Cascadia review and Overview

A Stunning Tile-Laying Adventure in the Pacific Northwest

Cascadia is one of the most consistently recommended games on this site and for good reason. It is accessible, beautiful, well-produced, and produces genuinely interesting decisions across every player count. It won the Spiel des Jahres in 2022 and it earns that award every time it hits the table.

Designed by Randy Flynn and published by Flatout Games and AEG, Cascadia plays 1 to 4 players in 30 to 45 minutes. You are building a Pacific Northwest wildlife habitat, placing terrain tiles and wildlife tokens in patterns to score points.

What Is Cascadia?

You draft pairs: one hexagonal terrain tile and one wildlife token. The tile goes into your growing landscape, connecting to existing terrain. The token goes onto any valid tile that accepts that wildlife type.

Each wildlife species has its own scoring rules. Bears want to be in groups of exactly three. Salmon want to be in long straight lines. Hawks want isolation. Foxes score based on the variety around them. Elk want to alternate direction. Balancing all five within a single landscape is the puzzle.

Nature tokens let you swap out unwanted wildlife choices or bend placement rules. They are earned by creating large matching terrain areas, which adds a second strategic layer.

Key Game Information

Players1-4 (great at all counts)
Play time30-45 minutes
DesignerRandy Flynn
PublisherFlatout Games / AEG
CategoriesTile Placement Games, Pattern Building Games, Solo Games, Family Games, Gateway Games
MechanicsDrafting, Tile Placement, Pattern Building, Set Collection
ThemeAnimals and Pets, Nature and Environment
ComplexityLight to Medium-light
Best forAnyone who wants a beautiful, satisfying game that works for every group from casual to experienced

How to Play Cascadia

The shared supply has four pairs of terrain tiles and wildlife tokens, arranged in a row. On your turn, take one pair (one tile plus its matching token). Place the tile adjacent to your existing landscape and place the token on any compatible tile.

Each terrain tile shows which wildlife it accepts, often multiple types. Some tiles accept all five. Once a token is placed on a tile, no further tokens can go there.

At the end of the game, score points for your wildlife patterns using the scoring cards for each species in play. Score additional points for creating large contiguous matching terrain areas. Spend nature tokens during the game to override the usual pair-drafting rule.

The wildlife scoring cards vary between games, so bears might score differently this game than last time. This is what drives replayability.

Playing at Different Player Counts

1 player (solo): One of the best solo modes in modern board gaming. You play against a set of increasing difficulty challenges with scoring benchmarks. Consistently satisfying.

2 players: More controlled and strategic. Easier to plan ahead when fewer tiles cycle through the supply.

3-4 players: More competitive for specific tiles and tokens. You need to be more flexible and react to what becomes available.

Cascadia scales better than almost any game at its weight. I have enjoyed it at every count.

Playing Solo

The solo mode is genuinely excellent. You work through a series of progressively harder challenges, each with a target score to beat. The structure gives you a clear goal and a sense of progression. It is one of the best reasons to own the game.

Components and Production Quality

The artwork, illustrated by Beth Sobel, is beautiful. The hexagonal terrain tiles have a warm, earthy colour palette that builds into an attractive landscape as the game progresses. The wooden wildlife tokens have real character.

Everything is clear to read and easy to sort. The insert is well designed and setup takes a few minutes at most.

  • Landmarks Expansion (2023): Adds landmark tokens that provide additional scoring opportunities and strategic variety.

There have also been several small promo packs with alternative wildlife scoring cards.

Digital Versions

Cascadia is not available on Board Game Arena

If You Like Cascadia, Try These

  • Harmonies: Very similar in feel. Tile-laying and animal scoring with gorgeous artwork. If you love Cascadia, try Harmonies next.
  • Kingdomino: Faster and lighter. Good if Cascadia occasionally feels slightly long.
  • Azul: More abstract and competitive but similarly accessible. Great for groups who want more direct tension.
  • Calico: Pattern building with a cat theme. Similar weight and a strong solo mode.
  • Isle of Cats: More complex but rewards the same pattern-building satisfaction.

Final Thoughts

Cascadia is one of the most reliably excellent games in my collection. It works at every player count, it looks beautiful on the table, it teaches in ten minutes, and it keeps rewarding you the more you play it.

The solo mode alone is reason enough to own it if you play games alone. The scoring card variety means no two games feel the same.

If you do not already own Cascadia, buy it. It belongs in every collection.

Cascadia won the Spiel des Jahres in 2022, and playing it tells you exactly why.

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