Best board games 2025: our favorites reviewed

What are the best board games to play in 2025? As tabletop game specialists, we at Wargamer play a lot of classic and new board games, day in, day out, as well as reviewing the latest titles rigorously – so we can confidently bring you this ultimate list of our 15 top board games, selected to cover multiple genres, group sizes, age ranges, and experience levels. Plus, we’ll preview the biggest upcoming board games we’re waiting for in 2025!
The best board games of all time look different for everyone, so we’ve put a lot of thought into our selections – click on the links below to find out how we test and choose the winners, plus some extra buying tips. If you specifically want a game for two, try our expert guide to the best board games for couples – or branch out with our updated list of the best card games.
Why you can trust us ✔ We spend hours testing games, toys, and services. Our advice is honest and unbiased to help you buy the best. Find out how we test.
The best board games in 2025 are:
Our most anticipated upcoming board games in 2025
The absolute bangers above are our current favorite board games in every field – but rockstar game designers and tabletop publishers are constantly bringing out brand new titles to challenge our winners for their seats at the top table.
Here are a few of the upcoming board games slated for release in 2025 which you should absolutely keep an eye on – we’ll certainly be looking to get our sweaty reviewing hands on them ASAP!
Galactic Cruise – estimated release March 2025
Kinson Key Games’ Galactic Cruise is a super crunchy worker placement eurogame about corpo scientists competing to become the next CEO of the world’s first provider of vacation cruises in (Tim Curry voice) SPACE!
Its gameplay – heavy with tableau building and complex resource management challenges like its euro forebear Ark Nova – looks like catnip for worker placement lovers. But it’s the gorgeous, pastel retrofuturist art style that sets GalCru apart, and we can’t wait to try it.
Vantage – estimated release mid-2025
Easily the most surprising new board game concept we’ve seen in a while, designer Jamey Stegmaier describes their seven-year project Vantage is “an open-world, cooperative, roguelike adventure game for 1-6 players” which crash-lands players in totally different locations on a fully traversable planet, and has you wander the alien world looking for each other.
The real kicker? You explore the world in first person, through around 800 location cards, and there are over 900 other cards simulating the various interactions you can have with the world as you venture across it. It’s wildly ambitious, pretty unique as far as we’re aware, and we’re very keen to try it when it drops midway through this year.
Echoes of Time – estimated release October 2025
Popular designer Simone Luciani (Barrage, Darwin’s Journey, Grand Austria Hotel) is back with another strategy game. Designed for two to four players, Echoes of Time is a card-based game where you recruit a fellowship from various factions who help you to gather a precious resource known as ‘power’. With this, you can control time itself, and the world as you know it.
It’s a high-fantasy concept, but the initial pictures imply that things might not be as complex as they seem. However, the publisher does promise that you’ll be able to build an entirely new deck of cards each time you play – so variety is a top priority.
In a BoardGameGeek forum, publisher Cranio Creations promises that this title will be available at Essen 2025 in October.
Cyberpunk 2077: The Board Game – estimated release December 2025
It’s fair to say there’s been some fan controversy surrounding this second high profile board game adaptation of CD Projekt Red’s troubled sci-fi RPG. Billed as a “story driven tactical action game” for 1-4 players, it offers “42+ hours of gameplay” in its campaign, plus an “endless Afterlife mode”.
Most of the stink is probably simply because it’s one of a now famous breed of big, licensed IP board game adaptation, loaded up with millions of crowdfunding dollars, that puts beautiful miniatures front and center. Having been burnt by similar-looking games in the past whose design or gameplay disappointed, some folks are poorly disposed towards anything that fits that profile.
As journalists, we’re both skeptical and open minded, however – and as nerdy gamers with a liking for neon signs, techwear, and weird future slang, we’re very excited to try out a fully loaded, tabletop tactical RPG adventure in Night City. We’ll see, choom. We’ll see.
Sanctuary – estimated release date ??? 2025
Though it doesn’t currently have a place in this list, Ark Nova remains one of our favorite strategy board games. Sanctuary is, in all ways, the younger sibling of that ultra-crunchy title. It comes from the same designer, and it’s still about managing a zoo, but it comes with streamlined and simplified versions of the original game’s mechanics.
As we mentioned when Sanctuary was announced, it can be tough to get Ark Nova to the table – particularly if your pals aren’t as keen on six-hour gaming sessions as you are. This could be a great middle ground. If only we knew when it was coming – BoardGameGeek promises a 2025 release date, but details beyond that are far and few between.
How we choose the best board games for our guide
This buyer’s guide brings together the elite board games Wargamer’s journalists genuinely think are the absolute best in the world – and explains why we think they rule. Our number one goal here is to help you find a game you’ll love, whether you’re after wholesome fun with the kids, a raucous casual party experience, or something more nerdy and involved.
The categories in this guide are spread over different tastes and genres, so there’s something to suit every reader – but also so our writers can highlight their personal expertise and passions. We’re not soulless AI aggregators; we’re a small squad of real, human journalists. And we’re incurable, 24/7 tabletop game nerds with our own tastes and favorites – so when we recommend a game, it’s because we really love it.
We’re constantly testing new board games to cover on Wargamer, and every new release could smash its way onto this leaderboard. Every month, we review whether any new board games should replace any of the winners on this guide, or whether we should switch up some of the categories to make our recommendations more helpful to more people.
Rest assured: we’ll only recommend a game in this guide if one or more of our writers has personally, properly put it through its paces. For some games, this can be as simple as a few full playthroughs with different groups; for others (like the monster Frosthaven) it can mean months of intensive testing to get to grips with deeper elements of story and long-term value.
For more detail on our process and priorities when evaluating games, read our How we test page.
How we break down each board game in our guide
For every board game, we aim to explain two important things in clear language: what’s so great about the game; and how you play it. With that information, and our insights, you can hopefully judge whether each one is for you.
We don’t pack out our guide with a huge fact file of stats and numbers for each game. However, for each game, we’ll include a few quick facts that are vital to pick the right game for you:
- Players – how many people can play?
- Recommended age – how old do kids need to be in order to enjoy playing the game?
- Play time – how long does one full game session take?
- Complexity – on a 1-5 scale, how complicated is the game to learn and play, relative to others?
On age recommendations and play time, we usually quote the publisher’s official guidance – unless our tests have found something different.
What does our ‘complexity’ rating mean for board games?
We want to give you a rough idea of how hard it is to understand the rules, strategy, and mechanics of the game and get stuck into playing – which is what our complexity rating is for.
Being high or low complexity isn’t good or bad – but, before you drop your hard-earned cash on a board game, you should know how much it will strain your brain.
For us, a board game’s complexity is about three main factors:
- How many systems and rules you need to understand in order to play, and how complicated the interactions between them are.
- How well the game teaches you those systems and rules, including physical design choices, manuals, and player aids.
- How much ‘admin’ is required to make the game function – are there lots of pieces, tokens, and trackers in play, or a big board with lots of important information?
Here’s a broad summary of what each complexity rating means in practise:
- 1/5 – Ultra lightweight. Very light, a few simple rules with little to no rule interactions or score tracking. Ideal for kids, families, or casual party settings.
- 2/5 – Lightweight. Mostly simple rules with light strategy elements or alternate victory conditions, and minimal admin. Widely accessible.
- 3/5 – Midweight. A balanced experience that’s still accessible to most gamers, with some more complex rules and interactions that need to be mastered before you can fully enjoy the game. Some light admin needed.
- 4/5 – Heavyweight. Several layers of rules with significant interactions which you’ll need to learn for the game to function. Player decisions are mostly complex, with varied strategic options relying on multiple rules simultaneously. Usually a fair bit of admin per turn. Challenging.
- 5/5 – Ultra Heavyweight. Highly detailed turn structures, many possible rule interactions, multiple tracked game mechanics requiring heavy admin, high skill ceilings, and huge strategic variety. Best for experienced gamers.
Best board games FAQ
If you’re just dipping your toe into the board gaming hobby as a beginner, or else just looking to find a gift for the board gamer in your life, you might find yourself baffled by the brave new world of tabletop games, with all its genres and jargon. Read on for some basic info to help you get your bearings.
What’s the best place to buy board games?
In our opinion, the best place to buy new board games is always your local game store (LGS) – i.e. a physical store that specializes in tabletop games.
By buying in store, you can get expert, in-person advice from staff who actually play and love these games, and, depending on the store’s facilities, you may be able to try before you buy! Besides that, you’ll be supporting your local gaming community and (usually) a small business.
If that’s not the right option for you right now, though, almost all the games we recommend above can be found online at Amazon and other retailers like Target. If you buy through the links in our guide, Wargamer may also get a small commission from the store – so you’ll be supporting quality tabletop games journalism too!
You can also find some excellent deals on used board games (including new releases like some of our recommendations) via platforms like Ebay and Facebook Marketplace – but if you’re going to use those, make sure you check the seller is reputable and, if it’s possible and safe for you to do so, inspect the game physically before buying.
How long do board games take to play?
As a very rough estimate, the average board game session length is around 30 minutes to an hour, and many publishers try to design new games around that approximate time span, to make their game as convenient and accessible as possible for a wide audience.
However, modern board games, just like their classic counterparts, vary hugely in the average length of time it takes to play one game – from under ten minutes to six hours or more. Most board games will have the publisher’s estimated game time printed on the box – but be aware that that estimate is based on a notional ‘average’ player group who already know the rules. If it’s your first playthrough, or you have younger or less experienced gamers at the table, or both, allow a lot more time.
And that’s all our buying advice for now! This guide may be the absolute cream of the board game crop, but there’s a wide tabletop world out there, and we’re on a mission to profile the top-tier choices of every genre, scale, and type.
If you’re looking for something more niche, check out our picks of the best strategy board games, or get martial with the best war board games.