Deck-Building2009
Dominion: Intrigue box art

Box art via BoardGameGeek

Deck-Building

Dominion: Intrigue

Dominion with teeth, where your choices get sharper and your neighbors get meaner.

3.8 out of 53.8/5

Designed by Donald X. Vaccarino · 2009

Players2-4
Play time30 min
WeightMedium
Ages13+
Check price on AmazonAffiliate link · supports the site, costs you nothing extra
The verdict

If base Dominion felt a little too solitaire and tidy, Intrigue is the fix: more choices, more bite, more reasons to glance across the table. It's still the best place to learn what makes deck-builders sing.

Best for: Players who liked base Dominion but wanted more interaction and tougher decisions.

The full review

What it is

Dominion: Intrigue is a deck-builder for 2-4 players, designed by Donald X. Vaccarino, and it's the first big follow-up to the game that started the whole genre. You begin with a tiny deck of coins and points, then buy better cards from a shared row to make your deck hum. The hook here is choice. So many cards say pick one of these, so your turns ask real questions instead of running on autopilot.

The catch

What players love is how the victory cards finally pull their weight. Instead of dead point cards clogging your hand, several of them act or pay you too, which keeps the late game alive. The interaction steps up as well. Swindler swaps your good buys for junk, Torturer hands out cruel either-or decisions, and Masquerade passes cards around the table. It's pointed, but most folks find it strategic rather than spiteful.

Who it's for

Here's the honest part. If you adored base Dominion because it felt like polishing your own machine in peace, the extra needling may grate, and a few people call it death by paper cuts. The art and bones are pure Dominion, so it can read as more of the same. Still, for anyone who wanted sharper choices and a little table tension, this is the one I'd hand you first.

What other players say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and player discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

More from the shelf

All reviews