• Roll through the Ages: The Iron Age (with Mediterranean XP)

Game Details Players: 1 to 4 Age: 10 and up Time: 40-60 minutes
Publisher: Eagle Games Designer(s): Thomas Lehmann


Roll through the Ages: The Iron Age (with Mediterranean XP)

Ref: ROLLAGESIR
MYR299.00 MYR269.00

Roll Through the Ages: The Iron, a sequel to the highly-awarded Roll Through the Ages: The Bronze Age, lets you build an Iron Age civilization in under an hour! Do you build provinces, raise armies, and conquer barbarians or build ports and ships to gain trade goods? Explore the strategies of Greece, Phoenicia, and Rome as you erect monuments, fend off disasters, and strive to feed your people.

Grab those dice including the Fate die and prepare to build the greatest empire as you continue to Roll through the Ages! This bundle includes the limited Mediterranean Expansion (which is released as part of the Kickstarter campaign).


Weight (kg): 2.0 Sleeve size: n/a
BGC Marks Earned+269 (what is this?)
Incl Mediterranean XP
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Roll Through the Ages: The Iron, a sequel to the highly-awarded Roll Through the Ages: The Bronze Age, lets you build an Iron Age civilization in under an hour! Do you build provinces, raise armies, and conquer barbarians or build ports and ships to gain trade goods? Explore the strategies of Greece, Phoenicia, and Rome as you erect monuments, fend off disasters, and strive to feed your people.

Roll Through the Ages: the Iron Age gives players different ways to build their empires: the Trade and Naval strategies of the Phoenicians, the conquests of Alexander the Great, and the engineering prowess and gradual absorption of new provinces by the Roman Republic.

Grab those dice including the Fate die and prepare to build the greatest empire as you continue to Roll through the Ages! This bundle includes the limited Mediterranean Expansion (which is released as part of the Kickstarter campaign).

The Mediterranean expansion adds overseas settlements to the mix via a central pegboard that all players share. Players race to reap the benefits of strategic colonies: Crete for fleets; Spain for mining; Carthage for wheat; Gaul for armies; while Syracuse, the home of Archimedes, and Alexandria provide vital innovations.