PBG · 2026 Issue No. 2026.05 Editorial · Curated · Independent Updated weekly

Head-to-head comparison

Wingspan vs Spirit Island

Both are top-tier solo games. Wingspan is meditative and accessible; Spirit Island is demanding and infinitely replayable.

Wingspan Medium weight Wingspan

$60

1-5 40-70 min Medium

Birds, engine-building, exquisite art. Plays light enough for casual nights, deep enough for repeat play.

Buy Wingspan · $60
Spirit Island Heavy weight Spirit Island

$80

1-4 90-120 min Heavy

Reverse-colonialism cooperative. The thinky version of Pandemic. Endless replayability.

Buy Spirit Island · $80

Pick Wingspan if

You want a solo engine-building game with calmer pacing and a lower complexity ceiling.

Pick Spirit Island if

You want the deepest, most replayable solo experience available - Spirit Island's invader system is a genuine puzzle.

The tradeoff.

Wingspan

Wingspan is an engine-building card game where players construct bird sanctuaries across three habitat types: forest, grassland, and wetland. On each turn, you play a bird card to one of your habitats, which typically triggers a cascading effect tied to that habitat's color. You gain resources-eggs, food tokens, and increasingly valuable birds-that power future plays. The core loop is straightforward: play birds, activate their powers, collect resources, repeat. Over five rounds, your tableau grows into an interconnected engine that generates points through bird collections, habitat synergies, and end-game bonuses. It's contemplative rather than chaotic, with genuine moments where your carefully constructed combo chains feel rewarding.

What distinguishes Wingspan is its perfect marriage of accessibility and strategic depth wrapped in genuinely beautiful presentation. The bird illustrations are museum-quality, and the rulebook respects your intelligence without overwhelming you. Most importantly, the game creates a distinct emotional texture-relaxed but engaging-that feels different from other medium-weight euros. Players aren't crushing opponents so much as quietly optimizing their own sandboxes while watching others do the same. Groups of three or four feel ideal, as you get enough table interaction to care about what others are doing without experiencing downtime paralysis. This is the rare game that works equally well as a gateway title with families or as a respite between heavier strategy nights.

Best for: 3-4 Players, Two Players, Family with Kids

Spirit Island

Spirit Island casts players as elemental spirits defending an island from colonial invaders. Each turn, you'll play cards representing your spirit's powers, allocate energy to fuel them, and then watch as invaders build settlements and towns across the map. The core loop is satisfying: you're constantly weighing limited resources against escalating threats, deciding whether to prevent future growth or obliterate present dangers. Your actions resolve simultaneously, which creates genuine tension since you can't react to what others do mid-turn. The invader deck advances relentlessly, creating a pressure cooker where poor planning in round two becomes catastrophe by round four.

What separates Spirit Island from the crowded cooperative genre is its asymmetry and the puzzle-like depth of each spirit's unique powers. Playing as a river spirit plays nothing like playing as a plant spirit, and discovering fresh synergies across forty different spirit combinations gives real longevity to the experience. The game respects your intelligence completely-there's no randomness hiding behind bad decisions, only consequences for underestimating the colonizers or miscalculating your power economy. Victory tastes earned rather than lucky, and losses sting with clarity about what went wrong. Veterans of Pandemic will recognize the cooperative skeleton, but the mechanical sophistication here operates on another level entirely.

Best for: Solo, Two Players, Cooperative

No paid placement. No sponsorship. Editorial picks only. Amazon links fund the site - if you'd rather buy local, find a store via BoardGameGeek.

Also worth considering.

Games that share contexts with both Wingspan and Spirit Island.