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  • WIL WHEATON: Gaming is truly a global phenomenon, with some

  • of the most popular games in the world

  • being designed in Europe.

  • These European style board games tend to have a few

  • things in common.

  • They use a scoring metric that keeps everyone involved in the

  • game until the last move.

  • The concept of attacking another player is minimized or

  • eliminated entirely.

  • And they're all language independent.

  • Most of the European style board games

  • are designed in Germany.

  • But today on TableTop, Beth Riesgraf, Casey McKinnon, and

  • Leo Chu are here to play a game that was designed in

  • France, where a sense of artistic communication and

  • appreciation for beauty, the ability to communicate

  • emotion, and a strong sense of empathy are keys to victory.

  • This is one of the most elegant and beautiful European

  • board games I have ever played.

  • It is 2010's game of the year, Dixit.

  • [SPEAKING FRENCH]

  • Dixit is a communications game.

  • Every player gets a hand of these

  • beautifully illustrated cards.

  • One player each round is the storyteller.

  • The storyteller chooses a card from their hand, and then

  • describes it any way they want to.

  • A word, a phrase, a sound, a gesture.

  • It's really up to them.

  • They play the card face down.

  • And then every other player in the game chooses a card from

  • their hand that they feel best matches the storyteller's

  • description.

  • The cards are shuffled and then revealed.

  • The players then try to guess which card was the

  • storyteller's card.

  • Players place their votes on the table.

  • Then the votes are revealed, and we have a scoring round.

  • Every player who chooses the storyteller's

  • card gets three points.

  • So does the storyteller.

  • For every vote that is on a different player's card, that

  • player will receive one point.

  • Now the storyteller has to communicate creatively and

  • clearly, but not too clearly.

  • Because if they're too on the nose and everyone chooses the

  • storyteller's card, the storyteller gets zero points

  • and all the other players get two points.

  • The storyteller also has to be careful not to be too vague.

  • Because if no one chooses the storyteller's card, then the

  • storyteller gets zero points and all the other players will

  • get two points.

  • Dixit is a beautiful game.

  • It's a whimsical, joyful game.

  • Everyone is involved on every turn.

  • And I cannot wait to find out how our imaginations are

  • brought to life.

  • It is time to play Dixit.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: I'm Casey McKinnon.

  • I am an indie filmmaker, and I'm known for making A

  • Comicbook Orange, a comicbook review show.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I am Beth Riesgraf.

  • And I would say I'm most known for my role on Leverage.

  • I play Parker.

  • LEO CHU: I'm Leo Chu.

  • And I'm a writer/producer and the creator and executive

  • producer of Supah Ninjas on Nickelodeon.

  • WIL WHEATON: Leo, you will go first.

  • LEO CHU: Great.

  • WIL WHEATON: You are the storyteller, so look at your

  • cards and do your thing.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Stop cheating, Wil.

  • Stop looking at my cards.

  • LEO CHU: Snow White.

  • WIL WHEATON: So he says Snow White.

  • LEO CHU: This is my first time playing the game.

  • But it's a very empathetic game, and so you really have

  • to understand how everybody else's minds work.

  • WIL WHEATON: Snow White is the clue.

  • Snow White.

  • Snow White.

  • Snow White.

  • Snow White.

  • Everybody got it?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yeah.

  • WIL WHEATON: OK, just go ahead and just turn over your vote.

  • OK, so we'll put these in front of number one.

  • We'll put that one in front of number three.

  • OK, who played number one?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: That was me.

  • WIL WHEATON: Wow, OK.

  • So, Beth, you are currently getting two points.

  • Who played number two?

  • LEO CHU: I did.

  • That was my card.

  • WIL WHEATON: Oh no.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh no.

  • WIL WHEATON: Beth gets two points.

  • And everyone except Leo gets two points.

  • Who played number three?

  • I did!

  • So I get another point.

  • OK, Casey, you are the storyteller.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: OK.

  • WIL WHEATON: Everybody draw one more card

  • to refill the hand.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: OK.

  • I have to get a good balance of people who know what I'm

  • talking about and people who don't know

  • what I'm talking about.

  • So my strategy is to go with the geek references, because I

  • know Wil will get it.

  • But I have a feeling that Beth won't get it.

  • (HIGH PITCHED VOICE) Hey, Charlie.

  • Charlie!

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Ugh.

  • WIL WHEATON: I think maybe I can steal this one from you.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Question is, can everybody?

  • WIL WHEATON: All right.

  • Let's mix them all up.

  • And let's see.

  • Do it.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: (HIGH PITCHED VOICE) Hey, Charlie!

  • Hey, Charlie!

  • Hey, Charlie!

  • Charlie!

  • WIL WHEATON: So this is the beauty of Dixit, right?

  • Which one do you choose?

  • Let's go ahead and vote.

  • And reveal.

  • It's Charlie the Unicorn horse, right?

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Yeah.

  • WIL WHEATON: Yeah, that's what I was thinking.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Hey, Charlie!

  • WIL WHEATON: But then I was also thinking maybe-- like I

  • don't know how dark Casey is.

  • So that could be, if that thing was like, hey, Charlie,

  • it could be like, kill it, kill it, kill it with fire.

  • So that is going to be three points for Casey.

  • That takes you to five.

  • Three points for me.

  • That takes me to six.

  • And three points for-- are you yellow, Beth?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yep.

  • WIL WHEATON: And that takes you to seven.

  • Good Lord.

  • LEO CHU: I need to score.

  • WIL WHEATON: And who played number four?

  • Oh, I did!

  • So that's going to be--

  • I'm green, so that's another point for me.

  • Yay.

  • OK, Beth, you are the storyteller.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: All righty.

  • Let me see here.

  • OK.

  • Little House on the Prairie.

  • WIL WHEATON: Little House on the Prairie.

  • OK Little House on the Prairie.

  • Little House on the Prairie.

  • Little House on the Prairie.

  • Little House on the Prairie.

  • Ready?

  • OK.

  • Let's reveal.

  • One, one, and three.

  • OK, so three.

  • You want to put that there, Casey?

  • Thank you.

  • All right.

  • Who played number one?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I did that one.

  • That was me.

  • [INTERPOSING VOICES]

  • BETH RIESGRAF: The little candle.

  • My play with Little House on the Prairie is simple.

  • They had no electricity--

  • candle holder in a light bulb.

  • Genius.

  • Wait that doesn't go with it.

  • Genius.

  • WIL WHEATON: All right so that's

  • going to be three points.

  • Hey, Leo, you're on the board.

  • LEO CHU: Thank you.

  • WIL WHEATON: And that's going to be three points for Casey

  • and three points for Beth.

  • LEO CHU: I wasn't really expecting to be behind,

  • because I'm actually a really good game player.

  • And I play a lot of really elaborate,

  • strategy board games.

  • You know how sometimes you're really good at calculus, but

  • you can't really balance your checkbook?

  • Dixit is like the checkbook of games, and I

  • can't balance mine.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: I think that I'm going to win, because I

  • win at everything.

  • WIL WHEATON: I know Beth really well from working with

  • her on Leverage.

  • I don't know Casey and Leo as well as I know her.

  • So, I'm hoping that I will be able to

  • load up on Beth points.

  • But I'm going to have to get points from Casey and Leo, if

  • I'm going to win this game.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I am going to win.

  • I'm going to cut Wil down to size.

  • WIL WHEATON: OK, I'm the storyteller now.

  • And I'm going to say it was going so well.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh, that's the clue.

  • WIL WHEATON: That's the clue.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh.

  • WIL WHEATON: Oh, no.

  • You killed the rabbits.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I should throw salt over my shoulder.

  • WIL WHEATON: It was going so well.

  • It was going so well.

  • It was going so well.

  • It was going so well.

  • All right, go ahead and reveal your votes.

  • Number three, number four, and number three.

  • I thought I had in the bag with it was going so well.

  • I thought clearly it's a date.

  • And I thought well, maybe someone will get another card

  • that would be sort of in there.

  • I didn't expect the sad clown in the spotlight.

  • I would have chosen that one.

  • Number two was my card, because they're having a great

  • date, but then he gets too competitive with chess.

  • It actually didn't work out the way I wanted it to.

  • And who played number four.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I did.

  • WIL WHEATON: That's also a very good it

  • was going so well.

  • Look at that.

  • Every time someone thinks they're catching up with you,

  • you leap right back into the lead like a real rabbit.

  • Beth really gets Dixit.

  • You can tell because she's always been either in the lead

  • or one or two off the lead the entire time.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Beth is a wild card of a player.

  • And I have no idea what she's going to come out with.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I'm feeling very confident right now.

  • I can tell Wil's trying to psych me out.

  • But I'm not going to be fooled by his trickery.

  • WIL WHEATON: All right, Leo, it's all you.

  • LEO CHU: Helen.

  • WIL WHEATON: Helen?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh.

  • WIL WHEATON: Helen.

  • All right, let's see.

  • Helen.

  • Helen.

  • Helen Helen.

  • All right.

  • Casey's like I got this.

  • Hell's yeah.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Woah, instant.

  • Instant.

  • No lag with this one.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: It was obvious right from the start that it

  • was a reference to Odysseus.

  • WIL WHEATON: I hope that the first place my mind went for

  • Helen is not overly influencing my vote.

  • I was worried when Leo said Helen that my expectation of

  • it being a Helen of Troy reference was going

  • to get in the way.

  • I mean, I don't know.

  • It could be Helen Roper from Three's Company.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Because duh.

  • Helen of Troy.

  • WIL WHEATON: That's the first thing I thought, and then I

  • saw her and I was like, oh man, is that

  • Odysseus trying to--

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Yes, exactly.

  • WIL WHEATON: --sail back to get her from the war?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I really thought I had

  • the Helen one down.

  • I was thinking Helen Keller.

  • But I picked a mouse by an Arabian palace.

  • So I'm not really sure how that even

  • related with that thought.

  • WIL WHEATON: All right, Casey, you're up.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Life is but a walking shadow.

  • LEO CHU: Wow.

  • That was so fast.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh, stop it.

  • Don't try to--

  • LEO CHU: I'm so intimidated.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: --just be that person right now.

  • All right.

  • WIL WHEATON: All right.

  • Here we go.

  • Life is but a walking shadow.

  • Life is but a walking shadow.

  • Life is but a walking shadow.

  • Life is but a walking shadow.

  • All right.

  • Everybody ready?

  • Go ahead and flip them.

  • One, two, three.

  • Look at that.

  • All right, who played number one?

  • I did.

  • The word shadow is right in the clue.

  • And I've got a card that has a shadow and people walking

  • right on it.

  • And I just had to hope that everyone would think all

  • right, she's very literal, that's why

  • she chose this card.

  • So that's one point for me.

  • Who played number two?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I did.

  • WIL WHEATON: Beth played number two, so that is one

  • point for Beth.

  • Who played number three?

  • CASEY MCKINNON: That was my card.

  • WIL WHEATON: Oh, so that's three points for Beth, and

  • three points for Casey.

  • And you played number four.

  • LEO CHU: And I played number four.

  • WIL WHEATON: Leo is struggling a little bit.

  • He just can't seem to catch a break.

  • LEO CHU: Casey is actually very clever.

  • And she finds very interesting references for her cards.

  • My problem is that I didn't always know the references.

  • WIL WHEATON: Where did you-- what did you get?

  • It's a quote from Macbeth.

  • Out, out, brief candle.

  • Life is but a walking shadow.

  • WIL WHEATON: Oh, check you out.

  • Did you know that?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yeah.

  • When she brought that Macbeth quote out, I actually had no

  • idea it was Macbeth.

  • I just acted like I did.

  • WIL WHEATON: All right.

  • This is going to be it all adds up.

  • Leo and I are spending a lot of time in Loserville.

  • But our bunnies look really cute together.

  • All right.

  • Here we go.

  • It all adds up.

  • It all adds up.

  • It all adds up.

  • Don't talk yourself into second guessing and not

  • scoring points like I did last time.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Go with your gut.

  • LEO CHU: Oh, really?

  • See, I've been going with my gut all game, and I've only

  • guessed the card once so far.

  • WIL WHEATON: You're back here.

  • LEO CHU: So don't go with my gut.

  • I'm going to do the opposite of my gut.

  • WIL WHEATON: Welcome to Loserville, population us.

  • LEO CHU: It's actually awesome to have Wil start losing the

  • game, because it was really nice to have another bunny

  • keeping my little pink bunny company at

  • the back of the pack.

  • WIL WHEATON: Maybe my suck is kind of

  • holding Leo back as well.

  • Maybe it's sort of like Team Dudes, we're

  • going to suck together.

  • Wait, no.

  • That doesn't sound right at all.

  • Like whispering in his ear.

  • OK, we're going to make an alliance

  • against the girls now.

  • LEO CHU: Your strategy should be to play the game.

  • WIL WHEATON: Let's go ahead and reveal votes.

  • Let's just go ahead and skip all of the--

  • that was actually mine.

  • So everybody gets two except for me.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: The funny thing is Wil's trying to play it

  • cool and very collected.

  • But I know the real Wil Wheaton.

  • And inside, he is spinning.

  • He's like a little hamster on a wheel.

  • He's freaking out, because he knows I'm going to win.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Clap your hands if

  • you believe in fairies.

  • WIL WHEATON: Clap your hands if you believe in fairies.

  • Clap your hands if you believe in fairies.

  • Wow, look at you guys.

  • You all believe in fairies.

  • Clap your hands if you believe in fairies.

  • Clap your hands if you believe in fairies.

  • Clap your hands if you believe in fairies.

  • Clap your hands if you believe in fairies.

  • WIL WHEATON: Ready?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yeah.

  • WIL WHEATON: All right, let's do it.

  • LEO CHU: Oh!

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh!

  • CASEY MCKINNON: What?

  • WIL WHEATON: Are you number one?

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Yes.

  • Have you guys all seen Hook?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: No.

  • WIL WHEATON: No, but before Hook was Hook, it was this

  • book called Peter Pan.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: I know.

  • I know, but in--

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Well, no I was going with Peter Pan.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: But in Hook--

  • wow.

  • WIL WHEATON: I almost went with number two, and then I

  • was like, no way, that's not the way Casey

  • would play this game.

  • Two points for everyone but blue.

  • One, two, one, two.

  • Why am I in last?

  • One, two.

  • OK, Beth, you're up.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Gosh.

  • OK.

  • I have all these songs popping in my head, but none of them

  • are quite right.

  • WIL WHEATON: Do a song.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I know, but I feel like I have it wrong,

  • which will not be great for anyone.

  • OK.

  • OK.

  • All right.

  • (SINGING) You build me up.

  • WIL WHEATON: I have no idea what song

  • Beth is talking about.

  • But I'm sure that if it exists, I hate it.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: (SINGING) You build me up.

  • WIL WHEATON: It just sounds like something my mom listens

  • to in the car when we're going to auditions.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I think I'm crossing a church hymn and

  • possibly a song.

  • Oh.

  • WIL WHEATON: OK.

  • OK.

  • I think you should do it one more time.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: (SINGING) You build me up.

  • WIL WHEATON: Oh, so good.

  • It's so beautiful.

  • It's the voice of an angel.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: (SIGHS)

  • WIL WHEATON: I think it's that one.

  • OK.

  • I think it's that one.

  • All right.

  • Ready?

  • Vote.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh [BLEEP]

  • [LAUGHTER]

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I combined two songs that really didn't have

  • anything to do with the card.

  • But subliminally they did, I think, because it was a guy

  • chopping a tree.

  • And there's an eagle like (SINGING) You lift me up when

  • on eagles' wings.

  • It's like a hymn plus something else.

  • So, I just confused them all.

  • WIL WHEATON: Number one was mine.

  • So I'm out of Loserville.

  • Look at that.

  • I've been tied for Loserville.

  • That's great!

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I think I was thinking on

  • (SINGING) eagles' wings.

  • Is that a song?

  • Isn't there a song, you lift me up on eagles' wings?

  • WIL WHEATON: I don't know.

  • I hope there isn't.

  • I was so excited when I called Beth and asked her to come

  • play on my show.

  • And now?

  • Maybe not so much.

  • All right, Casey.

  • You're up.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: OK.

  • Seamstress for the band.

  • WIL WHEATON: Seamstress for the band.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: (SINGING) Seamstress for the band.

  • WIL WHEATON: Seamstress for the band.

  • Seamstress for the band.

  • Seamstress for the band.

  • Seamstress for the band.

  • Seamstress for the band.

  • Reveal votes.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Ugh.

  • WIL WHEATON: OK.

  • Who played number one?

  • I did.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I'm so glad I didn't go for that one.

  • I almost did.

  • WIL WHEATON: That's a point for me.

  • Did you play number two?

  • Please say you played number two.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Yes!

  • WIL WHEATON: Yes!

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yay!

  • WIL WHEATON: When Casey sang the line from "Tiny Dancer," I

  • knew that's what she was doing.

  • And I just had to figure out which one of those cards is

  • related to "Tiny Dancer."

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I know Casey's trying to connect with Wil on

  • some subliminal level, but I think I figured it out.

  • She goes with references that she thinks he'll know.

  • And me knowing Wil's mind at this point, I

  • know where she's going.

  • So when I see the pink shoes, (SINGING) tiny

  • dancer, hold me closer.

  • LEO CHU: What was the reference?

  • CASEY MCKINNON: "Tiny Dancer" by Elton John.

  • LEO CHU: Oh.

  • WIL WHEATON: That's why I put him there.

  • Because he has blue jeans.

  • OK, Beth you're up.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: OK.

  • This is going to be a little trivial.

  • Wait, no.

  • A little piece of trivia that you could consider trivial.

  • All right.

  • It got left in the trunk of a taxi cab.

  • Should I say famously was left in the--

  • WIL WHEATON: You could.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Famously left in the trunk of a taxicab.

  • WIL WHEATON: All right.

  • It was famously left in the back of a taxicab.

  • It was famously left in the back of a taxicab.

  • OK, let's reveal.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: OK.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: OK.

  • WIL WHEATON: Is it a cello that was left in

  • the back of a taxicab?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: It was.

  • WIL WHEATON: Yeah, I thought so.

  • Whose was that?

  • I don't remember whose it was?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: It was Yo-Yo Ma's.

  • WIL WHEATON: That's right!

  • That's right!

  • I didn't know what actual thing was left in a cab until

  • I saw the cello.

  • And then I remembered some famous person left a their

  • cello in a cab.

  • And I'm just thinking, please choose the hand.

  • Please choose the hand.

  • I have got to play this hand.

  • It is a personal challenge for me to play this hand and score

  • points with it.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: When I saw Wil lay down the hand with a

  • magnifying glass, I knew where he was going.

  • Because he thought, oh maybe it was a

  • fingerprint, or like the mafia.

  • Someone cut someone's hand off and left it in the taxi.

  • I'm going to go ahead and lift it up a bit and go into the

  • cultural realm of Yo-Yo Ma.

  • WIL WHEATON: And who played number three?

  • I did.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: A fingerprint were you thinking?

  • WIL WHEATON: I thought maybe it was like a severed hand,

  • like cut off from the mafia or something like that.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: I was thinking fingerprints.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yeah.

  • WIL WHEATON: I've had that card from the first draw, and

  • I have not known what the hell to do with it.

  • So I made it a challenge to myself to play that card.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: You fooled me.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: It's a good lesson.

  • WIL WHEATON: You, you, and me.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Last card.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Last card.

  • WIL WHEATON: Guys, this is the last play.

  • This is actually a really important decision for me.

  • I knew that the very best I could do was tie Beth.

  • That's OK.

  • Shared victory is great.

  • So, I have to pick a card that everyone except

  • her is going to get.

  • I just need one person to get the card.

  • One person and not Beth.

  • And then I tie the game.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I know.

  • Stop!

  • Get out of my head.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I know, Wil.

  • WIL WHEATON: Quit.

  • Sh.

  • Sh.

  • Stop it.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yeah, just skip that one, too.

  • Ugh.

  • You're the worst.

  • This is play for today.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Oh.

  • That sounded so lame.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: That was like one of

  • those leadership posters.

  • That's like--

  • WIL WHEATON: Hang in there.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yeah.

  • And it's very important that you do not choose my card.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Why?

  • WIL WHEATON: It's very important that you don't

  • choose my card.

  • Because if someone chooses my card and you don't chose my

  • card, then we'll be tied, and we'll get to share victory.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Do we go into mad overtime or something?

  • WIL WHEATON: No, no.

  • We just punch each other until somebody gives up.

  • OK, so it's play for today.

  • Play for today.

  • Play for today.

  • Play for today.

  • Choose wisely.

  • And by wisely I mean pick mine.

  • But not all of you.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: There's one that I want it to be.

  • WIL WHEATON: I feel like I'm in a poker tournament, I have

  • all my chips in the middle, and I need the

  • other guy to fold.

  • That's what it feels like.

  • Like I do not have the winning hand.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Oh, right.

  • I'm the last.

  • OK, fine.

  • Done.

  • WIL WHEATON: OK, turn them.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Oh, no.

  • Really?

  • She got it?

  • LEO CHU: Really?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Because you're youthful, and you're only

  • young once.

  • The moment Wil lays that final card down, we flip it over, I

  • see the carousel, I know it's Wil's.

  • He went the kid route.

  • WIL WHEATON: Rage face.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Yeah!

  • WIL WHEATON: My card is number one.

  • So that's three points for me.

  • Look we're tied!

  • And three points for Beth.

  • Beth, you're the winner.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Thank you.

  • WIL WHEATON: You win the game.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Thank you very much.

  • LEO CHU: Yay, Beth.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I am very honored to accept this bunny

  • on behalf of Dixit.

  • Yeah, I know I won.

  • But it's just a game.

  • And Wil and I are like this.

  • So it's not going to--

  • WIL WHEATON: I hate you.

  • CASEY MCKINNON AND LEO CHU: Well, my favorite part of

  • Dixit is when I'm winning.

  • LEO CHU: Had I won.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: And that never happened.

  • LEO CHU: But that didn't happen.

  • WIL WHEATON: Casey--

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Yes.

  • WIL WHEATON: Leo--

  • LEO CHU: Yes.

  • WIL WHEATON: --we're going to go to the losers couch--

  • LEO CHU: OK

  • WIL WHEATON: --where we will sit down and

  • feel sorry for ourselves.

  • Beth--

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I just want to stay up here.

  • WIL WHEATON: --I will see you downstairs in front of the

  • wall of victory.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Woo, woo, woo!

  • WIL WHEATON: I think we did the best that we could.

  • We just could not stop the juggernaut that is Beth.

  • LEO CHU: I didn't think she was going to win.

  • But then I was wrong about everything.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Everything.

  • LEO CHU: Thanks, Casey.

  • WIL WHEATON: It seems like you guys have a lot to talk about,

  • so I'm going to get out of here and go congratulate Beth

  • in front of the wall of victory.

  • And you guys can work this out.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: He's such a loser.

  • LEO CHU: I'm so glad he didn't win.

  • CASEY MCKINNON: Seriously.

  • LEO CHU: Yeah, that would've sucked.

  • WIL WHEATON: Internet, I reluctantly, by three points,

  • present you with your champion, Beth Riesgraf.

  • Congratulations, Beth.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Thank you, Wil.

  • WIL WHEATON: You win the TableTop trophy of awesome.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Where's my name?

  • WIL WHEATON: Well, I'll write your name on it right now.

  • I'll personalize it for you.

  • Look.

  • Beth.

  • Right there on the trophy.

  • Go ahead.

  • Make a speech.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Is there an under--

  • Is there an engraved--

  • WIL WHEATON: Nope.

  • Nope.

  • It's just tape.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: OK.

  • WIL WHEATON: I know it's not very impressive.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: That's OK.

  • No, it's great.

  • WIL WHEATON: But I'm not feeling that great about you

  • winning, so.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I'd like to say thank you to Wil and Felicia

  • for asking me to come in and whoop ass.

  • Can I say that?

  • WIL WHEATON: I don't think I asked you to come

  • in and whoop ass.

  • I said, would you come in and play a game?

  • BETH RIESGRAF: I'd like to thank Wil and Felicia for

  • asking me to come in and play this game.

  • And, as Felicia said, I'm sort of a Dixit savant.

  • So I'm going to go ahead and take it.

  • WIL WHEATON: Well, congratulations.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Thank you.

  • WIL WHEATON: Now, listen, I have to take this trophy back,

  • because we don't have enough money in our budget for more

  • than one trophy.

  • But we have an endless supply of tape.

  • So look.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Oh my god.

  • WIL WHEATON: There you go.

  • Oh, I was trying to stab you in the face with the marker.

  • There.

  • Now everyone knows that your name is Beth.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: You just stuck it on my hair.

  • WIL WHEATON: Yeah.

  • So congratulations.

  • You're a winner.

  • And we'll see you next time on TableTop.

  • BETH RIESGRAF: Uh--

WIL WHEATON: Gaming is truly a global phenomenon, with some

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