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15th June 2023 Thursday night gaming in Aldershot continues with Formula Dé Mini. Race around famous F1 tracks in this cut-down version of a classic racing game. As the name might suggest, Formula Dé Mini is a smaller iteration of classic racing game Formula Dé which is itself re-iterated by Formula D. I'm not going to do the usual blog for Formula Dé Mini because of it's similarities to Formula D. Instead I'll just list how it differs.
Component quality in Formula Dé Mini is comparable to the original Formula Dé. The boards are well made as are the tiles, cars, tokens and dice. Using plastic gold discs for life points seems a little strange to me but they're as good as anything else for tokens. The board features the same fantastic and detailed art that was found on the boards from Formula Dé . There's a little bit of iconography on the board but that's about it. Since Formula Dé Mini lacks the 6 types of resource from Formula Dé , all the icons and symbols related to those are gone, making this game easier to understand. How's it play? Formula Dé Mini retains most of the mechanics from the other games, playing almost identically: Read the Formula D blog for an overview of how it all works. Formula Dé Mini broadly only differs in 2 ways, although many of the optional rules have been removed. Firstly; the 6th gear is missing which makes sense considering the Formula Dé Mini tracks are somewhat smaller and it isn't really needed. It also removes one of the riskier (And longest to count!) gear dice from the game, making the game slightly less complex. Secondly, all of the types of resources (Gearbox, brakes, fuel etc.) have been removed and replaced with a single universal resource - the aforementioned life points. Each car in Formula Dé Mini is given 16 life points at the game start. Overshoot a corner? Spend life points instead of tyres. Need to skip a gear? Spend life points. Collide with another car or take engine damage? Spend life points and so on. you get the idea. The game becomes notably easier and quicker to manage with a single resource. Removed rules include those for weather conditions tyres as well for custom cars. Finally, it's definitely worth mentioning that Formula Dé Mini is completely compatible with both other previous iterations of the game. That means all of the previously published tracks can be used with the Formula Dé Mini dashboards and components. Additionally, if you have the original Formula Dé core game, then the 6th gear dice can optionally also be used in Formula Dé Mini with those tracks. Excellent! Overall
It seems obvious that the goal of Formula Dé Mini was to create an iteration of the original that was both easier to learn and faster to play and I think it succeeds at both. Formula Dé Mini is somewhat easier to learn and play and is also a lot more forgiving in that regard. The occasional mistake like having a car overshooting a corner by a lot of spaces might well cripple or eliminate that car in the full versions of the game but here, it would instead just cost more life points - although if a car loses all it's life points, it will still be eliminated. The removal of the multi-stop corners from tracks that come with the game removes one of the more finicky aspects of the rules. This means the remaining rules are reasonably straightforward to learn and several of them are situational and might not even occur during the game. Is Formula Dé Mini quicker to play? Yes, especially when using the supplied smaller tracks but even when using the 'full-sized' tracks play will a little faster. Reducing the resource management from 6 to 1 resource makes decisions quicker. Even so, players will be faced with similar decisions to the full games. I'm impressed with how Formula Dé Mini manages to retain the 'feel' of the full sized games. It's always fundamentally been a game about how much players are willing to push their cars through the corners and how much risk they're willing to take to do so, this hasn't changed. Sure, Formula Dé Mini may take the edge of that risk but it's still always there. So how does Formula Dé Mini stack compared to the full versions of the game? The answer is; pretty good actually. When I heard there was a version of Formula Dé that removed all the resources, I was pretty sceptical and sort of assumed that it would overly simplify or 'infantilise' the game but that wasn't the case. What you have is genuinely a quicker easier version of the game to play. On a intellectual level I feel Formula Dé/Formula D is the better, more satisfying game to play. On visceral level though, I found Formula Dé Mini very enjoyable to play. Some of the more challenging elements are gone but it means you can now blast round the tracks safe in the knowledge that you have some more wiggle room to mitigate those bad dice rolls! It's an arcade racing game compared to a sim! If you're looking for a quicker version of the game to play - or a way to introduce Formula D to players, this will definitely do the job. While Formula De Mini remains long out of print, the still available Formula D utilises these simplified rules in its beginner game. Alternatively, if you've got the original Formula Dé , you can simply acquire a bunch of tokens and play it that way. I generally wouldn't choose Formula Dé Mini over the other versions but it's still a great game.
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