A Gest of Robin Hood, 2nd Printing

Status: Shipping
Orders To Date: 496
Weight: 4.0000
COMPONENTS
- One 17” x 22” Mounted Game Board
- 44 Cards (Event Deck & Travellers Deck)
- 42 Wooden Pieces
- One Half-size, Full-color Countersheet
- Two Player Mats
- Two Player Foldout Screens
- Two Custom 6-sided Dice
- One Rules of Play Booklet
- One Playbook
- One Learn to Play Booklet
Published: 2024
Designer: Fred Serval
Developer: Joe Dewhurst
Graphics: Chechu Nieto, Robert ALtbauer, and Terry Leeds
Art Director: Justin Martinez
Designer: Fred Serval
Developer: Joe Dewhurst
Graphics: Chechu Nieto, Robert ALtbauer, and Terry Leeds
Art Director: Justin Martinez
Price:
$82.00
Additional taxes may apply to international orders.
Component Photos by Scott Mansfield
Note on 2nd Printing: This will be identical to the 1st Printing, except that any known errata will be corrected.
HOW TO PLAY VIDEO FROM WATCH IT PLAYED
Note on 2nd Printing: This will be identical to the 1st Printing, except that any known errata will be corrected.
HOW TO PLAY VIDEO FROM WATCH IT PLAYED
FULL GAME VIDEO PLAYTHROUGH FROM WATCH IT PLAYED
LIVING RULES
- Rules of Play Booklet
- Learn to Play Booklet
- FAQ & Clarifications Document (Google Doc)
- Rules of Play Booklet - Italian Translation
- Learn to Play Booklet - Italian Translation
ONLINE RESOURCES
- A Gest of Robin Hood on BGG
- 16 Minute Preview Copy Unboxing Video of A Gest of Robin Hood from Designer Fred Serval
- Heroic & Villainous Personas Sheet (PDF)
- 2 Hour and 38 Minute Video Teach, Full Game Playthrough, and Discussion from Heavy Cardboard
- 1 Hour and 7 Minute Full Video Playthrough from The Players' Aid
- Action Point 1 Article from The Players' Aid
- Action Point 2 Article from The Players' Aid
- Action Point 3 Article from The Players' Aid
- Action Point 4 Article from The Players' Aid
- Action Point 5 Article from The Players' Aid
- 18 Minute Video AAR from KilroyWasHere
- 53 Minute Full Game Playthrough Video from Legendary Tactics
- Video Series from The Boardgames Chronicle
- Session Report: A Gest of Robin Hood Demo at SDHistCon 2021, by The Boardgames Chronicle
- Is A Gest of Robin Hood a COIN Game?, by Fred Serval
- Two-Handing Robin Hood; or, How to Rob Your Own Carriage, by Joe Dewhurst
REVIEWS
- 16 Minute Video Review from The Discriminating Gamer
- 49 Minute Video Review from The Players' Aid
- Podcast Review from The BGG Podcast (skip to 20:43)
- Podcast Review from The Longest Turn Podcast (skip to 4:18)
- 12 Minute Video Review from The Cardboard Herald
- Review and from DystoPeek [French]
- 30 Minute Video Review from Drive Thru Games
- Video Review from Board Game Animal
- Review from Meeple Mountain
- Review from Games Fanatic [English, Polish]
- 18 Minute Video Review from Legendary Tactics
UNBOXING VIDEOS
- Unboxing and First Look Video from The Gaming Gang
- 19 Minute Unboxing Video from KilroyWasHere
- Unboxing Article from Armchair Dragoons
- 6 Minute Unboxing Video from Legendary Tactics
- 6 Minute Unboxing and Overview Video from The Boardgames Chronicle
- 15 Minute Unboxing Video from Ones Upon a Game
- 8 Minute First Look Video from Legendary Tactics
- 31 Minute 2nd Printing Unboxing and Overview Video from The Boardgames Chronicle
UNBOXING VIDEOS
NEWS
- (New!) Podcast Interview from Into the Greenwood with Designer Fred Serval
- 50 Minute Video Interview from BGG's Cardboard Creations with Designer Fred Serval
- 1 Hour and 20 Minute Video Interview from GMT Talk with Designer Fred Serval and Joe Dewhurst
- Review and Interview from DystoPeek with Designer Fred Serval [French]
- Another Interview from Dystopeek with Designer Fred Serval [French]
- Interview from Mesa de Guerra with Designer Fred Serval [Spanish]
- Podcast Interview from History On The Table with Designer Fred Serval
- Two-Part Interview from LudoVox with Designer Fred Serval [French with English Auto-Translate Function]
- Interview from The Players Aid with Designer Fred Serval
- #2 on the May 2024 Hot Games List from Watch It Played
- First Look Video from Rob's Tabletop World
Description
One of England’s most popular literary heroes is a man whose most endearing activities to his public were the robbery and killing of landowners, in particular church landowners, and the maintenance of guerrilla warfare against established authority represented by the Sheriff. A man who would now, of course, be described as a terrorist.
- Rodney Hilton, “The Origins of Robin Hood”, Past & Present #14 (Oxford University Press), 1958
A Gest of Robin Hood is the second game in the Irregular Conflicts Series, further adapting the COIN system to depict peasant revolts, feudal tax collection, and outlaw activities in late 12th century medieval England. Transposing one of GMT’s most popular systems into a simpler format and a more approachable setting makes A Gest of Robin Hood perfect for newcomers to wargaming. At the same time, it also offers a tight challenge for more experienced wargamers who can enjoy a tense asymmetric duel in under an hour.
Highlights:
Player Factions:
Historiography of Robin Hood:
The year is 1192. Richard I “Lionheart” is held captive by Duke Leopold of Austria, interrupting his return from the Crusades. Meanwhile, the King’s brother Prince John rules England as his regent. Prince John uses his temporary powers to increase taxes and pass laws in favor of loyal members of the nobility and clergy. Sir Robin of Locksley, a young and courageous minor noble, has recently returned from the Third Crusade to see his family dispossessed of its wealth by the corrupt Sheriff of Nottingham. He decides to revolt against what he perceives as an illegitimate authority and takes to the forest where he finds unlikely allies: rogue yeomen, poachers, and other bandits. Perhaps this sounds familiar?
This version of the story of Robin Hood, the one many of us grew up with, is surprisingly modern and polished, as it is based on 19th century retellings of older folktales by authors such as Howard Pyle. Additional layers have later been added to the character of Robin Hood by the 20th century film industry, from the 1922 adventure film starring Douglas Fairbanks, right through to the gritty reboots of the past decade. The original version of Robin Hood can be traced back to the 14th Century, first appearing in a brief mention in the allegorical poem Piers Plowman (~1370s) and then later reappearing in a variety of ballads. His first dedicated literary work (that we know of) is A Gest of Robyn Hode, printed around the turn of the 15th and 16th centuries, which compiles several older tales of a heroic outlaw fighting for justice. This original version of the Robin Hood character was slightly different from the one that we know today: rougher, more violent, and closer perhaps to the contemporary image of a guerrilla fighter.
In 1958, the medieval historian Rodney Hilton published a study of the original Robin Hood tales and what they symbolized. The audience for these tales were the common people of the late 14th century, and we can see that the character is himself kind and well-tempered when dealing with representatives of these people, such as the Potter, but behaves ruthlessly with representatives of the ruling class, like the pompous Bishop of Hereford. Members of the emerging free peasant class recognized their struggles in the heroic figure of a brave yeomen, fighting unfair taxes and judiciary systems established to keep them in check. In this narrative, the King is a distant and kind figure unaware of the people's suffering, who will eventually support them in their struggle once he returns to restore justice. This illusion would fade after the 1381 peasant revolts and Richard II’s betrayal of the common folk.
A Gest of Robin Hood taps into this rich historiography, leveraging the romantic story that we all know but setting it in a more realistic context by depicting Robin Hood as a complex figure. A social bandit, as the historian Hobsbawm describes him, at the head of an insurrection against the Sheriff of Nottingham.
Number of players: 2

- Rodney Hilton, “The Origins of Robin Hood”, Past & Present #14 (Oxford University Press), 1958

A Gest of Robin Hood is the second game in the Irregular Conflicts Series, further adapting the COIN system to depict peasant revolts, feudal tax collection, and outlaw activities in late 12th century medieval England. Transposing one of GMT’s most popular systems into a simpler format and a more approachable setting makes A Gest of Robin Hood perfect for newcomers to wargaming. At the same time, it also offers a tight challenge for more experienced wargamers who can enjoy a tense asymmetric duel in under an hour.
A Gest of Robin Hood Game Map
- An ideal entry point to the COIN system and the ICS series: a two player, relatively low complexity game with a family friendly theme that plays in one hour and introduces all of the key concepts found in the COIN series.
- A new hidden movement mechanic: The Sheriff will chase Robin Hood across Nottinghamshire to prevent him from organizing peasant revolts, but Robin can sneak away and hide amongst his Merry Men.
- A second new hidden movement mechanic: Carriages serve as a simple twist on Lines of Communication, transferring wealth back to Nottingham while providing a target for robbery by the Merry Men—but some of them might be a trap, containing concealed Henchmen!
- Random encounters with rich travelers: Robin Hood draws from the Travelers Deck when conducting a Rob action, then decides whether to play it safe or demand a larger ‘donation’ with potentially negative consequences.
- A streamlined sequence of play: Further developing the two-player sequence of play first found in Colonial Twilight, this new sequence of play is easy to understand while still presenting difficult tactical decisions.
A few Event Cards
- Robin Hood and the Merry Men: Robbing from the rich to give to the poor. An archetypal insurgency faction focused on undermining the Sheriff’s authority by inciting peasant revolts, robbing carriages and travelers, and building a network of camps across Nottinghamshire.
- The Sheriff of Nottingham and his Henchmen: In charge of maintaining order and collecting taxes for Prince John. A proto-counterinsurgent faction focusing on suppressing peasant revolts and securing roads to ensure the safe travel of wealth confiscated from the parishes.
Historiography of Robin Hood:
The year is 1192. Richard I “Lionheart” is held captive by Duke Leopold of Austria, interrupting his return from the Crusades. Meanwhile, the King’s brother Prince John rules England as his regent. Prince John uses his temporary powers to increase taxes and pass laws in favor of loyal members of the nobility and clergy. Sir Robin of Locksley, a young and courageous minor noble, has recently returned from the Third Crusade to see his family dispossessed of its wealth by the corrupt Sheriff of Nottingham. He decides to revolt against what he perceives as an illegitimate authority and takes to the forest where he finds unlikely allies: rogue yeomen, poachers, and other bandits. Perhaps this sounds familiar?
A few Traveller Cards
In 1958, the medieval historian Rodney Hilton published a study of the original Robin Hood tales and what they symbolized. The audience for these tales were the common people of the late 14th century, and we can see that the character is himself kind and well-tempered when dealing with representatives of these people, such as the Potter, but behaves ruthlessly with representatives of the ruling class, like the pompous Bishop of Hereford. Members of the emerging free peasant class recognized their struggles in the heroic figure of a brave yeomen, fighting unfair taxes and judiciary systems established to keep them in check. In this narrative, the King is a distant and kind figure unaware of the people's suffering, who will eventually support them in their struggle once he returns to restore justice. This illusion would fade after the 1381 peasant revolts and Richard II’s betrayal of the common folk.
A Gest of Robin Hood taps into this rich historiography, leveraging the romantic story that we all know but setting it in a more realistic context by depicting Robin Hood as a complex figure. A social bandit, as the historian Hobsbawm describes him, at the head of an insurrection against the Sheriff of Nottingham.
Number of players: 2
