GameSpot editors' review
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CNET editors' rating:
stars
OK
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 08/03/2007
- Released on: 08/01/2007
- Originally published on GameSpot: Spyglass Board Games (Xbox 360) Review
For 400 points ($5), you can now play chess online on Xbox Live. Or, if that's too highfalutin' for your tastes, you can play checkers instead...or, if you're some kind of weirdo board-game aficionado, reversi (otherwise known as Othello) and mancala. These four games are what make up Spyglass Board Games, a bare bones collection that lets you play all of the above online against friends, as well as against brain-dead computer opponents. The presentation's been stripped bare and there's a real dearth of options here, but if all you want is to get your checkers or chess on against friends on Xbox Live, this is a suitable way to go.

Spyglass Board Games is a good way to play online chess against friends--it's not good for much else.
If you don't know how to play chess or checkers, you can just stop reading right now because this game isn't for you. It's probably safe to say that at least a few people have heard of reversi, the game that gives its two players either white or black tiles that must be placed on the game board to create lines of same-colored pieces. We'll hazard to guess that the vast majority of you haven't heard of mancala. In this game, each player has his or her own colored pieces, and the board consists of a series of pits that contain varying numbers of those pieces in stacks. At the end of each row of pits is a primary pit, and your goal is to move the pieces onto that primary pit. When you move a stack, a piece moves to each subsequent pit leading up to the main pit. So, if you were to move a stack of four pieces off of the fourth pit, a piece each would land on the third, second, first, and primary pit. Pieces can also end up on your opponent's side and be stuck there until moved.
Hopefully these explanations are good enough for you, because that's about as good as you're going to get within the game itself. There's a fairly detailed help document on chess, but the remaining help files are woefully inadequate, meaning you'll probably want to do some online research before embarking on these more obscure games.
Once you know the rules, each of the games function accordingly. The interface is simple and effective in each game, though the presentation leaves much to be desired. There's plenty of board and piece customization for each, but all the options are dirt ugly, and there's no option to play anything but 3D chess. If you prefer your computer chessboards to be 2D, too bad. Also, there are no options to mess with beyond the main rule sets for each game. Want to play speed chess? Can't do it.
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