Couple bring world board games competition to Singapore after face-off in Las Vegas
Mr Ivan Chen and Ms Lynn Liu competed in the World Series of Board Gaming tournament in Las Vegas in September 2024. ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI
SINGAPORE - The stakes were high for data analyst Ivan Chen as he stared at the cards laid out before him on the table at a Las Vegas hotel on a balmy evening in September 2024.
On the line was a chance at glory and US$25,000 (S$32,100) but Mr Chen and his wife Lynn Liu, both 36, were not gambling in the casino pits of the Nevada town.
As chance would have it, they were facing off against each other in the first round of a board game called Splendor, after flying halfway across the world from Singapore to compete against thousands at the annual World Series of Board Gaming (WSBG).
Splendor is a card-based board game in which players are gem merchants and race to accumulate points.
In Las Vegas, Mr Chen beat his wife, a digital marketing manager , and went all the way to the final round before finishing fourth.
He said: 'Everyone - the young and the old - can play board games so there's a 1 per cent chance you can be a world champion. We thought we had a chance but we were unlucky.'
The experience, which the couple described as 'electrifying and novel', inspired them to bring the tournament to Singapore in the form of a WSBG satellite event.
'When we were in Las Vegas, we noticed that among thousands of players, not many were from Asia, and we couldn't find someone we could link up and play with back home,' said Mr Chen.
The plan to bring together people in Singapore who are passionate about board games began at the start of 2025.
The satellite event - the first of its kind to be held in Asia - will be held from May 31 to June 2 at board game cafe Mind Cafe Mega in Prinsep Street.
It will feature the same 16 board games as the Vegas event. They are: Acquire, Ark Nova, Azul, Brass: Birmingham, Cascadia, Dune: Uprising, Earth, Great Western Trail, Heat: Pedal to the Metal, Lost Ruins of Arnak, Ra, Splendor, Terraforming Mars, The Castles of Burgundy, The White Castle and Wingspan.
More than 80 players from countries like Singapore, China, Germany and Australia are expected to compete in the tournament.
Each player can compete in up to two board games, and up to 16 players can compete in each game.
The 16 winners of each board game will then be split into groups of four to compete in the semi-finals on June 2.
Games for each semi-final will be picked at random, but the games will not include any that the four competitors played earlier in the competition.
The last four players that remain will compete for the title of grand champion, and they will be given a free return flight ticket to Las Vegas for this year's games later in 2025.
Winners of each board game will also be able to skip the first round for that board game if they go to Vegas.
Mr Chen and Ms Liu, both China -born permanent residents, first met at a board game cafe in Hong Kong in 2008.
Explaining the allure of board games, Mr Chen said: 'Nowadays, there are a lot of online games, which are probably not that healthy if you get addicted. I think board games are a good way for everyone to develop smarts.
'There's also that face-to-face connection, and strangers might become friends or maybe even husband and wife.'
The couple at the 2024 World Series of Board Gaming in Las Vegas in September 2024.
PHOTO: COURTESY OF LYNN LIU
The window to sign up for the Singapore competition has closed but casual play tickets are available at this link for $20. Ticket holders can watch the competition and also play board games for fun during the tournament.
Board game coach David Tan, 57, said the tournament is a good opportunity to take part in a world-class tournament without having to travel.
Mr Tan, who runs board game courses for children and organises board game parties, will be competing in two games: Acquire and Ra.
He aims to win both. He said: 'Some of my young students - fledgling players - want to see their coach play at the WSBG... I'm aiming to win the champion title for either game, and hopefully, inspire my students.'
Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
10 hours ago
- Straits Times
Taylor Swift buys back rights to her old music
Taylor Swift bought back her masters from Shamrock Capital, an LA investment firm, for an undisclosed amount. PHOTO: AFP NEW YORK - Pop sensation Taylor Swift, locked in a feud with record executives since 2019 over ownership of her music, has bought back the rights to her entire back catalogue, she said on May 30. 'All of the music I've ever made... now belongs... to me,' she wrote on her website, after years of dispute over her first six albums, a number of which she has re-recorded to create copies she owns herself. 'To say this is my greatest dream come true is actually being pretty reserved about it,' she wrote in the letter penned to fans. 'To my fans, you know how important this has been to me – so much so that I meticulously re-recorded and released four of my albums, calling them Taylor's Version.' Those records included the award-winning Reputation and self-titled Taylor Swift. Swift bought back her masters from Shamrock Capital, an LA investment firm, for an undisclosed amount. The queen of pop, whose recent nearly two-year-long, US$2 billion (S$2.5 billion) Eras tour shattered records, said that she was 'heartened by the conversations this saga has reignited within my industry.' Swift's ultra-lucrative tour which wrapped in 2024 was a showbusiness sensation, and will have helped offset the costs of buying back her catalogue. The 149 shows across the world typically clocked in at more than three hours long each. Eras tour tickets sold for sometimes exorbitant prices and drew in millions of fans, along with many more who didn't get in and were willing to simply sing along from the parking lot. AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
a day ago
- Straits Times
Sha'Carri Richardson joins Team USA stars getting Athlos stake
Sha'Carri Richardson during the Met Gala, an annual fundraising gala held for the benefit of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute. PHOTO: REUTERS (Bloomberg) – Athlos, the all-female track event founded by Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, is expanding into a team-based league for 2026 and adding field events. The league will be headlined by Olympic medallists and Team USA standouts Sha'Carri Richardson, Gabby Thomas and Tara Davis-Woodhall, who will all serve as adviser-owners and shareholders in the league. 'For so long, athletes, especially in track, have carried the show but never owned the stage. To have a seat at the table where the decisions get made? That's powerful,' Richardson said in an e-mailed statement to Bloomberg. Ohanian launched Athlos – the Greek word for contest – in 2024 in an ambitious attempt to shake up women's track, combining music, racing and bigger prize money. Athlos held its inaugural race in September 2024 at Icahn Stadium in New York City. It showcased six sprint style races, with a DJ playing in between every race and each runner being introduced with a walkout song. They gave away one of the largest prize purses in the sport's history along, with US$60,000 (S$77,200) for the winners plus a Tiffany's crown. The night ended with a concert by rapper Megan Thee Stallion. 'Athlos isn't just trying to fit track into an old model. It's building something new that honours the athletes, the culture, and the competition in a way that grabs people's attention and makes the sport accessible. That's what's going to push the sport into the mainstream,' Richardson said of how Athlos is set to elevate the sport. The first season drew about three million viewers, the company said. Now they will host another race at Icahn Stadium in October 2025 before launching the league next year. No specific financials were released about the league, but Athlos confirmed there will be individual prizes per meet, and a team prize for the championship. Giving the founding athletes equity wasn't something planned when they initially signed on to be part of the league. 'That wasn't even a part of the conversation,' Ohanian said in an interview. 'So you can imagine it was a nice surprise to say, hey, look, we're doing a league now, and we'd love to have you involved and have a stake in it.' Athletes have increasingly taking stakes in the growing number of new startups outside of tradtional leagues and competitions. San Antonio Spurs point guard Chris Paul recently bought into Tiger Woods' Tomorrow's Golf League franchise Jupiter Links GC, joining sports stars including Mike Trout and Harry Kane as backers of the team. Footballers including Diogo Jota, Diogo Dalot, and Mason Mount invested in Baller League, a six-a-side football competition backed by a range of influencers and former footballers. Ohanian, who funded Athlos through his 776 venture capital firm, is looking to making track a lot more fun for fans and boosted viewership, thereby increasing pay for the athletes beyond the four-year Olympic cycle. A push has been made to capture the popularity of track and field outside of mainstream athletic events. Michael Johnson's Grand Slam Track launched in April with a US$12.6 million prize pot, with US$100,000 for the winner of each event. Next year will see the launch of the World Athletics Ultimate Championships, with a US$10 million pot and US$150,000 for first place. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
2 days ago
- Straits Times
Actress Joe Chen goes for surgery soon after appendicitis diagnosis
Taiwanese actress Joe Chen went for a surgery in Malaysia after she was diagnosed with appendicitis. PHOTO: IAM_JOECHEN/INSTAGRAM Actress Joe Chen goes for surgery soon after appendicitis diagnosis Taiwanese actress Joe Chen was thinking about her work even when she was unwell. The 46-year-old disclosed on Instagram Stories on May 28 that she had been suffering from diarrhoea and stomachache in the previous few days and was diagnosed with appendicitis after a health screening. Chen, who is married to Malaysian artist Alan Chen, decided to go for an operation on the same day she learnt about her condition, so that her upcoming work commitments will not be affected. 'The doctor told me not to worry, as it was only a minimally invasive surgery,' she wrote in Chinese on Instagram Stories. Joe Chen said she stayed in the hospital for only one night after the operation and was recovering well. The actress, who is known for starring in Taiwanese idol dramas such as The Prince Who Turns Into A Frog (2005) and Fated To Love You (2008), tagged Johor Bahru's Kempas Medical Centre in her post. 'Thank you to the doctors and nurses for their care, and thank you for preparing a fruit basket for me,' she wrote. 'I can be discharged from the hospital today, and the doctor said that I can eat whatever I want to eat.' The actress also shared a hilarious text conversation between her and her mother. Sharing a photo of her appendix after the surgery, Chen explained to her mother that the minimally invasive surgery, also known as keyhole surgery, was done with three small incisions in her abdomen. Her mother replied that the actress' appendix looked like chicken and duck intestines. Chen was in Singapore last week to attend American singer Lady Gaga's concert at the National Stadium. She shared on Instagram on May 20 videos and photos of herself at the event, including one of her pretending to be a monster, in reference to 'Little Monsters', as Lady Gaga's fans are affectionately called. Chen was also recently featured in the June issue of the Chinese edition of the Harper's Bazaar magazine. She previously disclosed on social media in January 2023 that she suffered from sleep apnoea and went for an operation to fix her condition. Her agency has so far not said if it will make any changes to her post-operation work schedule . Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.