📢 We’re Hiring at BoardGameBliss! 🎲✨ (Learn More)

Improved Shipping Experience for U.S. and International Customers ✅📦🌐 (Read More)

🎲❤️ Love board games? You’re in the perfect spot – we have A LOT! And we mean, A LOT! 🎯🃏♟️

First Time Customer Promotion

Enjoy $10 Off Orders Over $200

TAKE10OFF200
Board&Dice  |  SKU: BND0076

Nucleum

$72.95 CAD

Products title that includes 'PRE-ORDER' is subject to our Pre-order Policy

Click here to see Pre-order Policy
This item is available for pre-order. Orders will be fulfilled in order received. We will contact you if the item is unavailable.

Delivery and Shipping

For more details, please refer to our Shipping and Order Information.


Description

Designer Simone Luciani
Dávid Turczi
Publisher Board&Dice
Players 1-4
Playtime 60-150 mins
Suggested Age 14 and up
Expansions
Nucleum: Australia
Nucleum: Patrons Set
Nucleum: Court of Progress
Nucleum: Energy Research Institute
Additional Info BoardGameGeek (Images, Videos, Reviews)


When Elsa von Frühlingfeld presented her invention to King Frederik Augustus II of Saxony, people thought it was trickery. She used the recently isolated element Uranium to heat up a jar of water and used the resulting steam to power an engine that kept the Uranium active via a process she called “atomization.” Her device, the Nucleum, ushered in a new era of energy and prosperity over the next decades. Saxony went from a minor regional power to the hub of European science and engineering. Now, a generation later, factories are still hungry for more power, demanding bigger and more Nucleums to be built, more Uranium imported from the nearby country of Bohemia, and railways and power lines built across the country to carry the tamed power of the atoms to Saxony’s great cities. Inventors, engineers, and industrialists flock to the Saxon court, vying to be the leader in this new industrial revolution.

Nucleum is a heavy euro board game in which players take role of industrialists trying to succeed during the economic and technological boom of 19th-century Saxony, fueled by the invention and spread of the Nucleum (a nuclear reactor).

Players earn victory points by developing their networks, building and powering urban buildings, securing contracts, and meeting milestones (randomized endgame goals). Each player also gets unique asymmetric technologies, giving them special powers when unlocked. Gameplay is continuous; players take turns one after another with no rounds or phases.

—description from the publisher

Customer Reviews

Based on 10 reviews
80%
(8)
20%
(2)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
B
Bsdlots@shaw.ca
Current Favourite

#1 heavier game in my current play rotation. Don't see this dropping anytime soon.

N
Nathan Jones
I prefer this over brass

I am not a huge fan of brass Birmingham I acknowledge that it is a good game I just don’t have a lot of fun when I play it . Nucleum had a lot of similar mechanics to brass but I found I had more joy playing it than I would playing brass. There was more options to move around the board freely and I found the rail tiles gave a more engaging option than the cards in brass.
Overall a good game

J
Jeff Haubrich

Nucleum

W
Wayne Ketler

Nucleum

R
R.A.

Very satisfy as usual. Good service