The Battlepuppy Express 1

Side 1 of a two-sided card created for a winner of the 2015 Jack Vasel Memorial Auction, this features the Battlepuppy, a small knitted dog found in the North of England and known for improving the luck of the player with whom he sits.

The train is based on the Double Fairlie engines which are used on the Ffestiniog mountain railway in North Wales. This "double-ended" design dates back to 1869, and is characterized by the locomotives having a central cab with a firebox, boiler and smoke stack on either side.

At the end of the game the owner scores 1 point for each event cube in play, and the train comes with one Coal. During the game the owner may use one Coal or one Event Cube to buy his third Labourer from the Pub.

The Battlepuppy Express 2

Side 2 of a two-sided card created for a winner of the 2015 Jack Vasel Memorial Auction, this features the Battlepuppy, a small knitted dog found in the North of England and known for improving the luck of the player with whom he sits.

The train is based on the Double Fairlie engines which are used on the Ffestiniog mountain railway in North Wales. This "double-ended" design dates back to 1869, and is characterized by the locomotives having a central cab with a firebox, boiler and smoke stack on either side.

At the end of the game the owner scores 3 points for each event cube in play, and the train comes with one Event Cube cube and one Coal. During the game the owner may use one Coal to buy his third Labourer from the Pub.

The Engine Shed

The owner of this train may pay 2 Rubble each round to use their third Labourer - during the train maintenance phase, you still have to pay for maintancen with one Steel Bar, but you get everyone else's Steel Bars first.

The image on this card shows the Engine Shed of the Bregenz Forest Railway, an Austrian narrow-gauge railway, in Vorarlberg, with two U-class Engines outside.

The Shunter

Costing three Steel Bars, this Train allows you to use your third Labourer on every round without having to pay Coal

The Twin Engines

Produced to celebrate the birth of twins, the Owner of this Train may pay 1 Coal to use their Third Labourer, but may also pay an additional Coal to use someone else's Third Labourer. If they go before that someone else in the turn order, then the someone else does not get to use their Third Labourer that Round.

The trains featured on this card are of the Denver and Rio Grande Western K-36 class - engine 482 (pictured on the left) retired in 1962, then went went to the Cumbres and Toltec Scenic Railroad in 1960, and finally to the Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad in 1991. There it joined engine 480 (pictured on the right) which had arrived in 1981 having retired from the Denver and Rio Grande Western in 1970.