I have found that I can use this game to help me come up with topics, ask people, and play along. I will post here as I write up the game.
Conspiracy Theory is an open-ended, turn-based game in which you must make and defend your point of view about a subject before the game plays out. Unlike a lot of open-ended games, the game provides a lot of structure, so you can play it either in a single session or in a series of short sessions, which you can then play a week or two later.
The first section of the game is a standard “game of the week” format. Each game is based on a single conspiracy theory, and each game has a topic page with a brief description. The game then asks you to identify the topic you want and build a board or paper, which you can then play or discard as you see fit.
You will need to spend money to get the board and to buy the paper, so the game has a single-player “board” and “paper” options. In the single-player game, the board can be spent to buy multiple topics, which can then be played in a series. In the “paper” option you can create your own topic, but you have to buy and destroy the original paper first.
So basically you have a bunch of people who are secretly trying to kill you and you have to figure out how to stop them. You could play the paper option and build your board from scratch, or you could play a series of topics, each of which is more expensive and can only contain what you destroyed. If you choose the last option you are allowed to destroy any topic to start over.
It’s hard to say which one of these options is more fun. If you don’t want to play a paper game, you can just use a random board you had lying around and just create a weird layout (like the one on the first link). But on the other hand, if you do want to play the paper game, you have to have been playing this game before. We have a hard time deciding which option is more fun.
If you want to play a paper game, you have to have played this game before, right? Not really. The original game was a very simple board game where you have to try to destroy everything you can on the board until you can’t destroy anything anymore. We were able to get around this by combining the two games and making them into one.
The game is called Conspiracy Theory. It’s a game that is basically an X-Files type of game where multiple players must try to find evidence against each other to prove that the person who is accusing them is either a government agent or a private organization involved in a conspiracy to try to get them to shut up.
We can’t be sure if this is a game about the government or a game about the conspiracy, but the game’s concept is that people who have been accused of a conspiracy are either innocent or guilty. It’s not a game where players can just win and accuse someone of something. Conspiracy theory is a game about someone being accused of something and trying to prove they are innocent. It’s not a game where players “win.
Conspiracy theory boards are usually where some of the most important information on the subjects being discussed is hidden. The game is not about the content of the conspiracy, but rather about proving the conspiracy theory. It is a game about proving something and proving something is wrong.