The Settlers of Catan Reviews

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The Settlers of Catanx$29.99

(66 reviews)

Best Price: $42.00 $29.99

One of the most successful games of all time, Settlers of Catan is a trading and building game set in the mythical world of Catan. Players roll dice to determine which resources are generated each round and then must strategically trade those resources with other players to get what they need to build their settlements, cities, and roads. With multiple ways to gain victory points and a board that changes in every play, Settlers of Catan is a game that can be played hundreds of different ways. The base of a hugely successful franchise, with multiple engaging expansions, Settlers is the core game of many collections, and is a wonderful way to spend time with family and friends. For 3 to 4 players.

The Settlers of Catan from Mayfair Games is an award-winning strategy game where players collect resources and use them to build roads, settlements and cities on their way to victory. The board itself is variable, making each game a little different from the next. Each round of The Settlers of Catan is intended to keep three or four players ages 10 and above engaged for up to 90 minutes.



The game map changes every time for an endless variety of play. View larger.


Settlers of Catan engages both children and adults, garnering best-seller status in both Germany and the US. View larger.
What We Think

Fun Factor:

Durability:

(what this means)

The Good: Engaging strategy game that's different each time you play

The Bad: Requires three or four players

In a Nutshell: The Settlers of Catan is fun, easy to learn, and keeps advanced players on their toes
At a Glance

Ages: 10 and up
Requires: Three or four players
On the Road to Settlement
The game rules and almanac booklet sets out four pages of guidelines for getting started. Don't worry, the rules are straightforward and the four pages include plenty of illustrations. There's a starting map that shows a well-balanced set-up for beginners to follow and directions that allow more advanced players to lay out the map of the island at random. You'll have to pop the die-cut components of the game out of their cardboard holders before you play your first game.

The almanac portion of the booklet is laid out alphabetically, so while playing you can find answers to specific questions quickly. Useful entries remind you exactly what role pieces like the robber play, how actions like maritime trade work, and how to set up the board or finish the game.

Exploring and Developing Catan
The board consists of 19 terrain hexes surrounded by the ocean. Each type of terrain produces a different type of resource: brick, wool, ore, grain or lumber. There's also a desert hex that produces no resources. As the game progresses, players use resources to build roads along the edges of these hexes and settlements or cities on the intersections where three hexes meet. Each player begins the game with two settlements and two roads.

Each player's roll of the dice causes certain hexes to produce resources, which you collect if you have a settlement on one of them. On your turn, you'll use various combinations of the resources you've acquired to build new roads and settlements, upgrade settlements to cities, or purchase development cards. The ability to trade resources with other players adds a new level of strategy and ensures that the game includes lots of interaction between players. You can also trade without worrying about other players using an unfavorable maritime trade rate. Elements including a robber piece that lets you steal from other players and a variety of development cards add intrigue to the game.

The objective of The Settlers of Catan is to be the first one who collects 10 victory points. Each settlement is worth one victory point and each city is worth two victory points. You can also earn victory points by holding the "Longest Road" card, the "Largest Army" card, or special victory point development cards.

Best-Selling Game of the Year
It's easy to see why The Settlers of Catan has been recognized as a best-selling Game of the Year in both Germany and the U. S. We found this game to be fun and engaging for both children and adults, and the variable nature of the playing field really made us want to play again and again. When we started pausing to contemplate our opponents' strategy and factoring the probability of different dice rolls into our moves, the game sometimes took longer than expected, but we were so engrossed we didn't even notice until it was all over.

Due to the widespread popularity of the original game, several expansion sets (sold separately) are available that allow you to explore new aspects of the game or add more players. The only downside to this game is that you need to have either three or four players to play, so it's great that expansion sets are available that will allow you to add players.

What's in the Box
Six sea frame pieces, 19 terrain hexes, nine harbor pieces, 18 circular number tokens, 126 game cards, 16 cities, 20 settlements, 60 roads, two dice, a robber and a rules and almanac booklet.
MPN: 0029877030613 - UPC: 029877030613




Customer Reviews

  • Nice updates


    By A2X2399HZGKQBJ on 2008-01-05
    The primary, and best, addition in this 4th edition of Settlers is a very nice interlocking border which is placed around the game tiles. This replaces the individual hex tiles of previous editions. No longer will your tiles/pieces scatter/split apart when someone accidentally bumps the playing surface! One side of the border has the ports "built in" but you still get a bit of randomness when assembling the pieces. The flip side of the border is blank "sea" on which you can put the included port tokens for a truly random placement.

    The updated graphics are nice and colorful but take a bit of getting use to if you regularly play with an older edition.

    The box has a vacu-formed type insert designed to hold all the pieces and keep everything neat.

    All-in-all a nice upgrade to the 3rd edition.

    It's a simple sounding premise: You gather resources in order to build roads and settlements to earn points.

    However, there is a wonderful randomness which lends complexity to the game as the layout of the game board tiles differs with each play right down to the number on the dice needed to harvest a resource from a given tile. This makes *every* game unique. Strategy comes into play as you must determine the best location for your settlements and roads to get maximum value/points.

    If you've never played Settlers, find someone who has a copy and give it a try. If no one you know owns a copy, go to your local comic shop. Odds are someone there will have a copy readily available and delight in teaching the game to a new player! It's easy to learn, difficult to master, and quick to play with a typical game lasting only an hour or less.

    This is one of the truly classic games and belongs on the shelf of anyone who enjoys board gaming.

  • A game with endless varations - most variables of any game!


    By A1PXKFBJU16UBU on 2007-12-23
    Settlers of Catan is a very unique game. It is very easy to learn but hard to master the subtleties of the game. It has several things that make this game unique. The main thing that makes this game unique is that the board can be different each time you play the game. The five land types that each produce a different resource are shuffled each time you play the game. So the board ends up being different each time the game is played.

    Another variable is the numbers that you lay down on the land types. The numbers are also shuffled each time. When you roll the dice, what ever number comes up, the land or lands with that number on it produce their resource - regardless of who's turn it is. So you opponents can actually help you on their turn.

    A third variable is ports. If you have a settlement on a port you can trade two of one type of resource you have for one you need with the bank. Normally you have to trade four of one resource, to get the one resource you want if none of the other players are willing to make a trade with you.

    The fourth variable is the thief. Anytime someone rolls a seven on the dice, they get to move the thief off off the property that he is on, and move it to any other piece of property and to take away one card at random from the hand of any players that have a settlement on that property. The thief automaticly steals what ever is produced on that piece of land for as long as he is there. This denies your opponents precious resources that they need to build roads,settlements, cities, and buy development cards.

    Development cards are soldier cards that you can buy to chase off the thief off your property and on to one of your opponents properties. Another type of development card is a victory point card that gives you one point toward the ten point total that you need to win.

    Settlers of Catan is designed for 3 to 4 players but you can have up to 8 players with the expansion pack.

  • Fantastic family/strategy game in a new edition with more useful accessories


    By A2UTXIJ76M15K9 on 2008-01-05
    Settlers of Catan is an absolutely fantastic family strategy game. I won't belabor my discussion of the game, except to say that my wife (only a 'casual boardgamer', not as hardcore like me) and two boys (ages 8 and 10) have been playing it for over a year, many dozens of times, with continued enjoyment. I have successfully hooked other gamers in my family (brother in law, father) on it as well, so that it shares equal time with Monopoly in our family game marathons over the holidays.

    The big point to take away about this new edition of the game is that, without changing any rules, the edition includes some very handy extra pieces, esp. an interlocking set of holders to fit the tiles into, which helps prevent incidental dislocations of the pieces on the board (so common with the older edition). For those of you who have the Seafarers of Catan extension, the holding tiles are much those included in that extension (except shaped to fit the Settlers hex board).

  • Very disappointed in 4th edition


    By A2HUEY1KGPKJHZ on 2008-04-25
    I bought the 3rd edition of Settlers and the expansion for our game group about a year ago. I recently purchased the new versions including Seafarers and Cities & Knights, excited about the artwork and frame pieces, but I was extremely disappointed.

    Some changes:
    1) The new SLAP YOU IN THE FACE blue water pieces' color do not match our original version. This makes it impossible to mix with our older games for our large groups.

    2) The new "white" pieces are actually painted white now which I think is an improvement, but now they don't match earlier versions of the game.

    3) The hexes are (incredibly) even flimsier than the 3rd edition. They are also coated with a very glossy surface coating that makes it hard to play with light coming in the windows.

    4) The snap-together edges seem like an improvement, but since I have one of those awesome wooden boards from eBay, we don't use them.

    5) The clay hexes, that used to be clearly red, are now so similar in color to the wheat hexes that it's harder to differentiate between them.

    6) Gold, wheat, and even desert look very similar as well, but the cards' backgrounds haven't changed to help you match the resource with the card. With the exception of forest, the new hex artwork actually makes the game harder to play, imo.

    Catan is still a fantastic game and our game groups' favorite. But I am so disappointed with the new version that I am very seriously considering selling my 4th edition to go back to the easier to play with older versions.

  • Stick with the 3rd Addition


    By A3RJ7EV2SCYMZ3 on 2008-09-05
    We are avid players of Settlers (and love it), but this newest addition has some flaws that make us wish we would have bought the 3rd addition. We have had the game for about 8 months, and the interlocking border (instead of the regular hexagon pieces in the 3rd addition) have never fit right. It takes three people to get everything into place, and even then the border warps and the pieces pop out. They interlock like a puzzle piece, and they are starting to wear out, so we have finally given up on getting everything together correctly. If you were worried about the 3rd addition getting bumped and jumbled, you simply had to set up the game on a tablecloth or piece of fabric. This newer addition is impossible to setup correctly, especially as it ages.

    Also note you cannot use your old expansion packs with the newer addition, as the pieces are different. You now have to pay for all the newer versions of the expansion packs, how convenient.

    We still love this game and will play it regularly, it just seems the "advancements" were not tested or well planned. It is also bothersome that they made the newer additions incompatible with the old expansions, you can easily spend $150 on this game and the expansions, and you would expect that investment to last... it is a board game after all!

  • Settlers of Catan Rules
    By AO2JI5JZ2MIHY on 2008-01-12
    Settlers is one of the greatest games ever. I think it was originally created to teach capitalism. Here are my pros/cons:

    Pros:
    *There is enough strategy for most gamers

    *There is some luck which can make things interesting. If you want to
    minimize the luck factor then use 12-sided dice

    *Great interaction as you get to trade and barter with other players
    (even when it is not your turn.) Kids can definitely learn the concept
    of re-investing in your assets and great negotiation skills.

    *You can change the boardgame set up everytime so you get a different
    game everytime.

    *There are 2 expansions (seafarers & Cities & Knights) & other add-ons to
    change up the game to continue to make the game new and interesting.

    *There are extensions that expand the game to 6 players.

    *Also, there are ways to "gang up" on the leader, so there are many games
    where virtualy every player will be close to winning which makes it more
    fun than when one player blows out everyone every game.

    Cons:
    *Setting up the board and clean up can be a little tedious if you are not
    organized.

    *purchasing the game, its 2 expansions and each corrsponding 5-6
    extension can be a bit pricey. However, my experience is that the price
    is worth it because you play this game so many time compared to other
    games that may be cheaper.

    Overall, this game is fun and can be re-played countless times due to the variable game set up. Well worth the money.

  • great game, disappointing quality
    By A2GLKK3PL4ACDF on 2008-04-06
    I absolutely love this game, but being used to an (older) German version, I was very disappointed by the quality of the board tiles, which are made of thin cardboard (much sturdier in German version) and looked like they wouldn't make it through many game nights. Also, the game pieces for roads and towns were just little blocks of wood, while the pieces I am used to playing with actually look like roads in the country side and towns. The game is still great, of course, but it is obvious that they tried to produce it as cheaply as possible.

  • In a video game world, this is a GREAT game!
    By A2OCMDOVOXPTEU on 2008-01-03
    Played this game for the first time over Christmas break with family and really enjoyed it. The game is different every time and everyone has a great chance every time. In a world where WII's and PS3's are the new "thing" it's nice to play a gmae that is enjoyable for the whole family and makes you strategize around the dinner table instead of in front of a TV. Hours of fun!

  • Settlers of Catan, 4th ed.
    By A2DQLQSNKZZ1QK on 2008-02-08
    My husband and I played Settlers of Catan at a friend's house and decided we wanted a copy of our own. It's a great, easy to learn game that even my 8 year old granddaughter has played and had fun. Downside: The board pieces are made from a light-weight cardboard, and we don't think they'll be as durable as some other snap-together board games, such as Descent and Doom.

  • good game poor quality
    By A15Q78VYO4FI7D on 2008-09-03
    I love this game. I had the old version but not the expansion so I got the new version with the expansion. To my disappointment, the quality on the new version is terrible. After a day of opening my game, I found that the cardboard pieces would bend, which made it more difficult to build the board. Not only did the individual hexes bend, but also the outside water pieces. Very annoying and very disappointed. I also feel that I can no longer play with it now.

  • Refreshing Strategy Game
    By A38VT1CQPNCFV9 on 2008-01-07
    The Settlers of Catan - New 4th Edition!!!!!This board game is addictive. My two teenage sons and I have played it almost daily since opening the box Christmas Day. The object is to be the first person to get 10 points; you do this by purchasing roads that link settlements(1 point) and cities(2 points). You "buy" all of these things using the resource cards you acquire through rolling the dice. Trading "resources" with other people is essential to get what you need. Easy to set up, game time for experienced players(after 2-3 times) is 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Think Risk without the cut-throat nature and it doesn't take 6 six hours to play a game.

  • A whole new world of board games
    By AGIZRAQ5NO5LG on 2008-01-18
    The Settlers of Catan opened me and a number of my friends and family to a game that is easy to learn as monopoly or risk but ten times more enjoyable. I had not been willing to play anything but card games for years. This game incorporates strategy, chance, and negotiating skills (you must convince your opponents to trade resources with you even though it may mean that you will win the game). The initial game only allows 3-4 players so most people will want to purchase the expansion pack which allows up to 6. However, the 3-4 person games are usually shorter, allowing time for more than one game. When teaching new players the game may take several hours to finish, especially as the number of players grows. The game indicates that the age range is 10 and up. I think this is about right. We taught it to our 10 year old niece and she won the game. Our 8 year old nephew needed to be teamed up with an adult (he loves playing the game though). Once everyone gets the hang of the rules, a game can finish in an hour. Definitely a great addition to low key, small group social gatherings.

  • Great board game!
    By A1WKQ94M45D8MG on 2008-11-28
    Do you like a good board game that requires more thinking than luck? A little skill compared to random success? Then this is the game for you.
    We love playing Settlers and also have purchased the add ons of Seafarers and also Knights. The game requires some strategy and some planning in order to do well and win. Assessing proper location, stockpiling resources, placing the robber or pirate, undermining other players -- well it all adds up to great fun -- and perhaps even a friendly argument or two.
    Highly recommended for teens and adults who can grasp the overall concept and outwit opponents to claim victory. It is not usually a fast game and does take awhile to set up and get going. Enjoy!

  • Get ready to meet your family.
    By AJXBPTH76BUYC on 2008-01-18
    We were introduced to Settlers by some young people in our church. I ordered it the next week for my 15 year old for Christmas. He loves to play Risk but gets annoyed by how long it takes to play and get it set up (me too).

    We really like to play this game as a family. We even bought the 5-6 player expansion so more people could play. I highly recommend the game. The best part is that every time you play you have to develop a new strategy for winning. It just depends on where the hexes land.

    One thing about version 4. The ocean border is created as interlocking like a puzzle. Great, unless you spill water on it, thus affecting its flatness. I really preferred the way that the previous version had the ocean hexes just like the rest. Not a big deal though.

  • Settlers is addictive!
    By A2CAKCKXPJWO5L on 2008-01-18
    We got this game for both of our kids that are married. They both love it! We have played it several times with them and it is a really great game. Only drawback is only 4 can play at one time. Need to get the extended version to go along with it.

  • Great Game
    By A1EJYEILD47ZD3 on 2008-01-21
    I really enjoy this game. It is a great strategy game to have fun with the family. The only thing I didn't like was the border for the pieces came in four segments. It is a little bit of a pain to setup, but after it is setup, it is a lot of fun.

  • Very addicting family fun.
    By A1CHSF2YTBXUAS on 2008-03-04
    I was first introduced to the Settlers of Catan at a friend's house, and I fell in love with it from day one. The game itself is not too simple, not too hard, and contains a good mix of strategy and luck. It is simple enough for the beginner (though I would imagine the game is above the abilities of really young children), provides enough change (the board is different each game) for the average player, and provides ample places for strategy for the expert. All in all, it covers the spectrum of players well, and it is very addicting!

    As for the durability of the game, the board pieces are a very sturdy cardboard, the playing pieces are made of painted wood, and the cards are printed on high quality cardstock. With a lot of playing (like playing a couple times a week for a year or so) the cards can get worn out but it is simple to buy a replacement set of cards for a reasonable amount of money, and if you have gotten that much play time out of the game, it is worth it!

    One thing to note: there are lots of small (easily lost) pieces to this game, so if you tend to lose things, this could be a problem.

  • Amazing Game
    By A2HN1EEASAUOK on 2008-04-07
    I got this game for my sister for her birthday. She loved it so much that she makes my parents play it at least every week and they hardly ever play games and they love it. Whenever I come home from college, we spend the weekend playing several games of Catan. I can't get enough of it!

  • An Almost Perfect Board Game
    By A2NSJ737W3D27R on 2008-06-20
    I agree with all the other posts. Takes the best aspects of Diplomacy, Risk etc, but easier to learn, faster to play, and more interaction and fun. My neighborhood is now addicted, and my 9/8 year olds love to play as well. I highly recommend the Seafarers expansion. The Knights & Castles expansion makes it a much more complex game. If you have an older edition (3rd edition) of Settlers and then get a new 4th edition of the expansions, you will need to get the "upgrade kit" from the Mayfair Games site for $10. It is the frame of the board that fits together to form the water boundary. The older versions did not have this frame, and it makes the older and newer versions somewhat incompatible.

  • Settlers is AWESOME!!!
    By A2L1F1NTHYW3RL on 2008-08-14
    Anyone who i have ever played this with loved it and usually ordered it. Now when someone is telling you the rules and everything it honestly sounds like a terrible game and starts kind of slow but when it gets goin and the trading and negotiations get involved it becomes much more fun.

  • a must have for board gamers
    By ASCSUYDGF7Y4 on 2008-08-28
    The Settlers of Catan is a must have for anyone who enjoys playing board games. Winning the game requires negotiating with other players, assessing resource supply and demand, and mapping out a plan to get those last few victory points. Yet, players are still subject to the luck of the dice and rules that usually keep the game close until the very end.

    Settlers has huge replay value. The game board is actually a collection of tiles that change position every time you play, and there are several different strategies to winning. Additionally, the game has many expansions, scenarios, and variants to keep things interesting.

    A few things to consider before purchasing: The base game requires 3 or 4 players - no more, no less. However, an expansion is available that allows a 5th and 6th player to join in, and a 2-player variant is available in the Traders and Barbarians expansion. Also, the game time varies depending on the experience and "efficiency" of the players. I've played in games that take as little as 30 minutes and as long as 2 hours. Lastly, the rules are very detailed, yet easy to understand. You'll need to refer to the rule book the first few times you play for those "unusual" situations.

    Overall, this is truly a great game. Since it is not owned by Mattel or Hasbro, it suffers from underexposure in the U.S. Otherwise, you would find it on the shelves of every store that sells board games.

  • Here Come the Colonists!...
    By A39BOBX922IM8G on 2007-12-26
    Hey Guys,

    This game is both entertaining, lovable, and
    (GASP)
    ..........Complicated..........

    WARNING: DO NOT play this game with SMALL CHILDREN as they WILL(I repeat WILL) stick a very SMALL and numerous up his/her mouth.

    Read the MANUAL people. The game has many rules and guidelines that ensure you have fun, without those, the game seems dumb, boring, and very..very..very annoying.

    Other than that, this game is strategy and planning, much like Stratego.

    Have Fun!

  • Just discovered this game & already love it.
    By A2KB65SOJ51T4C on 2008-01-14
    I was at a retreat with a group recently and stumbled across this game as a few guys were setting it up to play. They let me in and I was soon fascinated. It has some of the strategy elements of very well known games like Risk or Monopoly, but it is completely different.

    Basically, the first one to gain ten points wins. You gain a point for building a settlement, two for a city and there are some bonuses for capturing certain cards. A key quality that is different to this game is that the board is a series of six sided puzzle pieces (all the exact same shape) that can be randomly arranged in any order to create a unique experience for every game. This makes strategies like going for the orange set in monopoly or going for South America in Risk untenable because the resources you need will have a slightly different set up in every game.

    On top of that, little chips are placed on every resource on the board, which have numbers ranging from 2 to 12. If you own a settlement or a city touching a resource with the chip on it that matches the current dice roll, you receive resources. For example, suppose you own a city that touches a wheat field on the board, and the wheat field has a 6 chip on it. Every single time a six is rolled on the dice (in any combination 4 & 2 or 3 & 3 or 5 & 1), you receive two wheat cards. You can then use your cards to buy roads, settlements, cities, or other items in the game.
    Sometimes you have to be creative in bartering with other players or in swapping cards you don't need for cards you do need. (roads cannot be built with wheat, but wheat can be converted into brick or wood for roads).

    As the game progresses, the need for specific resources (wood, ore, brick, wheat, sheep) shifts because there are limits to the number of settlements you can build (5). So you cannot win by just building settlements. You must upgrade some of them to cities. Those upgrades require different kinds of cards than the purchasing of roads or settlements. For example, a road is built by spending a brick and a wood card. Cities are built by converting a settlement on the board with two wheat and three ore. Cities are limited as well. Different quntities of resources are required for different point holding items. So as you complete the number of settlements you can have, you need to upgrade to cities, which require different resources.

    You can only get resources that you have a settlement nearby, or by trading or stealing from opponents. So the game essentially revolves around where you build your roads. Roads enable you to build settlements. Settlements can be converted to cities, which gives you a chance to win because of the points.

    Because the board always changes, you have to be creative in your strategy, which is a fantastic twist to this game in my opinion. When I walked up to play for the first time, they had the board set for a certain number of players. When I joined, they expanded the board and added another color. The flexibility of the game didn't alter the quality at all.

    Although I do not own this game yet, it is at the top of my list for things I plan to purchase. I think in some ways it is better than a war game like risk because you don't have the ruthless factor of having to completely eliminate your opponent. Although you can make it fairly miserable for opponents if you beat them to resources that are critical for advancing your own settler's vision.

    I heartily recommend this game.

  • Awesome game
    By AGRDR928XA5TN on 2008-01-28
    This game is awesome! Recommended by two co-workers independently. Game lives up to the recommendation. Complex enough to be fun for adults, not too complicated for my 9 year old. He was able to completely grasp the concepts and game play after one practice game. Nice online resources, best new game I have played in a decade.

  • One of the best board games ever
    By A8PS6YTA2Y0UX on 2008-01-30
    Changes from the third edition: new artwork on all the pieces, and the outer ring of the board fits together like a jigsaw puzzle, so that bumping the board doesn't knock everything apart. No big difference, same rules, still the really, really fun and engaging boardgame I remembered.

    I'm amazed this isn't more popular in America, on a scale with Monopoly, Risk and all the rest.

  • Addictive fun!
    By ASFG2FS3RDIEM on 2008-02-08
    This game is great because every time you play it it's different. It's totally addictive and leads to lots of lively table talk. Be sure to buy the set and extension so everyone can play Settlers of Catan & 5/6 player Expansion. My mom is in her 60's and even she loved this game.

  • Challenging & Ever-changing!
    By A3KCTZ2JLBTKMZ on 2008-02-08
    My husband and I played the previous version of this game and immediately wanted our own to play! The game is challenging and ever-changing (within individual games and with every new game started) which keeps it from getting old. The gameboard pieces are sturdy with vibrant graphics. After playing this edition multiple times, I'm still not sure if I like the "frame" in which the land pieces are set (which I believe to be the only physcial change from the previous edition) because it doesn't sit flat when put together. It doesn't impede in playing the game, but it is annoying so we usually put coasters around the edge to hold it flat. Time is also a factor...our games take about 3 hours on average to complete. We also bought the 5-6 player extension which we use quite often--it includes more land pieces, cards, and player pieces.

  • True Catan fan's review
    By A2SQWR4YVAUDD8 on 2008-02-09
    Catan is a very fun and addicting game. This version is great, easy to setup. However the instruction booklet doesn't do a very good job on telling you exactly how to proceed with setup, or gameplay.
    For instance, what happens when a 7 is rolled, and you have more than 7 cards in your hand, and how a player proceeds to steal a resource from another.

    The toughest part is finding people to play who have never played, and getting them to make it past all the initial rules, and understanding of gameplay.

    Overall, this game sells itself, and thankfully, xbox live's version of this has made it a national game phenomenon.


  • I LOVE this game
    By A1A4GJZ27AXRVW on 2008-02-12
    I was introduced to this game a few years ago at a family gathering and now every time we get together this is the game everyone wants to play. We received the 4th edition for Christmas and it has quickly become a hit with my new family. My husband and his sons are now addicts to this game. The only thing I wasn't too fond of is the interlocking border. It doesn't seem to fit well together and as a result we have a hard time getting the pieces to lay flat, though it doesn't seem to interrupt play too much. It might be just a matter of breaking it in. Regardless, we love to play it and I can't forsee ever getting tired of it. I highly recommend it.

  • Expansion
    By A31QHUUS0J9WNY on 2008-02-24
    After purchasing this I felt that it should simply come with the standard version of the game and not be a separate product. I have had the expansion for 2 months and have not used it yet. That aside, the product is what it is. It's just like the game! Read a review of the core game to see what Catan in all about.


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Product Features
  • All new 4th Edition!!
  • New Graphics!!
  • New Card Art!!
  • New Packaging & Tiles!!
  • Full Color Rules Book


 
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