
What's is the biggest mystery in board games? No, not Mystery Express (and no, not Clue either), but something much bigger. We're talking BIG, like, who's face is on the front of St. Petersburg?!
The game rules indicate that the game takes place during the reign of Czar Peter (the Great) of Russia (Hence the name, St. Petersburg). Of course! The face on the box must be Peter the Great! Right?
Wrong! Well, sorta wrong.
The picture may represent Peter the Great, but the face is partly modeled after our mystery person, and I'm not talking about Col. Mustard.
Here is a good image of Peter the Great I found Online. Clearly, the hair is a match, and the eyebrows look good too, but is this is the same Peter that is on the front of the box? No!


But then....who is our Peter?! I will defer to the keen insight of the little boy Peter in the movie Finding Neverland, who, upon being asked if he was Peter Pan's namesake, shook his head and looked at Mr. Barrie (Johnny Depp's character and author of the play Peter Pan), and said, "but I'm not Peter Pan...he is!"
Little boy, you are right! No, our St. Petersburg Peter is not Mr. Barrie or Johnny Depp. Our Peter someone much more important and relevant to the game.
That's right, the man on the front of St. Petersburg is the author of the game, Michael Tummelhoffer.
But you may have trouble finding a picture of this mysterious man, because Michael Tummelhoffer is only a pseudonym. The real author is a man often shrouded in mystery: Hans Im Gluck lead designer Bernd Brunnhofer, pictured below...

And by the way, I can verify with certainty that Mr. Brunnhofer is the author of St. Petersburg, because I have met him. He was kind enough to allow me a picture with him when we visited the Hans Im Gluck headquarters in Munich two years ago.

Many thanks to Hans in Gluck and Bernd Brunnhofer for treating my friends and I to a fun evening of games, and for this fun mystery to unfold.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for commenting at Pinebars: Applying Board Game Mechanics!