Popular Board And Card Games Are B2G1 Free At Amazon And Target For Black Friday
Amazon and Target are hosting Buy Two, Get One Free Sales on board and card games for Black Friday, making it a great time to stock your game cabinets before your next holiday party. Better yet, many of the board games featured in the promotion have received limited-time price cuts as part of Amazon’s broader game sale that launched last week. We’ve put together a big, alphabetized list of board games eligible for Amazon’s B2G1 free deal below.
The promotion features board and card games inspired by major entertainment franchises, such as The Lord of the Rings Card Game, Star Wars: Outer Rim, Marvel Splendor, and Harry Potter Monopoly.
Video game-inspired titles are also up for grabs, including multiple Minecraft and Sonic games, Small World of Warcraft, the Super Mario edition of The Game of Life, and Mega Man Adventures.
You’ll find beloved modern board games such as Catan, Ticket to Ride, and Arkham Horror. Some recent releases are eligible for B2G1 free, too. O…
Charlize Theron Used To Make Fun Of Marvel Movies, Wants To Revisit Mad Max
Appearing in pictures ranging from Monster to Mad Max to Long Shot, Charlize Theron has made herself difficult to pigeonhole as one type of actor or another. Despite this, even she admits she doesn’t always see what other people see in a project right away, as is the case with her thoughts on Mad Max: Fury Road and the MCU in a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter.
While Mad Max: Fury Road came out as a critically acclaimed return to form for director George Miller, reports of a rough and contentious set–especially when it came to Theron and co-star Tom Hardy–followed it everywhere it went. Looking back at the 2015 film, Theron has much kinder words for the movie, though she couches them in warnings for younger actors.
“I never really truly appreciated or respected George Miller’s vision until I saw [the completed film and] went, ‘Oh my God, this is what was in his head the whole time and I couldn’t hear it,’ Theron said. “And so it’s the one movie where I go, ‘If…
Consortium Review
One thing’s for sure: Consortium isn’t afraid to hide one of its chief influences. Mere minutes in, responding to a quip from the pilot of a futuristic craft crammed with quasi-military types, I jumped on the best of three possible responses: “So you’re the ship’s joker, right?” Had it used a capital “J,” developer Interdimensional Games might as well have shouted out its inspiration. Indeed, Consortium is partly Mass Effect stripped of all that business of exploring worlds and drilling planets, opting instead to unfold events in an aircraft from 2042 that feels like the Normandy and looks strikingly similar to a Boeing 747. L. Ron Hubbard would be proud. But this isn’t some soulless rip-off; look past crippling bugs and visual oddities, such as water faucets that seem to spit mercury and the Tomb Raider-circa-2003 faces, and you’ll find a role-playing game experience that’s at least worthy of breathing the same air as BioWare’s space saga.
Consortium presents us with a distin…