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Baby, We Were Born To Run is a two-player, card-based rpg inspired by the Springsteen song of the same name.

It's 4 pages, with a single photo graphic, but the layout is extremely clean and easy to read.

Setting-wise, Born To Run is very loose. It wants the same framing as the song, but it isn't very specific outside of that, and you need to provide your own world details.

The two characters each have a defined thing they want (to leave town, and to stay in town) but their characterization is unspecified outside of that. One wants to leave town. The other wants to stay. It's on you as players to fill in the rest.

Mechanically, Born To Run is very focused. You each start with a hand of cards and a deck in the center of the table. You burn one card off the deck into the discard, and then you take turns drawing from the deck or the discard. The goal is to assemble groups of matching or sequential cards, and each of those has a value of 0. Anything not in a match or a sequence adds points to your hand, and the first player to get under 10 points ends the game.

During this gameplay, every card triggers a piece of a conversation based on its suit. These suit-based prompts are deeply flavorful, and they add a ton of atmosphere to the game.

When the endgame does hit, it branches and forks and can lead to a number of unique resolutions---with the PCs finding some measure of happiness or subsiding into stasis---depending on what they choose to do and how they feel about it.

Luck is a major factor of gameplay, and while the odds are that one PC will be at least a little bit happy in the end, it's less probable that both will.

And either way, it depends on the cards.

Overall, Born To Run is a cool transformation of a song into game form. It makes some compromises on the game side to better replicate the song---steering away from a more concrete setting and defined characters---but it has a *lot* of flavor and it's quite engaging if you lean into the acting and storytelling. If you like short, character-centric games---and especially if you like Springsteen---give this one a shot.


Minor Issues:

-It's not super likely, but the endgame can trigger in an opening hand.

-What if both players Leave It All On The Line? Again unlikely, but I think it's possible to engineer this if you both coordinate.