Per me questo è il miglior gioco attualmente in circolazione su Batman. Molti elementi approsimativi di Conan qui sono stati limati a dovere. Certo l'anarchia sanguinaria del Cimmero qui manca vistosamente, sostituita dal duro lavoro dei super-eroi alle prese con computer da hackerare e bombe da disattivare la maggior parte del tempo. Ma ci sono tante missioni variegate e divertenti anche in questo Batman, e il fatto che stavolta c'è una discreta scelta di eroi e gadget utilizzabili è un'ottimo miglioramento. Il regolamento è molto prolisso ma in realtà non mi è sembrato quella tragedia che ho sentito lamentare in giro. L'app per la linea di vista qui diventa obbligatoria visto che in certe mappe le cose sono un po' complesse. Tra l'altro funziona molto bene e non è invasiva.
In Batman: Gotham City Chronicles, one villain faces off against a team of heroes in one of multiple scenarios. Each hero has their own character, and they control this character by spending energy to perform actions (such as Melee and Ranged attacks, defusing bombs...) recovering more or less energy at the beginning of their turn depending on their stance. If the hero gets damaged, energy moves to a wound area, and if they lose all of their energy, then they're out of action for a while to recover their strength. Each hero has differing strengths for their abilities, and these strengths are represented by colored dice with different values; the more energy a hero spends on an ability, the more dice of that color they can roll. The villain controls a team of henchmen and iconic villains of the Batman universe, and these characters are represented by tiles on their command board, with the characters costing 1, 2, 3, etc. energy to activate as you move left to right down the line. Once a character is activated, they move to the end of the line, boosting their cost to the maximum value should you want to use them again immediately, and decreasing the cost of the other tiles. The game-play in Batman: Gotham City Chronicles is based on that of Conan, with revisions to character abilities, the addition of two different types of dice (w/ five types total), and a modified two-player set-up, the Versus Mode, in which each player has a command board and their own team of tiles that they can draft, with heroes facing off against villains.
- Batman: Gotham City Chronicles