/pic6530423.jpg)
/pic6530423.jpg)
Arkham Horror: The Card Game (Revised Core Set)
A Lovecraftian campaign where your detective levels up and the world keeps trying to break you.
Designed by Nate French and MJ Newman · 2021
It's one of the best narrative card games ever made, and also a door into a wallet-emptying hobby. Go in knowing both things are true.
Best for: Solo and two-player narrative fans who want a campaign with real character progression.
What it is
Here's the pitch. You build a small deck for one 1920s investigator, then walk them through a three-part Lovecraft campaign that remembers your choices. Every turn you're spending precious actions to investigate locations, fight horrors, and stay sane while two timers, the Act and Agenda decks, pull the story in opposite directions. Win or lose, the plot moves on. Designers Nate French and MJ Newman built a card game that behaves like a tiny role-playing campaign, and that's the hook.
The catch
Now the honest part. This revised box holds exactly three scenarios, and players agree the base set alone runs dry quick. Standard difficulty can feel punishing, easy mode goes limp, and the encounter deck loves a cruel spike. Reviewers flag multiplayer hard: at three or four people you flip four encounter cards a turn, and the randomness gets genuinely rough. The deckbuilding here is friendly but thin until you start buying expansions. That's the real cost.
Who it's for
So who's this for. If you play solo or as a pair and you want a story that sticks to you, a detective who actually levels up, and a campaign you can lose and still enjoy, this is close to the best in its lane. Just know the box is a starter, not the whole meal, and the expansion shelf is long and pricey. Go in clear-eyed and it'll happily eat your year.
What other players say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and player discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
More from the shelf
All reviews/pic4458123.jpg)
/pic4458123.jpg)
Wingspan
A calm little game about birds that tables get weirdly competitive over.
/pic6973671.png)
/pic6973671.png)
Azul
Lovely tiles, simple rules, and a surprising amount of quiet cruelty.
/pic9156909.png)
/pic9156909.png)
Catan
The one that started a thousand game nights, and one or two genuine arguments.