
Line of Fire: Burnt Moon
An Undaunted 2200 Game
Osprey Games (Publisher)
Published on 12. June 2025
Other
Game
978-1-4728-6718-6 (ISBN)
Description
A two-player deck-building card game of machines warring across the volcanic surface of Io.
A group of black-hat hackers known as POSIWID plots to hijack the moon, Io, and hold the entire Jovian power grid to ransom. Standing in their way are the ultra-corporate LFA, the constructors of the lunar energy facilities. Both sides have engaged a fleet of ROV - advanced remotely operated robots to battle across the treacherous landscape.
The machines are activated. Initiate combat sequence. The battle for Io has begun.
Line of Fire: Burnt Moon is a standalone two-player card game that fuses the lean deck-building of the award-winning Undaunted series with fast-paced lane-battling. Sharp decision-making and clever positioning combine in a nail-bitingly tense, endlessly replayable, and tactical experience.
Age: 14+
Time: 30 mins
Players: 2
Components: 81 Playing Cards, 4 Player Aids, 10 Terrain Tiles, 6 Fortification Tiles, 1 Gameplay Manual, 1 Action Manual
A group of black-hat hackers known as POSIWID plots to hijack the moon, Io, and hold the entire Jovian power grid to ransom. Standing in their way are the ultra-corporate LFA, the constructors of the lunar energy facilities. Both sides have engaged a fleet of ROV - advanced remotely operated robots to battle across the treacherous landscape.
The machines are activated. Initiate combat sequence. The battle for Io has begun.
Line of Fire: Burnt Moon is a standalone two-player card game that fuses the lean deck-building of the award-winning Undaunted series with fast-paced lane-battling. Sharp decision-making and clever positioning combine in a nail-bitingly tense, endlessly replayable, and tactical experience.
Age: 14+
Time: 30 mins
Players: 2
Components: 81 Playing Cards, 4 Player Aids, 10 Terrain Tiles, 6 Fortification Tiles, 1 Gameplay Manual, 1 Action Manual
Reviews / Votes
MUST-PLAY * Tabletop Gaming Magazine * A riveting strategic experience in a fairly short time frame -- Scott White * IGN * Line of Fire: Burnt Moon has gameplay as light and tight as the components that fit perfectly into the small box, but gameplay that well outgrows the small package * TechRaptor * Bold sci-fi style and streamlined, lane-based gameplay * Wargamer * A really fun game * The Discriminating Gamer * People who enjoy deckbuilders will enjoy this * Rolling Dice & Taking Names * A fantastically awesome mechanical game * Liege of Games *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
Interest Age: From 14 years
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 112 mm
Thickness: 44 mm
Weight
492 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4728-6718-6 (9781472867186)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
David Thompson and Trevor Benjamin are a game design duo who met in Cambridge. David hails from Savannah, Georgia, and is known for Sniper Elite: The Board Game, Resist, and Europe Divided, while Trevor is originally from New Brunswick, Canada, and has titles such as Maya, Dice Heist, and Mandela to his name. Together they have published General Orders, War Chest, and the award-winning Undaunted series of games.
Leonard Dupond is a Lille based illustrator, who has illustrated board games, books and magazines. His work has been featured by AXA, Arianespace, Apple, BMW, CNES, Enedis, Flextronics, and Wired. He is fast becoming a fan favourite in the world of board game illustrators with ICE (This Way!), and A Message From The Stars (Allplay) to his name.
Leonard Dupond is a Lille based illustrator, who has illustrated board games, books and magazines. His work has been featured by AXA, Arianespace, Apple, BMW, CNES, Enedis, Flextronics, and Wired. He is fast becoming a fan favourite in the world of board game illustrators with ICE (This Way!), and A Message From The Stars (Allplay) to his name.