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Box art via BoardGameGeek
Grand Austria Hotel
Roll the dice, serve the strudel, charm the emperor, sweat every turn.
Designed by Simone Luciani and Virginio Gigli · 2015
A tight, tense dice-drafting euro that punishes a wandering mind and rewards a tidy plan. If you like puzzles with teeth, this one earns its shelf space.
Best for: Euro fans who want a tense, plan-ahead puzzle at two players
What it is
You're running a Viennese cafe and trying to grow it into the grandest hotel in Austria, which mostly means rolling a pile of dice and fighting over them. Each round a handful of dice hit the board, and the number showing tells you what that action does and how strong it is. You draft two at a time, snake-style. So you're serving coffee and cake to guests, prepping rooms, hiring staff, and trying to keep the emperor happy. It's a tidy puzzle that hides real claws.
The catch
Here's the honest part. The dice giveth and the dice taketh, and if you plan a perfect turn around a number that never gets drafted to you, it stings. The real drag is four players. Turns get long, the AP-prone friend goes quiet for five minutes, and you sit there counting strudels. Players also flag the original rulebook, where the icons and the words don't always agree. None of this is fatal, but it's worth knowing before you commit a full evening.
Who it's for
So who's this for? People who like a tense, interlocking euro where every die feels like a small fight. It shines at two, where downtime nearly disappears and the whole thing hums along in about an hour. Fans call it an all-time favorite, and after a dozen plays you'll see why, even if the card pool starts feeling familiar. If a wide-open sandbox is your thing, look elsewhere. If you want a knife-fight over numbers, pull up a chair.
What other players say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and player discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
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