Nuns on the Run (Second Edition) Game Review
Hidden movement games occupy a strange corner of the tabletop world. Compared to juggernauts like deckbuilding, worker placement, and engine building, the genre feels like it has been locked in the crypt, occasionally rattling the door to remind everyone it still exists.
Nuns on the Run is a perfect example of that. Originally released in 2010, the game flipped the typical hidden movement structure on its head. Instead of many players hunting one, a single player searches for several invisible ones. Throw in a genuinely charming religious theme that somehow manages to poke fun without punching down, and you have something worth paying attention to.
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The Lord’s Work This is Not
Our story starts with life in the abbey not going quite as planned. Most players are novice nuns who have very clearly not yet grasped what life in the cloth actually demands of them. Locked away somewhere in the abbey is a relic of their former life: a love letter, a bottle of booze, a box of cookies. The goal is simple: sneak out of bed, grab the key, retrieve their precious contraband, and make it back before anyone notices they are gone.
Standing between the novices and their contraband are the two nun pieces, both controlled by…
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