Start your treasure hunt on the ocean floor online on Tabletopia - and stay ahead of both rivals and sharks.
When we hear the words “treasure hunting,” we imagine chests of gold and maps marked with a red X. But the publisher Super Meeple shows the other side of that romantic image. In Thesauros, you are not a lone diver, but the head of a large company trying to raise history from the ocean floor while competitors (and sharks) attempt to take a bite out of your budget.
This is a heavyweight strategy game where the romance of the sea meets harsh management. It is not enough to simply find an amphora - you must also determine whether you can afford the fuel to transport it to the nearest museum.
The game is divided into three major in-game years, each consisting of several rounds. This structure immediately establishes a long-term planning horizon. Players do not merely react to what happens at the table, but define in advance which directions will be prioritized in the near future. Mistakes in this planning are not felt instantly, but gradually accumulate and can become critical closer to the endgame.
By its nature, this is a game about systemic development. It does not aim to be flashy or fast-paced. Its strength lies in steady growth, gradual expansion of capabilities, and the constant need to balance ambitions against available resources.

The core of Thesauros is built around a combination of several classic euro mechanics, tightly interwoven.
First, there is worker placement. Company staff are assigned to different departments and action spaces, allowing players to perform specific operations: hiring personnel, acquiring area cards, purchasing equipment, improving technologies, or preparing expeditions. The number of available spaces is limited, so competition for key actions appears from the very first rounds.
Second, annual budgeting plays a crucial role. At the start of each year, players distribute money among departments, determining which types of actions they will be able to perform more frequently.
The third element is auctions and the struggle for turn order. Acting earlier often means access to better spaces and more favorable opportunities. However, winning an auction requires spending money, directly affecting the company’s financial health.
Finally, exploration of the seabed and interaction with treasure cards add a spatial dimension. Teams move across the map, encounter obstacles, and must be technically prepared for successful expeditions. This connects the economic side of the game with a more thematic, adventure-flavored layer.

Strategy in Thesauros takes shape long before the first expeditions begin. Everything starts with budget allocation. An aggressive focus on exploration can provide quick access to treasures, but may leave the company without a reliable infrastructure. A more cautious approach, on the other hand, builds a solid foundation but risks falling behind in the race for valuable finds.
A key feature of the game is the dominance of indirect interaction. Players rarely interfere with each other directly, yet constantly affect one another through occupied action spaces, depleted markets, and shifting turn order. Monitoring opponents’ priorities becomes just as important as developing your own strategy.
Expeditions require careful preparation. A lack of equipment or personnel makes journeys inefficient and sometimes unprofitable. For this reason, successful players often invest in upgrades first, and only then begin actively searching for treasures. This approach reduces risk, but demands patience.
The game also rewards flexibility. Combinations of available cards, technologies, and market opportunities change constantly. A strategy that works well in one session may prove weak in another. The ability to adjust plans during play becomes a critical skill.

Thesauros is a demanding economic strategy aimed at thoughtful players. It rewards those who can think several steps ahead and build coherent chains of decisions. The game does not try to simplify the process and offers no shortcuts to victory.
Its major strength is the coherence of its design. All mechanics serve the same theme and reinforce one another. Budget planning, infrastructure development, and expeditions feel like parts of a single integrated system.
So who is likely to assemble a team and dive into treasure hunting?
Fans of medium- to heavy-weight euro strategies where calculation, optimization, and long-term planning are essential.
Players who enjoy managing an economy and building an engine rather than relying on luck.
Those who appreciate indirect interaction and competition for limited actions instead of direct conflict.
Lovers of games with tough decisions, where early mistakes have consequences in the final scoring.
Groups ready for sessions lasting 2–3 hours.
Players attracted to exploration and expedition themes presented in an economic, rather than purely adventurous, form.
Those looking for high replayability thanks to variable starting conditions and card combinations.
Fans of solo modes focused on optimization and personal best scores.
Thesauros is a game about patience, calculation, and foresight. If you are interested not only in finding treasures, but in building an efficient system to extract them and convert them into reputation and profit, you will find depth and variability here that can sustain long-term interest.

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