- Source: Reiner Knizia
Reiner Knizia (German pronunciation: [ˈʁaɪnɐ ˈknɪtsi̯a]) is a prolific German-style board game designer. He was born in West Germany in 1957 and earned a doctorate in Mathematics from the University of Ulm before designing games full time. He is frequently included on lists of the greatest game designers of all time. Many of his hundreds of designs are considered modern classics, and many have won or been nominated for significant gaming awards, including the Spiel des Jahres and the Deutscher Spiele Preis. His notable designs include Amun-Re, Blue Moon City, Ingenious, Keltis, Lord of the Rings, Medici, Modern Art, Ra, Taj Mahal, Tigris and Euphrates, and Through the Desert. Many of his designs incorporate mathematical principles, such as his repeated use of auction mechanics.
Early life and education
Knizia was born in Illertissen, West Germany, in 1957. During his childhood, the small town of Illertissen offered only limited access to boardgames (the only place that sold games was the local barbershop, which had a limited selection). He played Monopoly, which had an impact mainly because the paper money allowed other forms of creativity, such as game design. Because of the limited selection of games in his hometown, at age 8 or 9 he began designing games of his own based on themes he found interesting, such as racing and castles, to play with friends. In one childhood design, a board used a fantasy map of spaces on which knights moved to attack pieces of the other player and occupy their castle. As a teenager, he developed an international-themed wargame, and in his 20s he self-published a play-by-mail magazine where readers would send moves which would be announced in new issues.
He later gained a Master of Science degree from Syracuse University in the United States and a doctorate in Mathematics from the University of Ulm in Germany. He went on to manage a two-billion-dollar mortgage services company in the United Kingdom, from which he was able to retire at age 40. He published many magazine-based games while writing for Spielbox (a German games magazine), and began having success publishing boxed games in the 1990s, with two games themed around digging for gold. Goldrausch was centered around the California Gold Rush, and Digging was themed about avoiding bandits while mining for gold.
Career
Knizia has been a full-time game designer since 1997, when he quit his job from the board of a large international bank. Knizia has been living in England since 1993.
In addition to having designed over 700 published games, Knizia is highly acclaimed as a designer, having won the Deutscher Spiele Preis four times, a Spiel des Jahres (in addition to a Kinderspiel des Jahres and a special award), and numerous other national and international awards. At the Origins Game Fair in 2002 he was inducted into the Gaming Hall of Fame. His games frequently make appearances on various "top games" lists, including the GAMES 100 list, the BoardGameGeek top 100, and the Internet Top 100 Games List. Several gaming conventions host "Kniziathons", which are tournaments dedicated to celebrating Knizia-designed games.
Reiner Knizia started developing games for his play-by-mail game zine Postspillion, founded in 1985. The zine still exists, and the game Bretton Woods (also a Reiner Knizia design), which was started in 1987, is still going.
One of Knizia's best selling games is Lord of the Rings, published in 17 languages with over one million copies sold. His dice game Pickomino has also reached 1 million copies sold and his Keltis sold over 600,000 copies. His game Ingenious has been published in over 20 languages. In 2011, Knizia designed a Star Trek-themed game for NECA/WizKids, based on the 2009 film that 'reset' the Star Trek universe. In 2015 Ravensburger released Star Wars VII - Galaxy Rebellion based on the popular movie franchise.
A number of Knizia designs have been redeveloped for the electronic gaming & console markets. Ingenious (aka Einfach Genial) and Keltis have both appeared in CD-ROM versions; Lost Cities was adapted for Xbox 360 via Xbox Live Arcade. An original game for the Nintendo DS, Dr. Reiner Knizia's Brainbenders was published in 2008; Keltis for the NDS followed in 2009. Other mobile implementations of Knizia titles include Lost Cities, Battle Line, Kingdoms, Medici, Ra, Through the Desert, Samurai and Tigris and Euphrates. Knizia has also designed various game applications specifically for the iPhone, including Robot Master, Dice Monster, Labyrinth and Pipes.
Over several years Knizia has developed a number of hybrid boardgames with electronic components, most notably with German publisher Ravensburger. The first of these was the King Arthur adventure game in 2003, later updated for use with the iPhone in 2014. Other titles include Die Insel, the award-winning Wer War's?, Der Drei ??? and in 2015 Captain Black (notable for a talking ghost pirate captain and a 90 cm – 3 foot – 3D ship).
Game characteristics
Knizia's games cover many board game genres. He has designed small two-player card games, children's games, and even a live-action roleplaying game.
One element of modern game design that Reiner Knizia has pioneered is abstract theme. Older themed games like Monopoly have traditionally developed their themes by trying to model or emulate the environment or situation they are thematically tied to. So Monopoly has players buying and developing properties as a real estate developer might. Knizia's thematic game designs tend not to try to model a specific environment, but instead try to invoke the thought and decision-making processes that are key to the theme. For example, Knizia's game Medici has a fairly abstract game system of drawing and buying cards that does not try to model any particular environment, but in the game-world, the players are always attempting to price risk, the key success factor in the investment banking business in which the Medicis made their fortune. A further example of this can be found in Knizia's game, Tigris and Euphrates. The players each take control of one of four different dynasties of Mesopotamia around 3,000 B.C. Each dynasty has priests, farmers, traders, and kings who are placed strategically on the board. The players take turns expanding their dynasties, controlling rivers, building temples, and attacking the other players' dynasties. Instead of Tigris and Euphrates having many complicated rules, the game is relatively simple and has very streamlined rules that does not attempt to emulate the real-life conflicts but rather abstracts this out, allowing for the players to focus on strategic decision making. This approach has allowed Knizia to develop games that are comparatively simple but require thoughtful game-play, while still retaining strongly thematic elements.
Using his understanding of principles in mathematics to full effect, pricing and evaluating risk are frequently recurring elements in Reiner Knizia games. Many of his most successful designs use auctions as a vehicle to price risk, as in Ra, Medici, and Modern Art.
Games
Some of Knizia's games are:
Abandon Ship
Age of War/Risk Express
Amun-Re
Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 2003
Nominee, International Gamers Awards—General Strategy; Multiplayer
Amphipolis
Auf Heller und Pfennig (released in English as Kingdoms)
Winner, Origins Award for Best Abstract Board Game of 2002
Battle Line (released as Schotten-Totten in Germany)
Beowulf: The Legend
Blue Moon/Blue Moon Legends
Blue Moon City
Nominee, Spiel des Jahres 2006
Carcassonne: The Castle
Recommended, Spiel des Jahres 2004
Clickbait (released by Big Potato Games)
Drahtseilakt (released as Tightrope and Relationship Tightrope in the US)
Dream Factory (released as Traumfabrik in Germany and Hollywood Blockbuster)
Winner, Arets Spel for Best Adult Game
Einfach Genial (released as Ingenious in the US and Mensa Connections in the UK)
Nominee, Spiel des Jahres 2004
Winner, Schweizer Spielepreis Best Strategy Game 2004
High Society (card game)
Indigo (board game)
Ivanhoe
Keltis
Winner, Spiel des Jahres 2008
LEGO Ramses Pyramid
L.L.A.M.A.
Nominee, Spiel des Jahres 2019
Loot
Looting London (card game)
Lord of the Rings
Winner, Spiel des Jahres 2001 special prize for best use of literature in a game
Lord of the Rings: The Confrontation
Lost Cities
Winner, International Gamers Award 2000 for Best 2-player strategy game
Medici
Recommended, Spiel des Jahres 1995
Modern Art
Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 1993
Winner, Finnish Game of the Year 2008
Recommended, Spiel des Jahres 1993
My City (board game)
Nominee, Spiel des Jahres 2020
My Word!
Orongo
Pickomino/Heckmeck
Prosperity
Co-designed with Sebastian Bleasdale
Qin (board game)
Quo Vadis?
Recommended, Spiel des Jahres 1992
Ra
Nominee, 2000 International Gamers Awards—General Strategy; Multi-player
Samurai
(Do You Know) Shakespeare?
Star Trek: Expeditions
Star Wars VII - Galaxy Rebellion
Taj Mahal
Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 2000
Winner, Essen Feather 2000
Through the Desert
Recommended, Spiel des Jahres 1998
Tigris and Euphrates
Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 1998 for Best Family/Adult Game
Recommended, Spiel des Jahres 1998
Tower of Babel
Winner, Schweizer Spielepreis best strategy game 2005
Vampire
Wer war's/Who Was It?
Winner, Kinderspiel des Jahres 2008
Winner, Deutscher Kinderspiele Preis 2008
Wettlauf nach El Dorado/The Quest for El Dorado
Nominee, Spiel des Jahres 2017
Winner's Circle (board game)
Recommended, Spiel des Jahres 2001
This is by no means a complete list of his work. He has been designing games since at least the 1990’s. For a complete list of his work, please visit his website at:
https://www.knizia.de/games/
See also
Going Cardboard (Documentary, includes an interview with Reiner Knizia)
References
External links
Knizia Games
Reiner Knizia video interview at Submarine Channel, 15 November 2011
Postspillion (in German)
Reiner Knizia at BoardGameGeek (includes complete list of games)
Reiner Knizia at Math Genealogy Project
Reiner Knizia by the Numbers, interview with Reiner Knizia, 12 April 2006
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Dadu
- Reiner Knizia
- Medici (board game)
- Eurogame
- Lost Cities
- Tigris and Euphrates
- Reiner
- Spiel des Jahres
- The Lord of the Rings (disambiguation)
- Ra (board game)
- Kingdoms (board game)