Description
In Tiletum, you and fellow players take on the role of rich merchants traveling throughout Europe, from Flanders to Venice, during the Golden Age of the Renaissance.
You will travel to various cities to acquire trade contracts for wool and iron, as well as a collection of their coats of arms. You must collect the required resources to fulfill contracts, invest in the construction of monumental cathedrals, gain the favor of noble families, and participate in important fairs where your main business occurs. You will also use the services of notable people who will be welcomed into your houses. You will thus gain prestige that will make you the most famous merchant of the Renaissance.
Tiletum is a dice management game in which dice have a dual function: gaining resources and performing actions. A certain number of dice will be rolled each round. On your turn, choose a die to gain the number of corresponding resources equal to the value of the die, then perform the associated action. The power of the action is inversely proportional to the value of the die, so the fewer resources you gain, the more powerful the actions you take and vice versa.
Components:
• one (1) Game Board
• four (4) player boards
• one (1) compass role marker
• twenty (20) resource dice
• one (1) dice bag
• one (1) action wheel
• six (6) action tokens
• twenty (20) action count tokens
• eight (8) town tiles
• eleven (11) fair tiles
• four (4) fair order tiles
• twenty-five (25) cathedral tiles
• nine (9) construction cost tiles
• six (6) corruption tokens
• fifty-four (54) bonus tiles
• twenty-six (26) contract tiles
• forty-five (45) character tiles
• four (4) "+100/+200" Victory Point marker (1/player)
• twenty (20) bonus action point (5/player)
• thirty-two (32) houses (8/player)
• twenty-eight (28) pillars (7/player)
• four (4) merchants (1/player)
• four (4) architects (1/player)
• twelve (12) generic markers (3/player; scoring marker, king track marker, and turn order marker)
• Resource Tokens in denominations of 1 and 5: gold, food, wool, stone, and iron