OrcaCon 2026

Liked Event

Click to Like

Special Event: Unsettling Catan: A Book Talk

Ruel Gaviola chats with author J. Rey Lee about Unsettling Catan, the first book in a new series on Tabletop Games (read online at lookingglance.com/unsettling-catan/). They’ll talk about studying games as culture and the complicated legacy Catan has left for eurogame design. With Q&A.

Read more »

Event Number 144
Event Type {{event.properties.type.name}}
Age Range {{ event.properties._options._age_range[event.properties.age_range] }}
Maximum Tickets 50
Cost $0.00
Time Zone America/Los_Angeles (UTC {{ '2026-01-10 20:00:00' | timezone_offset: 'America/Los_Angeles' }})
Where & When (local to convention) Jan 10 Sat - Events from {{ '2026-01-10 20:00:00' | amDateFormat: clock_format }} to {{ '2026-01-10 20:50:00' | amDateFormat: clock_format }}
Panels in Cascade 01 & 02
More Information https://press.umich.edu/Books/U/Unsettling-Catan
Hosts
Has Special Requests
{{ request }}
Email Notification for Tickets List {{event.properties.wait_count}} will be notified by email of available tickets

Tickets

This event is past the point where ticket sales are permitted.
You must log in or create an account to purchase tickets.

Most revolutions don’t start with nineteen cardboard hexagons, but Klaus Teuber’s game about settling a hexagonal island quietly revolutionized boardgaming. Catan’s commercial success selling over 40 million copies certainly catalyzed a modern boardgaming boom. More importantly, its playful experiments set a new tone for game design. By making its cutthroat gameplay feel peaceful and pastoral, Catan helped a fledgling eurogame tradition forge its distinctive style and was heralded by Wired for “changing the American idea of what a board game can be.”

Although peaceful revolutions are usually the best kind, it’s worth questioning how these games cultivate peaceful feelings. Today, peaceful-feeling eurogames often settle into detached design—a mindset of making conflict feel peaceful by dampening conflicted feelings. Unsettling Catan questions how peaceful-feeling eurogames can make implicitly imperialist themes palatable by cultivating a detached mindset that imagines power as peaceful, neutral, and abstract. To ask the hard questions that eurogames often look away from, the book walks through each aspect of Catan’s gameplay (placing hexes, rolling the dice, robbing and trading, collecting resources, building and scoring) to explore how simple design decisions can play out, or play with, cultural ideas and ideals. As the first entry in the Tabletop Games book series, Unsettling Catan introduces key concepts for thinking about board games as a medium and offers accessible game analyses and personal reflections to help players, creators, and scholars reimagine what board games can be and become.

J. Rey Lee is the author of Deconstructing LEGO: The Medium and Messages of LEGO Play (2020) and several articles on board games. He teaches at the University of Washington, Bothell.