Progress: Evolution of Technology cover
2014BGG rank #3,463

Progress: Evolution of Technology

by Agnieszka Kopera · NSKN Games

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Players1–5
Time45–90m
ComplexityMedium-Light
Age12+

About the game

What is Progress: Evolution of Technology?

Progress: Evolution of Technology is a card game about researching technologies. Each player takes his civilization from early antiquity and learns various technologies, moving progressively to the Middle Ages, the Industrial Revolution, and Modern Times and ending with today's Internet or Social Welfare. Unlike other civilization games, Progress focuses on a single aspect of civilization building: researching technologies that help a society advance. The 210 technology cards in the game are divided into three ages (Ancient, Middle Ages, Industrial) and three types (Military, Science and Culture). With every advancement on a path, you gain easier access to its more advanced technologies and you'll end up opening the door to the next age. Each tech card provides one bonus, which can vary from one extra knowledge to a larger hand size. Even though most tech cards in the game come in multiple copies (usually one per player), the key technologies occur less frequently, forcing players to specialize and granting them unique advantages. Every technology you research decreases the cost of up to three more advanced technologies, accelerating the race towards the end of the game. The game play is streamlined, with players usually taking two actions, thus making each turn short and ensuring that you use the time when the others are playing for planning rather than seeing it as downtime.

How it plays

Mechanics

Action PointsHand ManagementOpen DraftingTech Trees / Tech Tracks

On the shelf

Categories

Card GameCivilization

Questions players ask

Questions to bring to BoardGameBrain

  • How do setup and the first turn work in Progress: Evolution of Technology?
  • When does scoring happen and what ends the game?
  • How should the table resolve an unusual timing or rules interaction?