Nick Seluk - The Beer Thrillers https://thebeerthrillers.com Central PA beer enthusiasts and beer bloggers. Homebrewers, brewery workers, and all around beer lovers. Tue, 16 Jun 2026 20:01:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://i0.wp.com/thebeerthrillers.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/cropped-The-Beer-Thrillers-December-2022-Logo.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Nick Seluk - The Beer Thrillers https://thebeerthrillers.com 32 32 187558884 Organ Attack Review: A Hilariously Twisted Trip Through the Human Body https://thebeerthrillers.com/2023/06/16/organ-attack-review-a-hilariously-twisted-trip-through-the-human-body/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=organ-attack-review-a-hilariously-twisted-trip-through-the-human-body Fri, 16 Jun 2023 19:52:19 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=16891 Organ Attack Review: A Hilariously Twisted Trip Through the Human Body

Organ Attack – The Game by The Awkward Yeti

There are board games that teach strategy. There are board games that foster cooperation. There are board games that simulate farming, trading in the Mediterranean, building civilizations, or surviving zombie apocalypses.

And then there’s Organ Attack, a game that asks a much more important question:

What if you could give your friend a case of Kidney Stones while simultaneously protecting yourself with a pair of healthy lungs?

Welcome to the delightfully disturbed world of Organ Attack.

What Is Organ Attack?

The Organ Attack cards

Created by the folks at Awkward Yeti, Organ Attack is a card game inspired by the wildly popular webcomic series featuring personified organs, diseases, and bodily functions. The premise is simple:

Each player starts with a collection of organs.

Your goal?

Destroy everyone else’s organs before they destroy yours.

How do you accomplish this noble medical objective?

By inflicting diseases, injuries, and horrifying bodily ailments upon your opponents while using treatments and immunities to keep yourself alive.

It’s basically Uno if Uno had a dark sense of humor, a basic understanding of anatomy, and absolutely no regard for your long-term health.

First Impressions

The first thing you’ll notice is the artwork.

If you’ve ever seen an Awkward Yeti comic, you’ll immediately recognize the style. The organs are expressive, adorable, and somehow incredibly relatable despite being, well… organs.

The Liver looks perpetually exhausted.

The Brain is stressed.

The Heart is overly emotional.

The Stomach is having a rough day.

Which, if we’re being honest, sounds a lot like most adults.

The artwork carries the game. It gives every card personality and turns what could have been a generic take-that card game into something memorable and genuinely funny.

Even players who don’t normally care about art in board games tend to comment on it.

And when a game can make someone laugh simply by drawing an angry spleen, that’s worth something.

Gameplay: Controlled Chaos

Organ Attack in Progress! (My three daughters and I playing Organ Attack with my mom / their mawmaw)

The rules are straightforward enough that you can teach new players in a matter of minutes.

Each player starts with four organs.

On your turn, you’ll draw cards, play diseases on opponents, cure your own ailments, or use special action cards to wreak havoc around the table.

The diseases range from the mildly inconvenient to the alarmingly realistic.

You might inflict:

  • Kidney Stones
  • Anxiety
  • Heart Attack
  • Diabetes
  • Cancer
  • Infection

And a whole host of other conditions that would normally warrant a trip to the doctor rather than enthusiastic laughter.

The game quickly becomes a battlefield of escalating medical catastrophes.

One player develops asthma.

Another suffers organ failure.

Someone else receives a miraculous transplant.

A fourth player is somehow surviving despite appearing to have every condition known to modern medicine.

It’s glorious.

The “Take That” Factor

Let’s address the elephant in the operating room.

Organ Attack is absolutely a “take that” game.

If your gaming group dislikes direct confrontation, targeted attacks, and occasionally being singled out for reasons that can only be described as petty revenge, this may not be the game for you.

Players are constantly attacking one another.

Alliances form.

Grudges emerge.

Temporary truces collapse almost immediately.

The player who looked safe two turns ago suddenly finds themselves suffering from multiple diseases and missing half their organs.

The player who appeared doomed somehow wins.

There’s a beautiful unpredictability to it.

Unlike deeply strategic games where victory is determined through long-term planning, Organ Attack thrives on chaos, timing, and social dynamics.

The best move isn’t always the mathematically optimal one.

Sometimes it’s simply attacking the person who gave you a heart attack three turns earlier.

Justice must be served.

Surprisingly Educational?

I hesitate to call Organ Attack educational.

That feels like the kind of thing a teacher says right before forcing students to watch a documentary.

But it is interesting how often players begin discussing actual medical conditions during gameplay.

I’ve seen conversations emerge around:

  • What the spleen actually does
  • Why kidney stones are terrifying
  • Whether people can survive without certain organs
  • Which diseases are genuinely hereditary
  • Why everyone suddenly feels concerned about their liver

No one is becoming a doctor after playing this game.

But they might accidentally learn something.

Accessibility and Replayability

One of Organ Attack’s greatest strengths is accessibility.

You don’t need a dedicated gaming group.

You don’t need an engineering degree.

You don’t need to spend forty-five minutes explaining worker placement mechanics.

You can teach this game to casual gamers, family members, coworkers, and people who haven’t played a board game beyond Monopoly.

The humor does a lot of the heavy lifting.

People immediately understand what’s happening because the concept is inherently funny.

Replayability remains strong because player interactions drive the experience.

No two games unfold quite the same way.

Different disease combinations, shifting alliances, and varying levels of table chaos ensure that every session develops its own personality.

The Downsides

No game is perfect.

The biggest criticism is that luck plays a significant role.

Card draws matter.

Sometimes you’ll get exactly what you need.

Sometimes you’ll stare helplessly at your hand while your opponents systematically dismantle your internal organs.

Players seeking deep strategic complexity may find the experience a bit light.

This isn’t Terraforming Mars.

It isn’t Twilight Imperium.

It isn’t attempting to be.

The game prioritizes fun, interaction, and laughter over intricate decision trees.

Additionally, highly competitive players may occasionally feel frustrated when random card draws determine the outcome of a close game.

But frankly, that’s part of the charm.

The game is less about proving who is the smartest player at the table and more about creating memorable stories.

Final Thoughts

Organ Attack Overview

Organ Attack understands exactly what it wants to be.

It isn’t trying to reinvent tabletop gaming.

It isn’t trying to become the next great strategic masterpiece.

Instead, it delivers something arguably more valuable:

A fast, funny, easy-to-learn game that gets people laughing.

In an era where many board games seem determined to become increasingly complex, Organ Attack embraces simplicity without sacrificing personality.

Its combination of dark humor, charming artwork, accessible gameplay, and relentless player interaction makes it an easy recommendation for casual gaming groups.

Will it become your group’s most strategically revered game?

Probably not.

Will you remember the time your cousin gave you Anxiety, followed by Kidney Stones, before finishing off your Liver with a Heart Attack card?

Absolutely.

And honestly, that’s what good party games are supposed to do.

Rating: 8.5 / 10

Pros

  • Fantastic artwork
  • Easy to teach and learn
  • Constant player interaction
  • Genuinely funny theme
  • Great for casual groups

Cons

  • Significant luck factor
  • Limited strategic depth
  • Can feel mean-spirited for players who dislike direct attacks

Bottom Line:
Organ Attack is equal parts anatomy lesson, medical nightmare, and comedy show. It’s the kind of game that creates stories you’ll still be laughing about weeks later—assuming your organs survive the experience.


Be on the lookout for more future Board Game reviews! We want to continue to do board game reviews alongside our already popular beer reviews, brewery reviews, hike reviews, and book reviews, so stay tuned for more!

 


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Beer Review: Grace (Boneshire Brew Works) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2022/05/08/beer-review-grace-boneshire-brew-works/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=beer-review-grace-boneshire-brew-works Sun, 08 May 2022 12:37:00 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=9223
Grace by Boneshire Brew Works

Happy Mothers Day

Lets first start this off with doing a big shout out to all the mothers out there. We wouldn’t be here without them. (Quite literally.) So we here at The Beer Thrillers acknowledge and congratulate all the mothers – we know its not easy. (Ask my mom, she would gladly tell you horror stories of raising…. not me of course, my sister. I was an angel. Perfect child. Clearly the favorite. My sister on the other hand…. *shivers*.)

The flowers at Grammy’s grave

Every year around this time my grandmother’s peony bush blooms out front. So I cut off some of the flowers, and cut off some similar flowers (this year I cut a few branches of the dogwood and some azalea flowers) and took them out to grammy’s grave. Peonies bloom around early – middle of May and don’t last super long, but have wonderful beautiful flowers and a great aroma. You can read more on them here at Wikipedia: Peony. (Quick fun fact: The peony is named after Paeon [also spelled Paean], a student of Asclepius, the Greek god of medicine and healing. In Greek mythology, when Asclepius became jealous of his pupil, Zeus saved Paeon from the wrath of Asclepius by turning him into the peony flower.)

Yesterday we celebrated Mothers Day at my parents house and I brought my girls over. As per tradition whenever we all get together, we typically play some form of board game or card game. The girls love Organ Attack so we played that with my mom.

Organ Attack was created by the writer of The Awkward Yeti, Nick Seluk. I reviewed one of his comic books here: Book Review: The Heart and Brain (The Awkard Yeti) (by Nick Seluk). The card game is fun, and gets my daughters all in a fiery mood fighting each other to remove and eliminate their organs. It is a fun game, that does help the girls learn a little bit about anatomy (like what diseases target what organs, what the organs do, etc.). There is some awkward moments though, like giving my mom cancer – something that she has survived three different forms. But in true champion and warrior form, we turn it all into jokes and my mom laughs, especially when she got to play the Medicine card on it and remove it. She even joked that it was easier than chemotherapy again.

All in all, mothers day was a lot of fun (well technically Mothers Day Eve, but it was our mothers day). Can’t beat a day spent with family, playing games, delivering flowers, little things like this in life is what’s nice. Like Kurt Vonnegut would say quoting his uncle (Bernard Vonnegut): “If this isn’t nice, what is?”

Boneshire Brew Works

(Pigtoberfest by Boneshire Brew Works)

Anyone familiar with the blog knows that Boneshire Brew Works is my local go to brewery. Its about four minutes from home and all but within walking distance. (Rubber Soul is another, also within walking distance.) Needless to say we have covered many beer reviews by them: Sunburst, Pigtoberfest, Dillston, Harrishire, Fall Hippo, Blue Hippo, AuZealand 2.0, Tried and True (Mango), Caucus Race 6.0, The Hog, Long Tongue Liar, Pandemic Pils, Iscariot, Road Less Traveled, Good Walk Spoiled, S’Mores, LazaRIS, and reviewed the flight of Shire variants; we’ve also covered them in various news articles: Boneshire Brew Works Celebrates 5th Anniversary, Pigtoberfest 2021, Boneshire Brew Works Expands With Second Location, Boneshire Brew Works Celebrates 3 Years, Brewery Hopping – 12.27.19, and Breweries around Harrisburg Area (2019).

Soooo….. yea….. I would say we’ve covered quite a few of their brews here on the blog.

And all for good reason – they make some really wonderful beers. Grace (this beer) included. So when I heard they were releasing a special barrel aged beer – and that it was named Grace – I couldn’t slap my money down fast enough for this beaut. It was first released for sale for us mug club members, and then went on sale to the public after that. It was 20$ for the bottle.

From UntappdBoneshire Brew Works is a microbrewery from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. They have 189 unique beers. They have 41,401 ratings with a global average rating of 3.84 (as of 5.8.22). Their Untappd description reads: “Welcome to Boneshire Brew Works. We are located in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on Derry Street. Soon you will be able to have our beer and sodas throughout Central Pennsylvania, as they are already flowing in our tasting room. Follow us for updates on beer releases, events, and brewery happenings through your favorite social media site.”

Beer Review

Grace by Boneshire Brew Works

Beer: Grace
Brewery: Boneshire Brew Works
Style: Wild Ale – American
ABV: 7.5% / 6%
IBU: No IBU
Untappd Description: We brewed this beer several years ago and put it to sleep in American Chardonnay barrels with 2 strains of Brettanomyces. This beer is very complex with orange marmalade, subtle coriander spice, dry oakiness, heavy Brett funk and slight sourness.

This is a beautiful, beautiful, beautiful beer. Lovely in appearance, aroma, taste, everything, it just nails it. As per always with my beer reviews, I do it in the order of – appearance, aroma, taste. (Or at least I try to remember to do it that way. No guarantees.) [But have no fears, for this review I am.]

Starting off with the appearance – like I said, its beautiful. Its got a light reddish golden like hue. It has a very striking resemblance to some wines of the lighter scale. its fluorescent in a way, and completely clear. No sediment, no floaties, no deposits. Nice carbonation, slight small head that retains for a fair bit.

Aroma is an interesting mix of wine, Belgian, saison, and a mixture of other notes. Notes of the coriander spice, the grape, the oak, and lots of the chardonnay, gives off the heavy wine like impressions, but the coriander spice and the Brett aroma also gives off strong Belgian and Wilde Ale / Saison impressions as well; making this a wonderfully complex beer.

This is a deliciously tart, mildly puckering, wine like beer, designed for a classier age (not like those blasters they use in uncivilized times). It is a gorgeous looking beer, looks very wine like, and has just a wonderful appearance straight from the bottle to the glass, and undoing wax sealed bottles is always fun. (Really, there’s gotta be an easy way to unseal waxed and sealed bottles, but I haven’t found it yet.) The carbonation on this was nice, and the overall appearance is a medley of wine and Belgian styles, so I dig that. The bottle says its 6% ABV, but the Untappd listing for it says its 7.5%. This has a very complex overall taste to it. Its got a lot of wine attributes and tastes; you get a heavy dosage of oak, grape, Brett, funk, tart, with a dryness, and then you get some subtle notes of coriander spice, orange and orange marmalade, The tartness and dryness to the beer really holds it up well and keeps the medley of different flavors in a very nice sipping beer; this is a perfect dinner beer to share with someone over a nice course meal. This isn’t mean to be a sessionable or poundable beer that you have with your buddies while watching the Phillies blow another game or something similar, this is meant to be a lovely dinner beer, with candlelight, nice music, steak, mashed potatoes, garlic green beans, etc. Thats what makes it so enjoyable too, knowing the work and craftsmanship that went into this beer, making it such a delicious, well rounded beer, adds to the overall enjoyment of the beer itself; knowing that it was worked on hard, that it was barrel aged, that time was spent on this beer, all adds to its overall quality and flavor. Its the small enjoyable things like this – knowing that someone cares about their work and craft – that makes the moments and beer like this so much better. All in all, the flavors work so well, the aroma is lovely, the appearance of the beer is wonderful, and everything about this beer is just great.

My Untappd Rating: ****.5
Global Average Untappd Rating: 3.95 (as of 5.8.22)

Grandma’s and Mothers

Its so nice to get to celebrate Mothers Day and thank my mom for all she has done for me, for my girls, for my sister, and as a teacher all she has done for everyone else. My Grandma (Grammy) Grace was just as much a mother figure helping raise me as I grew up, and so was my Great Grandma – Florence Speck. All three of these women are / and were – such tough as nails ladies, who never gave up. My great grandma passed away at 99, after a long fight of dementia and alzheimers, my mom has survived several fights against cancer.

Its a nice nod to my Grammy that I got to do a beer review with a beer with her name. I think she would have been tickled pink by that. I got to do one for my Great Grandma as well – Florence by Hill Farmstead. I know she would have laughed about that, she loved stealing my dad’s beers when he still lived at home with them and going to college.

So let me just say one last time – Happy Mothers Day to all the moms out there who are doing such a wonderful job.

Thanks For Reading

Thanks for reading everyone. I know this was a bit of a longer winded review, but nice thing is you can always just scroll by my extra crap and get right to the beer review if you’d like. I tend to meander, my apologies for that. I do enjoy everyone indulging me though on all that, especially a beer like this.

I hope you enjoyed the review, and if you have any comments, questions, or anything else, let me know in the comments or contact us through the contact page or e-mail us at thebeerthrillers@gmail.com. We love to hear from you all!

Thanks for reading, Happy Mothers Day, and cheers everyone!

-B. Kline

As always, thank you everyone for reading! Leave your likes, comments, suggestions, questions, etc, in the comments section. Or use the Feedback – Contact Us – page, and we’ll get right back to you! You can also reach out to us at our direct e-mail address: thebeerthrillers@gmail.com

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

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Book Review: Heart and Brain – An Awkward Yeti Collection (Nick Seluk) https://thebeerthrillers.com/2021/07/24/book-review-heart-and-brain-an-awkward-yeti-collection-nick-seluk/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=book-review-heart-and-brain-an-awkward-yeti-collection-nick-seluk Sat, 24 Jul 2021 11:53:00 +0000 https://thebeerthrillers.com/?p=8023
Heart and Brain by Nick Seluk

The Awkward Yeti

The Awkward Yeti by Nick Seluk is a popular cartoon strip, primarily online. There has been book collections and other specials, but unlike Peanuts or The Far Side or Wizard of Id, etc; The Awkward Yeti has been primarily online.

You can find The Awkward Yeti online at – The Awkward Yeti – Nick Seluk. It is a relatively wholesome comic strip that details the body organs; brain, heart, stomach, liver, gall bladder, lungs, fat, tongue, etc. in humorous circumstances with their owner (or on their own).

Heart and Brain

Particularly, I enjoy the back and forth between heart and brain. The childish, youthful, fun filled antics of the heart versus the cold, calculating, analyzing, realistic brain. Or the neurotic parts of the brain versus the ‘forget it’ portions of the heart. And thats where this collection of comic strips shine through.

Review

As per GoodReads, the summary reads:

From paying taxes and getting up for work to dancing with kittens and starting a band, readers everywhere will relate to the ongoing struggle between Heart and Brain.

Heart and Brain: An Awkward Yeti Collection illustrates the relationship between the sensible Brain and its emotionally driven counterpart, the Heart.

Boasting more than one million pageviews per month, TheAwkwardYeti.com has become a webcomic staple since its creation in 2012.

Heart and Brain – GoodReads Page

My two favorite characters from the series – Brain and Heart. Their polar opposites but both compliment the other in ways thats only possible due to WHO they are (well, WHAT they represent anyway). This might be my favorite yet of the three books.

Nearly each panel is both funny, and sentimental and/or intelligent and witty/wry. Not all are huge ‘guffaws’ or “lol”, but nearly all are chuckles or a smirk inducing joke, with the added weight of the sentimentality or intelligence behind the panel due to the characters (brain and heart) involved.

I think the great thing about the characters of heart and brain, is how much it gets to the “heart and soul” of us. (See what I did there?) It gets right down to what makes us (as humans) tick. And it embodies our neuroses, our depressions, our ticks, our reasons, and our thoughts. It gets to how sometimes we’re flighty and want to run around in a sunflower field full of butterflies, and sometimes, we need to tamper that with doing our taxes or figuring out our budget for the coming weeks. Nick writes as someone who knows depression and anxiety, and it makes the characters relatable for those of us who also have these symptoms and see ourselves in the characters.

We see ourselves awake at night, thinking about something we did or said thirteen years ago. Or someone worried and paranoid or anxious about a test / promotion / etc. The best thing about the strip is its relateability. There is a few other compilations, as well as much of his stuff online. I fully suggest checking all of Nick Seluk’s other works out as well, especially the other Awkward Yeti works.

My GoodReads Rating: ****
My LibraryThing Rating: ****
Global GoodReads Rating: 4.33 (as of 7.24.21)

Be sure to check out our other book reviews, as well as check out our beer reviews, brewery reviews, brewery news, and much more here on the blog!

Cheers!

-B. Kline

Thank you for visiting our blog. Please make sure to follow, bookmark, subscribe, and make sure to comment and leave feedback and like the blog posts you read. It will help us to better tailor the blog to you, the readers, likes and make this a better blog for everyone.

Please be sure to follow us on our social media accounts – FacebookFacebook GroupTwitterInstagramYouTube, and Influence. Please be sure to also follow, like, subscribe to the blog here itself to keep updated. We love to hear from you guys, so be sure to leave a comment and let us know what you think!

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