By Megan Shersby

Published: Wednesday, 29 June 2022 at 12:00 am


Review: Wingspan board game

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Published in 2019 by Stonemaier Games (who have also published Scythe, Viticulture and Tapestry), Wingspan has been quite the phenomenon – and in two ways. It’s popular with birdwatchers (let’s be honest, we love anything even vaguely bird-themed) and it’s introduced them to the world of board games (beyond the typical ones we all grow up with: Monopoly, Scrabble, Cluedo, etc). I’m one of these converts, having spent years watching birds and other wildlife and discovering board games thanks to Wingspan.

However, it’s also been well-received by avid board game players too, and introduced them to the wonders of nature and birdwatching. A win-win-win-win situation!

It was designed by Elizabeth Hargrave (designer of Tussie Mussie and Mariposas) who was introduced to some of the great board games, such as Settlers of Catan and Ticket to Ride, during a holiday in winter 2015. Upon returning home, she continued playing games but found the themes quite repetitive and wondered about designing a game around something she loved: birds.

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The timing of the game’s publication in 2019 and initial surge of popularity was perfect for the incoming pandemic – as we all spent more time at home, and reconnecting with nature. Whilst I was separated from my partner during the initial lockdown, we played it online against each other, and when we were able to see each other again when restrictions lifted enough, we played it every day (sometimes twice a day).

As I’ve become more interested in board games (and not been stuck inside due to lockdowns), I’ve played it less and less, but it’s still a firm favourite and my one of my go-to games (without the expansions) for introducing birders and nature lovers to board gaming.

How to play Wingspan:

The premise of the game is to attract birds to your nature reserve, where they can live in one of three habitats: forest, grassland or wetland (with the exception of some migratory birds which can moved between habitats).

Each of the 170 birds is assigned a power (with the exception of some high-scoring birds) which can be activated either upon playing the bird, when taking an action in the habitat that bird is living in, or once between turns.

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For each of your turns, you have the choice of just four actions: play a card, gain food from the birdfeeder (a very cute dice tower), lay eggs or draw more bird cards. Whilst that sounds simple, you’ve got to plan ahead to work out your strategy and the best way to gain as many points as possible.

There are a wide variety of ways to gain points including playing birds, laying eggs, tucking other bird cards (either as a predator catching prey, or by creating flocks), end-of-round goals, and bonus cards. With so many different factors to take into account (including some luck) and potential strategies to focus on, it’s a very easy game to play again and again without getting bored.

It’s a Wingspan kind of evening pic.twitter.com/llOIs8JMq6

— Megan Shersby (@MeganShersby) October 31, 2021
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Anyone familiar with Sam Lee as a leading folklorist and singer will be aware of his love affair with another timeless tunesmith – the nightingale. This is a celebration of the nightingale, illustrated throughout with an eclectic mix of art.

It starts at a personal and practical level before weaving off into the past, as Sam explores our relationship with this bird in literature, song, story and art. The sources are as far reaching as the bird itself, and range through our cultural history to the present day, where the nightingale is seen as a modern symbol of wild recovery, hope and ecological rebellion.

Reviewed by Nick Baker, naturalist, author and presenter.

Listen to singer Sam Lee and violinist Anna Phoebe accompanying nightingales at midnight in the Countryfile Magazine Plodcast.

Summer visitors t-shirt

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Show off your love for birds with this t-shirt from the RSPB’s Teemill store, which depicts six of our summer avian visitors: swallows, swifts, house martins, nightingales, cuckoos and turtle doves, and is made from super soft organic cotton.

Both women’s and men’s t-shirts are available. The former comes in three colours (pink, grey and white) and is available in sizes 8-18. The latter comes in three colours (sand, blue and white) and available in sizes XS-XXL.