Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle Review (2024)

Fans of a certain teenage wizard could be heard giving a collective shudder of trepidation when the announcement of a Harry Potter card game hit the gaming scene. Pessimism abounded in the zeitgeist about the content and, more importantly, playability of the game. If a decent movie to game can ever be, pardon the pun, “in the cards” for Harry Potter fans, would USAopoly, a company more familiar with localized Monopoly reprints be the one to do it?

Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle is a cooperative deck building game for 2 – 4 players that, depending on which game you’re playing, could take 30 minutes, or well over 90 minutes. Hogwarts Battle plays best with 4 consistent players.

Game Overview:

Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle (hereafter just Hogwarts Battle) takes players on a journey through the seven films adapted from the books. They span the years of Harry Potter learning at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, meanwhile encountering the likes of various villains and one particular villain who-should-not-be-named. Players achieve their goals through some pretty standard deck building mechanisms and combating villains with spells, items, and companions along the way.

Game Components:

The main board for Hogwarts Battle is exceptionally made and holds up well to repeated plays. Although the spaces hint at what is to come, overall the board provides just the right space for card play. Included as well are player boards which focus players and provide locations for starting character cards, round reference cards, tokens, and health tracking. The cards are also of exceptional quality and can be shuffled repeatedly with little sign of wear.

The art for the components and cards fits right in the Harry Potter universe. Spells, locations, and characters are broadly represented, even with some of the more minor characters. The imagery for the cards is mainly taken from the films.

One of the most stand out components is the rulebook. It’s welcoming and well laid out, explaining as much as is needed in a friendly sequence. The additional game boxes will add rules to the game, as can be expected by the placeholder slots for rules in the back of the rulebook. The overall presentation of the game allows for repacking the game into its original state should a new gaming group inherit the game.

Probably the coolest component are the heavy metal location control markers used to denote how much villains are in control of game locations. They’re small, hexagonal metal tokens with a fearsome skull. They help to give intensity when they’re placed on a location, advancing the plot to the players’ defeat.

How to Play:

Hogwarts Battle presents players with seven game boxes representing an adaptive, progressively more difficult game each time the players successfully complete their objectives. There are new game mechanisms revealed with the various boxes, but the content can be predictable if players have seen the movies.

A game of Hogwarts Battle begins with setting up three primary decks: a Villain deck, the Dark Arts event deck, and the Hogwarts deck. These decks form the core of interactions with characters, items, villains, and spells. The Villain cards and Dark Arts events represent eponymous challenges or enemies to overcome while the Hogwarts deck provides allies, equipment and education in spells.

Each player’s turn begins with revealing a certain number of Dark Arts events based on the current location, represented by a card in the upper left corner of the board. Usually three stacked locations are present for each game. Dark Arts events represent the machinations of the villains as they seek to gain control of the location. Some cards directly harm the players. Other events will cause harm only when certain cards are played, or they might add location control markers to the Location card.

Next to be resolved on a player’s turn are any Villain Card effects. These are similar to the Dark Arts events but, because they stick around from turn to turn, they have the potential to form combinations with the event cards or with other villains (not a spoiler because the game board shows spots for three villains). Once multiple Villains appear, players should know the game strategy can change.

Hopefully, if a player isn’t too aggravated from dealing with all of the above, the main part of a player’s turn begins. In this step, cards are played from a player’s hand to gain influenceto purchase Hogwarts cards, gain lightning bolt tokens to damage the villain, regain health, or draw cards. The influenceand lightning bolt tokens are mainly used to keep track of how many of each a player has, placing them on their player board. This is key because it is possible to gain these tokens on another player’s turn, adding to the total available to the player on their turn.

The game continues in this pattern with player turns until all villains are defeated (player victory) or control markers are placed on all locations (villain victory). Players can progress to the next game box or replay if they did not achieve the box’s objective.

Game Experience:

To cut to the chase, Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle is a good game. It doesn’t deviate from tried and true deckbuilding patterns and implements some nice cooperative elements. Non-gamers experiencing a deck builder for the first time will be enthralled. Gamers with some deck building chops will pick up on the play quickly and should really start with the Game 3 box. It still won’t wow them, but it cuts out some softballs that serve to train those not versed in the mechanisms.

Spoilers can be found below, but without revealing anything, the content in each box is interesting, but not amazing. The continued tutorial format builds to a crescendo with the Game 7 box which presents a legitimately hard game. The number and combination of mechanics at that level is precisely on the level with many other deck building games. Unfortunately, to be more specific about what causes the reduced rating, spoilers will be revealed.

BOX CONTENT SPOILERS BEGIN

The primary let down of Hogwarts Battle is that characters only seem to improve through game effects presented as character abilities and proficiencies. Never are characters allowed to keep cards from one game to the next, much as would be expected in a campaign style game. It definitely feels like all the labor from one game of building a great deck would be rewarded with being allowed to keep one or two cards into the next game.

In addition, character abilities (presented in the Game 3 box) are specific and immutable until the Game 6 box (called Proficiencies). This is exceedingly late in the progression to allow players to change abilities or upgrade. By this time, games will take 90 minutes easily due to the overwhelming card and ability management necessary. Also, each character’s full power ability appears only in the Game 7 box.

One other conspicuous miss is the lack of any ability to remove cards from a player’s deck permanently (trash a card). This is most likely balanced by the tremendous number of villain abilities which cause cards to be discarded from a player’s hand, but even so, the inability to truly craft a deck is keenly felt. Even if there were an ability to replace cards in a character’s starting deck between games that would offer some continuity and sense of a journey. As it is, each game feels like starting from the beginning.

The feeling at the end is that the journey really begins in Game 3, ramps up quickly, and never remembers what came before. This is not a legacy style or even campaign style game. It’s a progressive tutorial for the real game which is contained in the Game 7 box. If players have seen the movies, they’ll know the characters and locations they’re likely to see. The slow reveal doesn’t really add anything except anticipation or education.

SPOILERS END

Final Thoughts:

Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle is a wonderful introduction to cooperative games and deck building for new gamers. It deserves high praise for achieving those goals. Where it falters are in areas that experienced gamers will notice. At times it is frustrating and the game time ramps up, but the overall play in Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle leaves a satisfaction of a well-designed cooperative experience.

If you’d like to pick up a copy of Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle, you can get it for about $50.

Final Score: 3 StarsExperienced gamers may find little to explore, but wizened or junior deck builders will enjoy the cooperative and strategic play.

Hits:
• Great cooperative options
• Progression is not too intimidating
• Component quality

Misses:
• Later games are much longer than early games
• Desired play mechanisms absent
• Not as many options for deck manipulation

Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle Review (9)

Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle Review (2024)

FAQs

How to make Hogwarts battle easier? ›

One way to do this is with the Disillusionment Spell, which is unlocked fairly early on in the game. Like other Hogwarts Legacy spells, the Disillusionment spell can be upgraded; this way, players can make it more difficult for enemies to see through their illusion.

Is Harry Potter Hogwarts Battle a good game? ›

Our family absolutely loves this game! It's a fantastic cooperative deck-building game that has brought us countless hours of fun and bonding. My kids are huge Harry Potter fans, and playing as Harry, Ron, Hermione, or Neville makes them feel like they're part of the adventure.

How long is the Harry Potter Hogwarts battle? ›

The rounds go pretty quick overall but all together the game probably takes anywhere from 30-45 minutes to play. If you love Harry Potter and you like the deck building cooperative aspect of Harry Potter Hogwarts Battle, this is a great two player game that is super similar.

Who are the characters in the Hogwarts battle board game? ›

The game's goal is to work together as Harry Potter, Ron Weasley, Hermione Granger, and Neville Longbottom to defend locations from villains using a mix of a spell, item, and ally cards. The game takes place in seven increasingly challenging and complex rounds that mirror Harry Potter's seven years at Hogwarts.

What is the hardest thing to do in Hogwarts Legacy? ›

Solving the Key of Admittance puzzle is quite tricky, which therefore makes finding the Book of Admittance in Hogwarts Legacy one of the hardest things to do.

Can you play Harry Potter Hogwarts battle more than once? ›

Hogwarts Battle is a simpler version of this with less replayability: replaying a book's challenges will vary primarily in the order of the dark events and villains (which can matter in later games as you face more than one villain at a time) and the order of the spells/items/allies cards that come out each game.

Can you be bad Hogwarts game? ›

Morality explained. While you can make certain choices and use spells that may be considered morally questionable, you cannot canonically be evil in Hogwarts Legacy. Essentially, there's no version of the story where you'll be recognised as inherently evil and rise up as a proto-Voldemort.

Did J.K. Rowling help with Hogwarts game? ›

The game's website also said that author J.K. Rowling was not involved directly in the creation of the game, but since she is the creator of the Harry Potter universe, she did create the foundation for the game.

Who is Draco Malfoy's boyfriend? ›

How many endings does Hogwarts Legacy have? ›

There are a total of 3 possible Endings in Hogwarts Legacy that players can achieve. These have been colloquially dubbed the Good Ending, the Evil / Bad Ending, and the True Ending.

What happened immediately after the Battle of Hogwarts? ›

Harry went on to become head Auror, Ron went to work with George at Weasley's Wizard Wheezes, Hermione become Minister for Magic. Neville became Herbology teacher, head of Gryffindor and co-landlord of the Leaky Cauldron with his wife Hannah Abbott. Petunia and Vernon Dursley died.

Is Luna Lovegood in the Battle of Hogwarts? ›

Luna Lovegood

'Use your Cloak. ' Along with other loyal members of Dumbledore's Army, Luna was vital during the Battle of Hogwarts – even leading Harry to one of the final Horcruxes he needed to destroy.

Were there Slytherins in the Battle of Hogwarts? ›

No Slytherins remained, a number of older Ravenclaws, a quarter of Hufflepuff and half of Gryffindor remained to fight.

Can you play Hogwarts Battle with two players? ›

In Harry Potter: Hogwarts Battle Defence Against the Dark Arts, you choose their favorite house and practice dueling in a competitive deck building game for 2 players.

Can you make Hogwarts Legacy easier? ›

Players will be asked to choose a difficulty setting before starting the game, though needn't worry too much about their decision. This is because players will be able to change the difficulty setting at any time simply by pausing the game and navigating to the "Gameplay Options" menu.

How to get better at combat in Hogwarts Legacy? ›

There are various tips and tricks that are vitally important for a newcomer to excel in Hogwarts Legacy and get the best out of their experience.
  1. 10 Read Up On Enemy Weaknesses. ...
  2. 9 Practice Spell Combos. ...
  3. 8 Research & Assign Appropriate Talents. ...
  4. 7 Learn When To Protego & When To Dodge. ...
  5. 6 Be Prepared For Shields.
Mar 4, 2023

How do I lower my Hogwarts Legacy difficulty? ›

How to change the difficulty settings in the game
  1. Hit the pause button.
  2. Go to gameplay options.
  3. The difficulty setting is located near the top of the screen. Select it, and a drop-down menu will appear. Pick one of the choices and continue on your journey.
Feb 16, 2024

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