Geekly News: April 13, 2025, Werewolf By Night’s Sequel

Hey, hey, Geekly Gang. It’s Sunday, so we have another Geekly News. We have an update about the tariffs and their impact on the board game industry, but first, let’s talk about the MCU.

Werewolf By Night Gets a Sequel

Michael Giacchino transitioned from writing scores for popular shows and movies like numerous Pixar movies (The Incredibles, Up, and Ratatouille to name a few), the Jurassic World series, Lost, and the MCU to directing the singular Werewolf By Night special. Giacchino is turning his attention to comic books. I loved the Werewolf By Night special. We’ve covered it in a previous post. According to Giacchino, this new comic book series (which will debut in summer 2025) tells an untold story from the original Werewolf By Night’s run.

Giacchino isn’t waiting for the MCU to green light a second Werewolf By Night special. He’s keeping busy with his theatrical movie debut, reimagining the 1954 monster classic Them!, which features mammoth ants invading a city and the mayhem they cause. And he continues to work within the MCU. Giacchino is the composer of the upcoming Fantastic Four: First Step’s score.

Giacchino mentioned that he’s interested in seeing Werewolf By Night return to the screen with a sequel special. This new comic book series will be a treat and could be adapted into that Werewolf By Night’s sequel. Werewolf By Night: Blood Moon Rises releases this summer and will get added to my summer reading. I can’t wait.

But Werewolf By Night fans may need to wait for a sequel. The MCU hasn’t figured out what it wants to do with the dark corner of Marvel’s universe. Recently, the Blade movie got cancelled, and while Midnight Sons remains on the horizon, the MCU hasn’t given word on which projects the characters involved (like Blade) will appear. Blood Moon Rises may need to tide fans over for a year or two until the MCU makes a Werewolf By Night sequel.

The DM Lair Cancels its Dungeon Drifters Kickstarter

Dungeons & Dragons YouTube creator the DM Lair launched its Dungeon Drifters Kickstarter campaign this past week. Dungeon Drifters is a rules-light adaptation of Dungeons & Dragons to a board game. Think of it as a quirky and fun alternative to Hero Quest. I intended to include Dungeon Drifters as an upcoming board game that recently began a crowdfunding campaign, which is something I do in most Geekly News posts. But days later, the DM Lair cancelled its Dungeon Drifters Kickstarter campaign. Here’s a link to the DM Lair’s official cancellation announcement.

The DM Lair has had a history of successful Kickstarter campaigns. They’ve had numerous successful ones, even a handful of board game-like projects. During the announcement, the DM Lair listed a handful of reasons. They take full responsibility for the Kickstarter campaign’s cancellation and reassure fans that Dungeon Drifters is on hold. I like the DM Lair because of its transparency. The company claims that they lost $50,000 of upfront cost during the making of Dungeon Drifters and is offering a 50% discount on their tabletop role-playing game supplies. Check out their store and help out, if you would like. I love the title of their discount code: HolyCrap50.

One of the contributing factors the DM Lair lists for Dungeon Drifters’ cancellation is the tariffs on board game products. By no means does the DM Lair say that tariffs are the only reason the project got cancelled (or postponed), but they do cite their many Kickstarter successes and admit that the increased cost played a role. And this is by no means an isolated incident.

The above image is of Vancouver-based board game company Off The Page Games (who make board games based on indie comics like MIND MGMT,  Harrow County, and Corps of Discovery), unable to make a shipment to the United States because of new tariffs.

Board Games and Tariffs…Again

We aren’t going to have any new board games on this week’s Geekly News because there aren’t as many to discuss, and the industry is scrambling to find answers for the mounting tariffs. A month and a half ago, Geekly mentioned tariffs causing havoc for Dutch indie board game company Splotter Games. One month ago, we discussed CMON’s precarious position. Like the DM Lair mentioned in their announcement, more than one factor is playing a role with fans questioning if CMON can fulfill last year’s Kickstarter campaigns. To date, CMON Games has only fulfilled smaller Kickstarter campaigns from 2024. I have my fingers crossed for DC Heroes United. Last week, we shared the CEO of Steve Jackson Games, Meredith Placko’s, thoughts.

Placko was one of several voices within the board game industry who expressed their concerns about these tariffs. Stonemaier Games co-founder Jamey Stegmaier suggested that his company’s games’ prices could leap from $60 to $100 to keep up with rising costs. I’ve heard numerous companies postpone any releases (both on crowdsourcing platforms like Kickstarter and retail stores like local game shops) until they learn the final cost of doing business.

I’ll paraphrase Placko here. The United States doesn’t have the industry to fill in the gaps left by this sudden inability to use outsourced labor. Many board game companies based within the United States would like to use in-country labor if it was possible. I’ll take it a step further. The United States government has made outsourcing labor a necessity. This trend began in the 1980s. It’ll take decades to build up the means (such as factories) and the labor force needed to fill the void.

Hopefully, we’ll have new Kickstarter or Gamefound releases for next week. If you have any new board game releases you’re excited about, feel free to contact us, and I’ll include them in the next Geekly News post. Thank you for reading, and wherever you are, I hope you’re having a great day.