Finspan board game box cover

Finspan

$45.00
Sale price  $45.00 Regular price  $50.00
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Finspan

$45.00
Sale price  $45.00 Regular price  $50.00
Our Take

A card-driven engine builder where you dive through three ocean zones over four weeks, collecting fish, hatching eggs, and building schools. It's the lightest, most approachable game in the Wingspan family, perfect for Wingspan fans who want a faster weeknight session or newcomers who've always thought modern board games weren't for them.

Game At A Glance

Players 1-5 PlayersBest: 3
Playtime 40-60 Min
Complexity Light
Recommended Ages 10+
Complexity Meter 1.92 / 5
Play Style Competitive, Solo-Friendly
Game Type Engine Builder, Set Collection, Card Drafting
Theme Animals, Nature, Ocean
Publisher Stonemaier Games
Designer Connie Vogelmann
Year Published 2025

Wingspan at half the weight, set beneath the waves

Picture this: you're descending into warm sunlit water, watching the light fade as you drop into the twilight zone, then into a darkness so deep it almost presses back. On every level, a new fish drifts past. Each one is a discovery. Each one unlocks what comes next.

That's the feeling Finspan is chasing, and it nails it. This is a card-driven engine builder set across three ocean zones over four weeks of diving. On each turn you either place a fish card onto your player mat or send a diver down one of three columns, triggering benefits on every fish you pass along the way. Cards sit face-up in open view, and your hand doubles as your resource pool, so there's no fiddling with food tokens or dice towers.

It's Wingspan at half the weight, and somehow it still feels complete.

What makes Finspan special is how elegantly it strips Wingspan down. The action cubes are gone. The dice tower is gone. The food economy is gone. What's left is the pure satisfaction of building an engine, where every fish you play makes your next dive a little more powerful, and every dive feeds back into more cards, more eggs, more schools. It's Wingspan at half the weight, and somehow it still feels complete.

This is the one to pull out with family members who heard Wingspan was complicated, friends who haven't played a modern board game since college, or your partner who wants something quieter than a party game but less demanding than a full evening of strategy. Solo play is built in, and it works. If you already love Wingspan, this is the faster version you'll reach for on weeknights when you don't have 90 minutes to spare.

The art is as beautiful as you'd expect from this series, and the card iconography is dense at first glance but genuinely intuitive within a game or two. One honest note: if Wingspan wasn't your thing, Finspan probably won't be either. It's the same core engine, just with fins.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many players can play Finspan?
Finspan plays 1 to 5 players. It includes a built-in solo mode using the Nautoma decision cards, and most groups find 2 to 3 players hits the sweet spot, where the race for dive-site rewards feels competitive without dragging out the turn timing.
How long does a game of Finspan take?
Plan for 45 to 60 minutes. That's noticeably faster than Wingspan's typical 60 to 90 minutes, which makes Finspan a much easier sell for a weeknight game after dinner or a quick session before heading out.
How does Finspan compare to Wingspan?
Finspan keeps the card-driven engine building that made Wingspan a hit, but strips out the food icons, dice tower, and action cubes. Your hand of cards acts as its own resource pool, which makes setup faster and turns cleaner. Most players describe it as a streamlined take on the original: same satisfying engine, less overhead on the table.
Do I need to know Wingspan to play Finspan?
Not at all. Finspan might actually be the easier starting point. The streamlined design means you can teach the rules in about ten minutes, and the card iconography is dense but consistent, so it clicks within the first game or two.
Can Finspan be played solo?
Yes. The box includes a solo mode called Nautoma, which uses a deck of decision cards to simulate an automated opponent. It's a solid, quiet solo experience for evenings when you want to run your engine in peace without learning a whole separate ruleset.
Is this a good fit for families with kids?
The publisher recommends ages 10 and up, and that's a fair benchmark. The beautiful fish art and manageable rules make it a great pick for family game nights, especially with kids who are ready to graduate from lighter family titles into something with real strategy.
Is Finspan accessible for someone who hasn't played modern board games?
Absolutely. Finspan was specifically designed to be more welcoming than Wingspan, and it's one of the friendlier on-ramps into modern gaming on the shelf right now. If you have a friend or partner who thinks modern games look intimidating, this is a great first ask.

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