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The Best Board Games Like Wingspan
If you love Wingspan, you're really chasing a specific feeling: a beautiful table, rules you can teach in ten minutes, and that quiet thrill of watching your little engine click into gear. This is a ranked list of the best board games like Wingspan, all gorgeous and approachable, all built around growing something turn by turn.
We leaned toward games that share Wingspan's DNA: nature or world themes, friendly rules, and satisfying payoff without a math degree. A couple of heavier picks sneak in near the bottom for when you're ready to graduate. Every game here earns its spot, and we'll tell you honestly who each one is for.
11. Cascadia
This is the closest thing to a perfect Wingspan companion. You're drafting habitat tiles and wildlife tokens to build tidy little ecosystems, and it teaches in five minutes, plays in 45, and looks lovely on the table. If you want the calm, the looks, and a lower price tag, start here.
22. Everdell
Everdell is the showpiece of the group, with a giant pop-up tree and woodland critters that make people lean in before they even know the rules. Underneath the cuteness is a sharp worker placement and tableau-building game where your cards combo off each other. Get it if table presence matters to you and you don't mind a slightly longer teach.
33. PARKS
PARKS sends you hiking down a trail, collecting resources and visiting national parks rendered in stunning poster art. It's lighter than Wingspan and a touch more tactical, which makes it a great pick for relaxed game nights and mixed groups. Ideal if you found Wingspan's rulebook a bit much and want something even breezier.
44. Lost Ruins of Arnak
Arnak blends deck-building, worker placement, and a little exploration into one smooth package, with art that pulls you straight into the jungle. It's a step up in weight from Wingspan but never feels punishing, and there's always an obvious next move to chase. Reach for this when your group is ready for more decisions without more headaches.
55. Ark Nova
You're designing a modern zoo, playing animal and project cards that chain into a serious engine. It's the spiritual big sibling to Wingspan: same love of animals, far more depth and table space. Only grab this if your table is happy to sit for two-plus hours and learn a chunkier rulebook.
66. Concordia
Concordia trades flashy art for clean, elegant engine-building where you replay a hand of cards to grow a Roman trade network. There's no luck to hide behind, just smart, peaceful planning that rewards repeat plays. Pick it if you loved building Wingspan's engine and want a purer, more strategic version of that feeling.
77. Terraforming Mars
This is the deep end of card-driven engine-building, where you spend hours turning a red planet green one project at a time. The production is plain and the rules sprawl, but the engine-building payoff is enormous and addictive. Save it for when Wingspan starts feeling too short and you want a real project.
88. Gaia Project
Gaia Project is the heaviest game here, a sprawling space-faring 4X where every faction plays differently and the engine-building runs deep. It's gorgeous in a busy, intimidating way and asks a lot of you. Only worth it if your group has graduated past Wingspan and actively wants a brain-burner.
If you want Wingspan's calm, build-something-beautiful feeling, start with Cascadia or Everdell and work your way down to the meatier picks.