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Triumph of the Temple

Triumph of the Temple

RRP: £19.99
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RRP £19.99
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The artifact matching, jewel-winning quest! “You’ve discovered an Egyptian pyramid filled with temple jewels and ancient artifacts that need repair. It’s up to you to fix them in order to be rewarded with the jewels of the temple. Your Quest Cards will tell you which artifacts you can fix on your turn. The player who collects the most jewels will be the one to triumph over the…
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Category Tags , , , SKU TCS-TRIUMPH Availability 3+ in stock
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Awards

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You Might Like

  • The box has great table presence
  • Very thematic
  • Great components
  • Simple game play

Might Not Like

  • Possibly too simple for me now
  • That box is awkward to store
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Description

The artifact matching, jewel-winning quest!

“You’ve discovered an Egyptian pyramid filled with temple jewels and ancient artifacts that need repair. It’s up to you to fix them in order to be rewarded with the jewels of the temple. Your Quest Cards will tell you which artifacts you can fix on your turn. The player who collects the most jewels will be the one to triumph over the temple.”
—description from the rulebook

In this game, you have a hand of 3 tiles. You then draw a Quest Card from the deck and it will tell you which artifacts that are listed on the tiles will score you points that turn. Match up as many symbols on the cards as you can and you will get a jewel for each correct match.

Players: 2-4

Duration: 20 Min

Age: 8+

The ancient Egyptians were deeply interesting. The architecture and construction projects in which they undertook were impressive feats of their time and their mythology is rich and vibrant. It’s probably why so many of the key things of ancient Egypt stand out to us. The Sphinx, pyramids, a jackal’s head, all examples of cultural artifacts which we all think of when we say “Egypt.”

We learn these things at a young age, they’re instantly associated. This is why I’m going to talk to you about a game where the thematic association is on point and you are trying to gather gems from a temple whilst trying to fix the ancient artifacts. Beware of the pointy top! Here’s Triumph of the Temple.

The Game

Triumph of the Temples is a tile placement, order fulfilment game, where you are rushing to repair the broken artifacts of Egypt. By doing so, you gain gems, which are your points. The highest points at the end win. To start, each player draws three tiles and one is placed face-up on the table, very much like Carcassonne.

Then the active player draws a quest card, showing one to three artifacts on it. You must place a tile that completes one or more of the artifacts shown on the quest card, pairing it with an already laid tile. Also, like in Carcassonne, you can only place like with like, so you can’t put a jackal head next to a pyramid and they must be in the right orientation.

For each match you make, you get a gem. If you can make more matches, you may place another one of your tiles down. If none of your tiles in your hand or the tiles on the table can create a match that is on the card, you discard it and your turn is over. Draw back up to three tiles and play then passes to the next player. The game ends when all quest cards have been discarded. Count your gems, and the game is over.

My Thoughts

This is a difficult one to write out because I think it became very clear early on that I am not the target audience for this game. I’ve been playing games for too long and I have other tile placement games like Carcassonne and Sorcerer City that I would rather play.

That does not mean that Triumph of the Temple is a bad game. It’s not! It’s a good little game. I like the theme and the unique way in which the box draws you in, even if it’s because it has shiny gems in it and is shaped like a pyramid. The serious gamers will be thinking “well that doesn’t fit in a Kallax.” They aren’t wrong but it’s also not meant to be put on a Kallax, it’s meant to be played by children.

It’s a matching game, it has spatial orientation, order fulfilment, a dollop of luck, and shiny gems. That’s great! It’s a great game for kids to get interested in the hobby before they’re ready to give a game of Carcassonne a go. It has pretty much the same mechanism for gameplay and there’s nothing wrong with it.

If I had kids, or if my nephew hadn’t just moved away (with his parents, obviously), I would probably keep this for them and I’d happily play with them. I’m not going to be offended if someone asked me to give it a go nor would I turn them down because it’s ultimately a gateway to creating new gamers.

I like the artwork; I think it fits the theme incredibly well. It’s super easy to grasp and it does show that there are times when you can’t do anything because the card you drew doesn’t match the tiles and that’s a shame. There’s even a mechanism in the two and four-player game which lets the first player have an extra turn because they had fewer options at the start of the game.

Conversely, they may have too many options at the end, so I think it balances out nicely. Here’s my final thought. If you have children who you want to get into the hobby one day, get them Triumph of the Temple. It has that “wow” factor for a kid, it has something which they can hang onto before you introduce the game that got them into the hobby. It’ll give you something to go off when you start trying to explain what a meeple is.

Zatu Score

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You might like

  • The box has great table presence
  • Very thematic
  • Great components
  • Simple game play

Might not like

  • Possibly too simple for me now
  • That box is awkward to store