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The Best Solo Board Games Worth Playing Alone in 2026 - IGN Image

Most of us know playing the best board games with friends and family can be a great way to spend your free time. But what about turning to board games when you find yourself alone and looking for something to pass the time? It's not as strange as it may sound, because many board games these days are designed to be played solo, or at least have a fun single-plyaer mode. From strategy games to roll-and-write board games and everything in between, there are many options available for solo play. Below, we'll take a look at some of the best board games that can be played alone, giving you a chance to relax and unwind while still engaging your mind.

TL;DR: These are the Best Solo Board Games

Vantage

Many games have tried to give players a sandbox in which to explore and tell stories, but all have come up against the limitations of physical components. Enter Vantage, which uses novel mechanics and over a thousand cards to give players as much freedom and variety as possible. Playing alone is a joyous jaunt across an alien planet at your own pace, as you encounter seemingly endless strange civilizations and places with the astonishing potential to work, settle down or just keep on tooling up and exploring as you see fit. And, as we explored in our Vantage review, long-term play begins to feel like a campaign as you unlock more and more of the game's fascinating secrets.

Creature Caravan

In Creature Caravan players are merchants, exploring a fantasy land in search of strange creatures and fabulous treasures to add to their menagerie for market. In practice this is a tableau-building game where you're exploring and scouring the wilderness, looking for likely pickups whose special powers and eventual value will give you an edge. Since players do this independently from one another, that means it also works very well solo, with lots of variety to experience and discoveries to make, with an automated bot to play against providing a sense of accomplishment.

A Wild Venture

While many solo-friendly adventure games see you cast as mighty heroes, slaying dragons and saving kingoms, the delightful A Wild Venture is a much more cosy affair where you play as an animal adventurer competing for their village community cup. This sets the stage for a surprisingly strategic offering in which you collect gear and compansions as an engine to explore the board and fulfil tasks, which gradually tire or wear and accumulate toward an eventual end-game score, with the constant cycling of cards forcing you to adapt your tactics as you play. With lovely production values and plenty of variety this is ideal for a comfortable night in. You'll need to download the solo rules from the publisher, though.

War Story: Occupied France

A fascinating and novel combination of choose your own adventure and tactical wargame, War Story: Occupied France puts you in a charge of a team of secret agents working behind enemy lines in World War 2. Leading you through a series of well-written text paragraphs, with choices at the end of each, it weaves a compelling story of danger and espionage. Yet at the same time, your descisions play out on miniature maps where your team and their allies can lay nail-biting ambushes to take on superior numbers of enemy soliders. There's enough difficulty and descision trees to provide replay value, and you can link all the scenarios into a campaign for the ultimate solo challenge. Altough the official player count is up to six working cooperatively, it's best experienced alone to maginfy the burden of command.

Invincible: The Hero-Building Game

Based on the popular comic book, and now also a popular animated TV show, this represents superheroism as you've never seen it before, with genuine peril and lashings of gore. This board game adaptation, which got 8 out of 10 in our review, focuses on the angle of young heroes still learning to control their powers, as you seach your hand for cool power combos to give to your growing proteges, while balancing this influx of upgrades with the pressing need to smash bad guys and save civillians. Each scenario links to a major storyline in the TV show, allowing fans to reenact their favourite episodes and the whole thing can also be played as a full campaign if desired.

If you want to familiarize yourself with the source material before diving into this game, you can check out our guide on reading the Invincible comics online. The show itself wrapped up its third season earlier this year and has been approved for a fifth season.

Legacy of Yu

Travel back to mythic China and struggle against the ever-present threat of barbarian tribes as you try to save the kingdom from flooding as the legendary Yu the Great. This is a fascinating mix of odd bedfellows: on the one hand there's a compelling resource management and worker placement game of rich strategy as you try to build canals off the main body of the river. On the other, this is supplemented by narrative paragraphs and military elements as you guard against barbarian incursions in an ongoing campaign. Despite the odd mixture it works brilliantly, offering you lots of strategic challenge, historical flavour and moral dilemmas along the way.

If you like the elements of history within this game, we recommend checking out some of the best historical board games available.

Final Girl

If there’s a particular theme that excels for solo gaming, it’s horror. When it’s just you and the dice in a darkened room, board gaming gets the closest it can realistically manage to feeling unsettling. And whatever your particular fear is, one of Final Girl’s many, many expansion sets will have you covered. It’s a modular game in which you play as the titular survivor at the end of a horror story, splitting time allocations between taking actions, playing cards and getting more cards, a split that gives the game its tension and strategic edge. But the core box isn’t enough to play on its own: you also need a Film Box, which comes with two scenarios based on classic horror movies, so you can pick and choose between your favorite flicks and your worst fears: you can explore the options with our Final Girl buying guide. Whatever you choose, you’re guaranteed a thrill ride in this horribly unfair but narratively brilliant game.

Dune Imperium

Despite it being one of the best strategy games of recent years, you might be surprised to find Dune: Imperium on this list since really it needs three or four players to shine. However, the need to also cater for two-player board games led the designer to include an automated opponent, House Hagal. Despite this being a fairly interactive game, House Hagal is simple to administer yet still manages to block out board space, steal resources and send in troops to contest territory, just like a real player. Solitaire you face two of them, with varying difficulty levels, which feels a lot more satisfying than just playing for a high score, as well as letting you experience this excellent game without roping in your friends. Read our Dune: Imperium review for more info.

While you don't need to be too familiar with the source material to play this game, it never hurts to read through atleast a few of Frank Herbert's Dune books before you dive in.

Hadrian's Wall

Hadrian’s Wall is a flip-and-write, where cards are flipped off the top of a deck and then the players - here representing Roman generals - use the depicted resources as they see fit on their own individual player sheets. It’s always been a solo-friendly genre, but this game really excels when played solitaire, not least because there’s now a downloadable campaign for it. Your task is to construct walls and fortresses in Roman Britain to repel Pictish invasions at the end of each round. That sense of dynamism is one of the things that sets the game apart from its peers. The others are a satisfying array of crunchy combos to cross off on your sheet, for plenty of strategic depth, and a long-term commitment to resource management with actual tokens rather than box-checks. Between them, these three things push Hadrian’s Wall away from the abstract conventions of its genre and into the living, breathing realm of history.

Imperium: Horizons

Civilization games have a long and storied history, but they’re not, on the whole, very solo-friendly. The Imperium series from Osprey games, of which Imperium: Horizons is the latest and greatest entry, is a notable exception. It’s also a fascinating exercise in bringing the deck-building mechanic to the genre. Each player selects a civilization, which comes with a unique starting deck and set of cards they can add as the game progresses, and it’s this granting of a specific deck that makes it suitable for solo play. It’s on you to leverage the game’s complex mechanisms, which newly includes trading and economics, to build your civilization from scratch, without overextending yourself and collapsing into the ever-present threat of revolt. It’s a significant challenge with any one of the fourteen included civilizations, but when you realise each one requires a unique strategic approach, you’ll understand you’ve got a solitaire game of colossal replay value and depth.

You can check out our hands-on review of Imperium Horizons for more details about the game.

Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective

Step into the shoes of literature’s greatest detective in this board game equivalent of a mystery novel. Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective includes a number of scenarios and fun props that really sell the experience. There’s a map of London, an address directory and a newspaper, each offering clues to hunt down and suspects to interview. Be warned, however, that this game does not hold your hand; each adventure presents a small amount of setup and exposition, and then sends you out into the city without much direction, leaving you to decide what locations to visit and who to accuse. This game gives you the chance to live up to Holmes’ reputation, which is a tall order given how though the mysteries can be.

You can check out more of our picks for the best mystery board games if you like this one or dive into our guide to Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes books.

Robinson Crusoe: Adventures on the Cursed Island

Robinson Crusoe: Adventures on the Cursed Island casts players as shipwreck survivors on an island that is actively trying to kill them. There are several different characters to play as, each with various strengths and weaknesses. You will find yourself scavenging for food, building and upgrading shelters, and exploring perilous locations on the island. The game includes rules for a solo variant, but the general consensus is that it’s easier for a single player to simply take on the role of more than one character. There is a lot going on in Robinson Crusoe and the ample iconography can be a bit overwhelming, but those that stick it out will find a rewarding adventure that begs for return trips.

Once you have the base game, there are three different Robinson Crusoe expansions you can check out as well. There's a lot of depth to be explored here.

Dinosaur Island: Rawr ‘n Write

Roll and write games, like co-op board games, often make very good solo fare because even multiplayer you’re all competing to make the best use of the same set of dice. Most, however, are too fast and simple for a compelling solitaire experience. Dinosaur Island: Rawr N’ Write is longer and more complex than its peers, but it pays off in a deeper, more satisfying game. Your dice rolls generate a wide variety of resources that you’ll need to balance carefully to build and run your Jurassic World style theme park. You even draw out the buildings on a grid and run tours through it but beware: if your security isn’t up to scratch, you may end up with fewer tourists than you started with. For more info, check out our Dinosaur Island: Rawr 'n Write review.

Cascadia

While Cascadia is one of the very best family board games, at first glance it doesn’t seem to offer much to a lone player. Sure the wildlife theme is appealing. And the simple yet addictive gameplay, where you choose pairs of random terrain tiles and animal tokens to add to your nature reserve to satisfy a range of scoring patterns, is fun enough. But what elevates it as a solitaire game is the list of achievements in the back of the rulebook. These task you to approach the game with different setups and rule tweaks, trying to reach particular score thresholds. Easy at first, the difficulty soon ramps up, giving you lots of varied challenges that are supremely satisfying to tick off, one by one. You can read our review of Cascadia for more information about this board game.

Terraforming Mars

In this heavy Euro-style game, you’ll help make the Martian surface hospitable to human life by increasing the oxygen levels in the atmosphere, raising the temperature from below freezing, and by building man-made oceans to sustain life. This is done through a combination of resource management and tableau building. You’ll take on the role of a mega corporation looking to profit off of humanity’s foray onto the red planet. add In the solo game, you’ll race against the clock to maximize each of the three end game parameters. Every turn, you play new cards from your hand, meaning your list of available actions will grow until you’ve assembled a sprawling tableau of action cards that can combo off of each other. It’s a very crunchy game experience, which is perfect for those who appreciate a good optimization puzzle. There are also a number of expansion scenarios available, making Terraforming Mars one of the best solo experiences available, as well as one of the best board games for adults, too.

Spirit Island

By their nature, cooperative board games make for great solo experiences. Because of the players-versus-the-board structure, co-ops easily allow one person to control two or more players. One of the best co-op games in recent years is Spirit Island, a game about protecting your land from waves of vicious colonizers. You control island spirits, each with their own deck of power cards that help destroy settlements and repair land that’s been ravaged by agriculture. The strong theme and combo-heavy card play combine into one of the most robust cooperative experiences we’ve played. It just so happens to make an ideal solo game as well.

Solo Board Game FAQs

Is it weird to play board games alone?

Not at all! It's probably something that people have been doing for hundreds, maybe thousands of years. There's a 1697 French engraving that shows a woman at the King's court playing peg solitaire, and if it had reached the highest circles of nobility at that time, chances are it's a lot older. The solitaire card game that you've likely played on your computer at some point can be dated back to the late 1700s in northern Europe. Speaking of which, it's generally not thought odd for people to play video games like solitaire or far more complex fare alone, even in these internet-enabled times, so why should playing a board game by yourself be any different? In both cases, the enjoyment comes from trying to beat the challenge set by the game, and then trying again to see if you can better your own performance. Solo board games, much like their video counterparts, can also be enjoyed in part for the visual and tactile pleasures that they provide. It's no more peculiar than doing a jigsaw puzzle.

For more, check out our picks for the best party board games and the best deck-building card games.

Matt Thrower is a contributing freelancer for IGN, specializing in tabletop games. You can reach him on BlueSky at @mattthr.bsky.social.

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