PHΦLΘSΘPHΦΔ
ΔCΔDΣMΨ GΔMΣS ΦS LΔVΠCHΦΠG Δ KΦCKSTΔRTΣR FΘR THΣ 1-6 PLΔΨΣR ΔVCTΦΘΠ GΔMΣ, PHΦLΘSΘPHΦΔ, ΘΠ SΣPTΣMBΣR 10.
(After receiving complaints about this faux-Greek letter font, the designer promised he will change it before the Kickstarter launches).
In Philosophia you are an ancient Greek philosopher who travels around Greece, builds schools, engages in argument fighting with other philosophers, and asks for help from the gods. The game uses auction, card drafting, and even rock-paper-scissors mechanisms for the actions that the players can take.
You win by collecting three Labyrinth tokens before the Romans take over the Greek world.
In the solo mode, you choose one of the philosophers in the game to battle against.
A complaint has been expressed on BGG that the philosophers minis are too big ('Philosozillas' was the term they used). The designer may ask backers if they indeed like their size.
Update September 8: Correction: Philosophia will not be published by Academy Games (I was confused by the similarity in the logo), but will be a self-publication by the designers themselves under the name Cogito Ergo Meeple.
You may check the Kickstarter Preview.
@eisahngu: You can find all their KS projects at https://www.kickstarter.com/profile/academygames/created
Got links to the current status of those other campaigns? I'm all in favour of encouraging KS to apply its new rules even-handedly.
It's Academy Games so they will have plenty of time to work out the details because the game will be at least a year late. They will promise a delivery within six months, but it will take eighteen. They already have two Kickstarters waiting to be fulfilled; one of which is a year overdue.
The abuse into basically-Latinate script of other cultures' writing systems is something I find repulsive, and something that seems largely to have gone out of favour these days; it makes me think less of the designer that he thought he could get away with it.
(Firedrake @ BGG)
He better be, if he wants to sell it. It's not Lords of Hellas. The target group it addresses is people who are most likely familiar with the Greek alphabet, to say the least.