lynx   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Contributed photo: Donica Nash A Kasilof setnet crew on a break plays Serfs and Soldiers  between picks. (Left)   Wesley Tullis Jr., Delissa Severson, Jonathan Hane , and, Shea Nash.

Contributed photo: Donica Nash A Kasilof setnet crew on a break plays Serfs and Soldiers between picks. (Left) Wesley Tullis Jr., Delissa Severson, Jonathan Hane , and, Shea Nash.

Soldotna couple debuts new boardgame “Serfs & Soldiers”

There are three ways to win a new strategy game from Soldotna’s Shea and Donica Nash: hoard all of the gold in the land, build the best fortress around, or invade and conquer your opponent’s land. Each session of Serfs & Soldiers is a mixture of strategy and luck and the gameplay has piqued the interest of gamers from several states.

Now, the couple hopes to get through the last few rounds of playtesting and revising the rule book before launching a crowdfunded campaign to mass-produce the board game.

Both games are resource-based which means players must find and spend resources to progress. In Serfs & Soldiers, that means that players must collect wheat, gold, wood, meat and iron to build new assets and gain control of the land.

Donica, Shea and a cousin Braden Nash have been developing, testing and inviting friends to play the game for about a year.

“We played it by ourselves for awhile and then included friends and family and then started branching out last spring,” Donica Nash said. “Our cousin, who has been helping us with marketing, took it to a board game convention in Idaho. We’re trying to get feeback from the various people who play it and get a perspective of what people want.”

Each player gets his or her own board which is set up like a grid. That grid is lined up with an opposing player’s grid and then the battle begins.

“You’re face to face with people, you’re playing it like chess, you’re combating another person,” Donica Nash said.

The artwork, board and original pieces were all designed and built by Shea and Donica Nash, though there have been a few upgrades since then.

The couple got their cards and boards and game tokens professionally printed before sending out versions of the game to various parts of the country to be tested.

“We have one in Kentucky, one in Washington, one in Oregon and one in Idaho,” Donica Nash said. “It’s pretty cool. We’re getting the feedback of people who are touching our game. We made every little piece by hand. There are people who, we have no idea who they are, but they’re out there playing our game. It’s fun and exciting to see.”

For Shea Nash, the idea for Serfs & Soldiers has been bouncing around in his brain since about 2006. Though, he said, playing Settlers of Catan with his family growing up influenced his idea of what would be a fun game. He preferred the game Risk, which allows players to conquer the world.

“I had a gaming group that would get together and play games every weekend in Washington, where I lived. I crafted this one and it’s basically like a real-time strategy game for the computer, but simplified and made really basic for playing as a board game,” he said.

The game has a medieval feel with serfs doing all of the work and armored soldiers fighting all of the battles. The game player fulfills the role of a lord.

The final game started to come together as he sat on commercial salmon fishing boat in Bristol Bay, Shea Nash said.

“We tried four or five different versions that all failed terribly and then I gave up for awhile,” he said. “I had some downtime and I worked it out and developed the strategy of the game.”

Currently, the gameplay runs at about 45 minutes, though Shea Nash said he’d like to see people play it several times in a row.

“If, at the end of the game they think ‘oh man, I could have won if I would have done this, I want to play again’ that’s the kind of thing that I want,” he said. “I want people to kind of grow with this game and just want to develop a strategy and have fun.”

The couple will be presenting Serfs and Soldiers at the Soldotna library on Saturday and part of that debut will include new, sturdier wooden pieces; a gift from a Soldotna man who played the game and wanted to help.

Aaron Gordon said he knew the family and played the game during the summer when Donica Nash’s sister invited him to try it out.

“The first time we played, I was just learning as we went. So, I was making moves and she would tell me if it was legal. We played it maybe two or three times there on the spot and then I actually borrowed it for the weekend and played it with a couple of other people…I ended up playing it like 10 times in three or four days,” Gordon said.

Gordon said he met Shea Nash for the first time in November and wanted to contribute something to the project.

“I heard that he was making eight more sets to play this weekend … some of the pieces were just made out of clay with a cookie cutter, so sometimes they would fall over and they were not perfectly shaped,” he said. “The rest of the game looks like a professionally made game.”

So, Gordon enlisted the help of a friend who works with wood and the two got nearly 100 wooden pieces made to fit with the eight new game sets.

“Now, (Shea) has two or three days left to get those sanded and painted and ready by Saturday,” Gordon said with a laugh. “I think it’ll look a lot nicer with wooden pieces than clay ones.”

Rashah McChesney can be reached at rashah.mcchesney@peninsulaclarion.com

Contributed photo: Braden Nash  A group playtests the game Serfs and Soldiers.

Contributed photo: Braden Nash A group playtests the game Serfs and Soldiers.

Graphic contributed by: Shea Nash

Graphic contributed by: Shea Nash

More in Life

The Kenai Marching Band performs during the Second Annual Kenai Marching Showcase at Kenai Central High School in Kenai, Alaska. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Kenai Marching Band preps for national contest during weekend showcase

The Kenai band will be traveling to Indianapolis in November to compete at the Bands of America Grand National Championships.

These chicken wings are sweet, mildly spicy, and fragrant with fresh ginger and garlic. (Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion)
Small bites of indulgence

These gochujang-braised chicken wings are best enjoyed as a side dish to seasoned vegetables.

File
Minister’s Message: Seeing the invisible

Jesus is on the lookout for those who walk through life unnoticed.

Harold Pomeroy was the director of Alaska’s Territorial Civil Defense before becoming the first executive of the Kenai Peninsula Borough in 1964. (Photo courtesy of Alaska Digital Archives)
No Simple Matter: Finding the borough a home — Part 2

The decision to locate the borough seat in or near Tustumena was termed by the Cheechako as “perhaps one of the most surprising incidents at the meeting.”

Ceramics by Jenny Nakao are on display through September 2025 at Bunnell Street Arts Center in Homer, Alaska. Photo provided by Bunnell Street Arts Center
1st Friday of fall

Fall is in the air and new art is on display in Homer’s galleries.

Volunteers at Glacier Spit Cleanup in September 2022. Photo provided by Center for Alaska Coastal Studies
CoastWalk 2025 kicks off this September in Homer

CACS’s annual marine debris cleanup and data collection event will start Sept. 6.

A photo from July of the backstage at Pier One Theatre. (Chloe Pleznac/Homer News)
Out of the office and on the stage

Ruminations on a return to Homer community theater.

Artists in the Homer Independent Living Center's Artability program are photographed with their artwork on display at the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge during the 2025 Shorebird Festival in Homer, Alaska. Photo provided by the Independent Living Center
Inclusivity in art

The Homer Public Library showcases work by local high school students and ‘Artability’ group members.

File
Minister’s Message: The Lord’s spiritual treasures are available to us all

The Bible says the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hid in Christ.

This 1955 aerial shows a portion of Joe and Mickey Faa’s homestead, including the Quonset hut that was on the property before it was acquired by Howard and Maxine Lee in 1948. The fields and other cleared land now house much of Soldotna’s growing medical establishment. (Photo courtesy of Al Hershberger)
No Simple Matter: Finding the borough a home — Part 1

Binkley Street was just a gravel-covered Soldotna back road in November 1969.

A piece of the poster for the 2025 Sacred Acre festival in Ninilchik, Alaska. This year's festival will take place Sept. 5-7.
Alaska EDM festival ‘Sacred Acre’ returns for 4th year

Started in 2022, the annual autumnal festival will be Sept. 5-7.

Лучший частный хостинг