/pic3187001.jpg)
/pic3187001.jpg)
Dominion: Second Edition
The game that invented deck-building, cleaned up and still hard to put down.
Designed by Donald X. Vaccarino · 2016
It's the granddaddy of deck-builders and it still earns the table. The Second Edition swaps out the weakest cards, so you're getting the best version of a genuine classic.
Best for: New players who want a fast, brainy card game they can actually finish
What it is
Dominion is the one that started it all, the first deck-building game, and it still holds up. You don't build a deck before you play. You build it as you go, buying cards from a shared market and weaving them into a money-and-action engine that, on a good turn, just hums. Vaccarino's idea was simple and a little genius. Players consistently love how fast it teaches and how endlessly the ten-card Kingdom keeps resetting the puzzle.
The catch
Here's the honest part. Dominion is quiet. You're mostly heads-down optimizing your own deck, and people who want table talk and direct conflict call it multiplayer solitaire, fairly. Your turns also lean on the shuffle, so a clogged hand can sting through no fault of yours. And once you've run the same handful of Kingdom cards a few times, regulars start itching for expansions. The base box is great. It's also clearly a doorway.
Who it's for
So who's this for? Anyone who wants a smart, low-commitment card game they can learn in one sitting and replay forever. The Second Edition is the version to buy, since it quietly retired the dullest original cards for sharper ones. It's gateway-friendly enough for new players and deep enough to keep strategy folks chewing. If you crave players punching each other across the table, look elsewhere. If you want a clean engine to tune, get it.
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.