Попробовали относительно новую настолку "Космические дальнобойщики". Автор — Влаада Хватил, тот самый чех, который создал великую и нашумевшую Codenames.
Конкретно Galaxy Trucker он создал ещё раньше, но в какой-то момент решил чуть-чуть доработать и выпустить переиздание. В игре вы сначала собираете из тайлов космические корабли по определённым правилам. У кораблей есть, например, пушки, защитные поля, двигатели, отсеки для грузов и экипажа.
Затем летите доставлять грузы, и каждый ход тянется карта с происшествием. Это может быть что-то нейтральное (вы просто летите вперёд), что-то хорошее (вы забираете грузы, за которые потом вам заплатят) и что-то плохое (метеоритный дождь или нападение пиратов). Для того, чтобы справиться с разными проблемами, у вас на корабле должно быть подходящее оборудование, ещё и расположенное нужным образом. Прикольно сделана механика попадания метеоритов: точка удара задаётся броском кубиков, и ты реально каждый раз надеешься, что космический камень не попадёт в уязвимое место. Иногда такими ударами или, например, выстрелами пиратов сносит половину корабля, приходится дальше лететь на обломке.
Игра простая, но создаёт нужный экшен. Ещё за сравнительно небольшую цену в коробке много качественных компонентов. Вполне себе неплохой вариант для завершения настольного вечера после какой-нибудь более тяжёлой евростратегии.
#games
#Op_ed: Historical Divides, Emerging Alliances: Shifting politics, rising hopes for dialogue in #Ethiopia
Ethiopia’s political crisis reflects not just a struggle for power but “fundamentally conflicting narratives about the country’s formation,” centered on Menelik II, writes Yaekob Yatene. One view sees expansion as “reunification,” while another defines it as “conquest.”
These competing narratives have shaped modern politics and institutions. While the #Derg’s “Land to the Tiller” addressed inequality, and ethnic federalism enabled self-rule, both failed to resolve deeper demands for autonomy.
Yaekob notes a shift: #Amhara actors now prioritize “the protection and survival of the Amhara,” even exploring “collaboration on the ground” with former rivals. He argues this “decoupling…from pseudo-unionist ideological control” could open space for “interest-based engagement.”
https://addisstandard.com/?p=56531
#Op_ed: #TPLF at 51: Legacy of transformation, contention
On 18 February 2026, the #Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) marked its 51st anniversary, which Ewnetu B. Debela calls “a milestone," highlighting its role as a "primary architect of the modern state" and “a deeply polarizing force.”
Since its 1975 insurgency origins, the TPLF has evolved from a guerrilla movement into a governing elite, overthrowing the #Derg regime and overseeing decades of "sustained economic growth" and infrastructural expansion. Critics note a "concentration of power" that stifled opposition, where "dissent was frequently framed as a matter of national security."
“The history of the TPLF resists simple verdicts,” Ewnetu concludes, urging #Ethiopia to pursue “a sober reckoning” with this complex legacy.
https://addisstandard.com/?p=55264
Mulugeta Bekele: the jailed and tortured scientist who kept #Ethiopian#physics alive
Mulugeta Bekele paid a heavy price for remaining in #Ethiopia in the 1970s and 1980s. While many other academics had fled their homeland to avoid being targeted by its military rulers, Mulugeta did not.
He stayed to teach #physics, almost single-handedly keeping it alive in the country. But Mulugeta was arrested and brutally tortured by members of the #Derg, Ethiopia’s ruling military junta. “I still have scars,” he says when we meet at his tiny, second-floor office at Addis Ababa University (AAU) in January 2026.
Gentle and softly spoken, Mulugeta, 79, is formally retired but still active as a research physicist. In 2012 his efforts led to him being awarded the Sakharov prize by the American Physical Society (APS) “for his tireless efforts in defence of human rights and freedom of expression and education....
https://physicsworld.com/a/mulugeta-bekele-the-jailed-and-tortured-scientist-who-kept-ethiopian-physics-alive/
#Book_Review: A Ten Minute Mission: The Least Price for Freedom by W. Hundee Hurrisoo
In this book review, Ababiyaa Ahmed Ajmel examines W. Hundee Hurrisoo’s A Ten Minute Mission: The Least Price for Freedom, calling it more than a prison memoir—it exposes the “moral and political logic” behind the #Derg regime’s terror.
As editor of Bariisaa, #Ethiopia’s first #Oromo-language newspaper, Hundee saw his symbol of “freedom’s light” targeted for erasure. Arrested under the false pretense of a “ten-minute mission,” he endured “4,040 days” in prisons like the Grand Palace and Maikalawi, where torture tools such as the “Stalin stick” broke bodies.
The reviewer emphasizes that “the memoir is not only a record of erasure” but also affirms the Oromo concept of Jirra: “we are here, we exist”—a truth echoed by today’s #Qeerroo generation.
https://addisstandard.com/?p=54635
#Commentary: From #Derg to #EPRDF to Present: #Ethiopia’s unfinished nation-state-building journey
In this commentary, Merera Gudina traces Ethiopia’s persistent instability to failed state-building across the imperial, Derg, and EPRDF eras. He argues each collapse stemmed from rulers prioritizing personal power over the "equality of Ethiopian peoples" and their "thirst for development."
Merera recounts how Emperor Haile Selassie’s 60-year reign ended ignominiously, even as hundreds of thousands perished in #Wollo, while the Derg, despite abolishing feudal landholding, succumbed to an "extreme lust for power," enforcing Stalinist "#Red_Terror" and destroying movements. The EPRDF era, meant to resolve the "nationalities question," became a 27-year "crude joke."
Today, Ethiopia faces a "final frontier," requiring an end to "political theater" and "sham elections" for genuine unity.
https://addisstandard.com/?p=55338