebook
- two six-sided dice
- The first issue ("Issue 0") of H.A.V.O.C. Magazine[2]
Publication history
[edit]Canadian games company Global Games had previously published the board game Legions of Steel (1992), for which they also marketed associated lines of 25 mm miniatures.[3] In similar fashion, Global published Inferno in 1996, a board game designed by Marco Pecota that also came with cardboard counters, but for which Global produced extensive lines of metal miniatures.[4] A German-language version of the game was marketed in Germany by FanPro.[4] Although the first issue of H.A.V.O.C. Magazine was included with the game, no further issues were ever published.
The following year, Global Games released an associated role-playing game, Abyss, that could also use the same lines of metal miniatures.[4]
After Global Games went out of business, the European rights to Global's lines of miniatures were acquired by British miniatures manufacturer Amazon Miniatures.[4]
Reception
[edit]In the October 1997 edition of Dragon (#240), Rick Swan thought the game was "elaborate", the components were "attractive", and concluded "The game itself is as involving — and demanding — as a military simulation."[2]
Other reviews
[edit]- Backstab (Issue 1 - Jan/Feb 1997)[5]
- Casus Belli #102[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Inferno". BoardGameGeek.
- ^ a b c Swan, Rick (October 1992). "Roleplaying Reviews". Dragon. No. 240. TSR, Inc. p. 114.
- ^ "Legions of Steel". Miniatures Workshop. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ a b c d "Inferno". Miniatures Workshop. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
- ^ "Backstab Magazine (French) Issue 01".
- ^ "Casus Belli #102". 1997.