âYou guys are red, and weâre blue. No waitâyouâre blueâno-â
By Isabelle Orr, Entertainment Editor
It was a big day for local board game enthusiasts Gilda Rynes and Derek Vassar, both 27, as they celebrated their 50th party ruined.
âWeâve ended dozens upon dozens of parties,â Vassar said as Rynes sat on his lap, something that made every reporter in the room uncomfortable. âAnd we hope to ruin many more in the years to come.â
After the two met studying geology, the two quickly realized that the only thing stronger than their love for each other was their passion for tabletop board games.
âBecause the only thing more boring than geology is board games,â said Rynes.
The couple described their takedown of parties as a double-pronged approach.
âWe wait until the party is really getting into full swing,â Vassar told the Other Press, zipping up his black Arcâteryx jacket as far as it could possibly go. âPeople are talking, laughing, really having fun. Then we pull out our mesh grocery bag full of intricate, hard-to-learn board games and put them all on the table. We make it very clear how the night is going to go. Do you want to describe the rest, babe?â
Rynes put one of her sweater strings in her mouth and chewed on it as she explained the rest of the attack.
âWe then find the least convenient area to play a gameâmost likely the table holding everyoneâs drinksâand move everything aside to set the board game up. If anyone protests, we shout them down with phrases like, âNo, youâll love it!â and âWeâve played this one a million times.â Usually, people start to realize that the fun, easygoing energy of the party is now over and done with, and the real fun begins.â
Other Press reporters spoke to Calvin Wrobel, host of the aforementioned 50th party.
âI hate board games,â said Wrobel. âDonât like them, never have. Itâs almost like Gilda and Derek are using them as a tool to distract us from the fact that they canât socialize. Before they pulled the board games out, they barely talked to anyone. They just sat on the couch whispering to each other. It was almost as awful as the games themselves.â
âWe pick the games with the most detailed rules that are almost impossible for first-timers to pick up on,â Vassar explained. âWeâre not talking Guess Who? or Monopoly. Weâre bringing out complicated, world-building games that are barely even fun for us. Now thatâs how you party!â
âBecause we own these games and play them often, we always have the upper hand. And believe me, weâre poor winners,â Rynes added.
Vassar pulled reporters aside while Rynes was in the bathroom. âJust between us, Iâm planning on proposing to Gilda at the next party we ruin. Iâm going to pull out Codenamesâand instead of a complex, frustrating game that guarantees nobody will be getting laid that night, thereâll be a ring inside! I canât wait to settle down, start a family, and force the doctor delivering our child to play Settlers of Catan before giving Gilda an epidural.â
Sources told the Other Press that Rynes and Vassar usually only bring two loose beers to a party, relying mostly on the hosts as a source of alcohol.
Before leaving the conference, Vassar and Rynes shared a long, tongue-filled kiss.
âWe do that at parties too,â Rynes said. âNobody likes it.â