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by mswphd 21 days ago
hard to give recommendations without more information. For example

1. what languages does he know? there are boardgames that are localized into other languages. Probably the easiest route tbh.

2. what kinds of games does he like? for example, many boardgames have very little english on the game pieces. think any game that uses a standard poker deck, e.g. solitaire, or many others. Mahjong is another example though, as is dominos).

There are some modern boardgames that might also be fine, namely ones that discourage communication in the first place. It's common in co-op boardgames. For example, the Lord of the Rings trick taking game is 1-4 players, and during gameplay there is no discussion allowed. Game pieces can be separated into two categories

1. scenario-specific ones, which have text on them/must be read to be understood/played. You could maybe translate them? or it may have been localized for a language he's literate in. I don't know.

2. secnario-independent ones, which are (functionally) poker cards.

For this game you only need to share language when understanding the scenario-specific cards, and when planning strategy before each scenario starts. I would be comfortable playing the game with someone I don't share a language with if

1. we both know the game (this would be the hard part), and

2. we have two copies of the game, so we each can read our scenario-specific cards in our own language, and

3. we struggled through with a translation app before each scenario starts, if we want to discuss strategy.

1 comments

He only speaks Spanish. He plays with my Mom who also only speaks Spanish. They play Solitaire, dominoes and Sequence.
Many boardgames are also available in spanish. BoardGameGeek is a popular boardgame website. Unfortunately, they don't seem to have an ergonomic way to filter searches on a spanish-language version of the game being available. But you can go to a particular game, look at the "versions" tab, and see what languages are available. From this I can see the LOTR trick taking game I mentioned is published in spanish (as well as many other languages).

https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/429293/the-lord-of-the-r...

I don't know firsthand for good games similar to what you've mentioned. I asked an LLM about "enhanced" versions of Solitaire specifically and is mentioned

* The Crew: it's a trick-taking game (like the LOTR one). which of the two trick taking games is better is probably debatable, notably the crew is 2-5 players, while LOTR is 1-4. I've only played LOTR at >= 2, so can't comment on it at 1 player.

* Regicide: 1-4 person cooperative game where you "fight monsters" by playing standard poker cards. I haven't played it personally but I saw a video on it and was interested in it from that.

All of the above (I think) have their core game pieces not really involve any language (besides eg numbers). So you could get them in spanish, and still plausibly play with them if you learned the english rules from somewhere. BoardGameGeek often has rules files available online, e.g. regicide's rules in english are downloadable on this page

https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/307002/regicide/files