
Ticket to Ride®: Heart of Africa Expansion
Veteran TtR players who've exhausted every other map will finally get a digital-first look at one of the most strategically demanding boards in the series, complete with a scoring mechanic that can swing games by 30 points on a single route.
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About Ticket to Ride®: Heart of Africa Expansion
I've spent enough time colour-coding Ticket to Ride route charts to know when a map expansion is genuinely adding decision layers versus just swapping the wallpaper. Heart of Africa lands solidly in the former camp, which is why its community-vote win made sense the moment you study what it actually brings to the table. The central mechanic is the Terrain card system, and it changes the calculus on almost every turn. Three terrain types cover the map's route colours in distinct geographic clusters: Desert and Savanna for yellow, orange and red routes; Jungle and Forest for purple, blue and green; Mountain and Cliff for white, grey and black. Play a matching Terrain card (or two, for routes of length four through six) when you claim a route and you double the points earned. A six-train route jumps from 15 points to 30. That is not a rounding error in a game where margins are usually single digits. The catch is a majority rule: you can only trigger the double-point bonus if you hold at least as many Terrain cards of that type as any opponent. That single condition converts what could have been a pure accumulation game into a quiet, tense tug-of-war over card counts that plays out in parallel with the main route race. The map itself is architecturally different from anything else in the digital TtR catalogue. Where most boards scatter route colours evenly, Africa clusters same-colour routes into geographic zones that mirror the terrain types. Cities in the congested central heart of the map are often connected by single routes only, which means blocking is not incidental but structural. At higher player counts this becomes genuinely punishing, and veteran players report it is the tightest, most cutthroat board in the series. The Longest Route bonus from the base game is also replaced here by a Globetrotter bonus, worth 10 points to whichever player completes the most destination tickets, adding another axis of competition that rewards ambitious ticket-drawing rather than conservative play. Where it shows limits is in the geography itself. Sub-Saharan African city names and positions are far less intuitive to most Western players than a US or European board, which means early turns involve more map scanning and less confident planning. That friction fades with repetition, but it does raise the per-session entry cost compared to maps players already have spatial memory for. The digital format actually helps here, since the interface highlights routes and ticket paths, partially closing that geography gap. New cosmetic additions include two characters (festival organiser Blessing Kipruto and griot Nnamdi Okpara), two vehicles (the Fahagola railbus and the Safari Sights car) and two carriages (Animal Trails and Stately Travels), none of which affect gameplay but give the presentation a fresh coat. The honest positioning: Heart of Africa is not a beginner's map, and it was not designed to be. The majority-control layer on Terrain cards rewards players who track opponents' hands, time their route claims to exploit card counts, and think two turns ahead about whether holding out for a double-score is worth the risk of losing the route entirely. That brinksmanship is precisely what experienced TtR players say they want from an expansion, and it delivers. Casual players who just want to lay trains and collect tickets will find the central congestion punishing and the terrain card tracking mentally taxing on top of everything else. Know your table before you commit. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10 or above
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 2 GB available space
- Graphics
- DirectX 11 class GPU [1280 x 720]
- Processor
- 2 GHz single core processor
- Sound Card
- Integrated sound card
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Game Info
- Developer
- Marmalade Game Studio Ltd
- Publisher
- Marmalade Game Studio Ltd
- Release Date
- Aug 20, 2025




