This is a guest post from Katie Boes, a self-avowed nerd.
As kids, many of us loved playing board games. I was a child of the eighties and, as such, grew up playing Candy Land, Sorry!, and Monopoly. But somewhere along the path to adulthood, most games that we’re familiar with seem to lose their appeal. Sure, we might enjoy occasional trivia games or party games, but the fact remains that most of the traditional board games that we used to play as kids now seem…boring.
In this post I’ll help you discover an entirely new and exciting world of board games — games that are fun, strategic, and interactive — that I guarantee will refresh your enjoyment of board gaming.
First, a plug for board gaming that will be appreciated by GRS readers. Board gaming is:
- Fun. A single game can provide your friends and family with years of entertainment.
- Frugal. An average game costs $25-$50 (about the cost of dinner and dessert for two at a moderately-priced restaurant) and never expires. This means that you’ll pay only 50 cents for each play of a $25 game if you end up playing the game 50 times.
- Educational. Many games help you develop and practice planning, puzzle-solving, and negotiation skills, making them great indoor alternatives to mindless television.
When I entered graduate school in 2002, a few friends and I met weekly to play board games, chat, and generally de-stress after the workday. Over the years this gathering continued, friends invited more friends, our game collections grew, and now “Game Night” is a Thursday night tradition. We have fun and enjoy a super-frugal evening of activity!
There truly is a whole world of fascinating board games out there, but many of these games (most of which come from Europe) haven’t broken into the mainstream, so many Americans remain completely unaware of these games. You won’t find these games in WalMart or Target — at least yet! One notable exception of a Euro game that has been gaining widespread popularity here is Settlers of Catan (see this article in Wired magazine). And there are so many other games out there that are very fun but simply not well-known.
Want to try new board games and reintroduce board gaming as a fun hobby in your life? If so, use these strategies to find the right games for you:
- Hug a nerd. Do you have a nerdy friend who has a shelf full of games that you’ve never heard of? Take a chance and ask him/her to teach you one of the games. It could become your new favorite game! Your friend will likely appreciate this too, as it can be hard to find people who are willing to try more obscure games.
- Find a board-game group near you. It’s possible that your region has an “official” board game club that meets once a month or so to play board games. Attending one of these events is a fantastic way to try out a variety of new games. The events are usually free or cost just a few dollars, and the club members supply all of the games. My husband and I attended a game day recently and were met by friendly people and tables upon tables of board games to try. By the end of the afternoon we had raced bicycles across terrain, claimed feeding spots for exotic birds, planted and harvested spices, and colonized alien worlds. To find an event near you, contact a local gaming specialty store to inquire whether it knows of any such events.
- Do research to find games you think you’ll like, then purchase them. If you don’t know anyone who has games to try and there aren’t any board gaming clubs near you, it’s very likely that you’ll just have to bite the bullet and order some games to try. As with any purchase, you’ll want to do some basic research first to ensure your satisfaction with the product. First, find and research games through the internet or the website Board Game Geek. Once you’ve pinpointed a game you might like, search the internet to find and watch a video review of the game. Finally, search to see if there’s an online version of the game that you can try first. For example, some of my game recommendations below — Settlers of Catan, Ticket to Ride, and Mr. Jack — all have online versions available to try for free. Finally, purchase the game — many will be available through Amazon.com.
Finally, what types of games are actually out there, and how do you find a game you might like? Here I’ll address a few very general ways to categorize games and provide some starting suggestions. For any specific games I mention, search the internet or Board Game Geek to get more detailed descriptions. (Disclaimer: These are only my opinions and only a tiny sampling of the games that are out there!)
- Strategy vs. luck. Do you like games that are entirely strategy-based (like Chess or Checkers), or do you prefer games that blend strategy and luck (like Risk or Monopoly, which involve dice)? For a new twist on 2-player pure strategy games, try Hive or Khet. For a fun and addicting 2-player game that blends strategy and luck, try Mr. Jack. (My husband and I are addicted to this game right now!)
- Theme vs. abstract. Do you like games with a rich story to tell (like Clue), or are you content just moving essentially meaningless pieces around a board (like Aggravation)? For new theme games, try Vegas Showdown, Cleopatra and the Society of Architects, or Shadows over Camelot. For new abstract games, try Ingenious or Qwirkle.
- Slightly complex vs. extremely complex. It’s no secret — Euro games are generally known for being much more complicated than the games that most of us are used to seeing in American retail stores. If you’re just trying out Euro games, I suggest trying some of the more simple (but still extremely fun!) games first. Start with Ticket to Ride or the ever-popular Settlers of Catan. If you like Settlers and are ready to step up the game a notch, add its expansion Cities and Knights. Or try other intermediately complex games like Ra, Citadels, Dominion, or Princes of Florence. If you want to try a very complex game, try Caylus or Goa.
I hope that after reading this article you’ll feel motivated to branch out and try new board games. They’re a wonderful source of frugal fun and can become highly addictive! I’ll end with some questions for you: Have you tried any of these games? Which board games do you and your friends/family enjoy the most?
J.D.’s note: I can’t believe I’ve never written about this subject before: I, too, am a nerd, and I, too, love board gaming as a hobby. Kris and I used to hold monthly game nights, but haven’t done so in years. Now our games simply gather dust. (Or get sold for extra cash on eBay.) I’d love to start playing again, though. Photo by gadl.
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When my family has holidays or get-togethers, we always play board games (much to the frustration I think of some of our in-laws). We are some very competitive Scrabble players.
I’ve also loved Settlers of Catan, Risk, Rummy-O, Scattergories, Cranium, Trivial Pursuit.
But above all, we have some pretty hardcore Backgammon tournaments. My grandmother taught us all and never eased up on us as kids. We didn’t win until we earned it – but I relished that first win!
You’re post reminded me how much fun they can be. I’m going to try to find some friends to play this weekend!
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I help run the largest public gaming convention in North America (PAX: http://www.paxsite.com) where I manage the table top games section, which encompasses board games, card games, dice games, casual games role playing games and any thing else that can be played without needing electricity. Needless to say I am a HUGE gaming nerd.
Board games are a great social experience, as long as you can get everyone on and understanding the rules, goals and themes of the game quickly, it is a wonderful time to spend chatting with the other players, telling stories and hanging out. Anyone that feels they can’t play a game and socialize while doing so is probably not going to have fun playing. The important thing to remember is that it is just a game, and it is far more important to build relationships with those at the table than it is to win the game.
Right now some of my favorites are:
Dominion (http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218/dominion)
Settlers of Catan (http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/13/the-settlers-of-catan)
Puerto Rico (http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/3076/puerto-rico)
Agricola (http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/31260/agricola)
Robo Rally (http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/18/roborally)
Puerto Rico and Agricola aren’t for beginners, but the rest should be pretty easy to pick up and learn and play in a couple of hours.
Also, if you are in Seattle Labor Day weekend, go to PAX and I promise you can learn to love games!
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One of the best things about having a regular game meet would be, I suppose, that each member could be responsible for only a couple of different games – nobody would have to collect a whole lot of them.
We did the jigsaw-puzzle thing growing up. That became a tradition at holiday dinners we traded with our parents’ best friends (who did not have children). A puzzle would be set up before company arrived, people could cruise by and drop in a piece during pre-dinner chat, and then we’d put in some concerted effort afterward. Puzzles are great because there are no winners and losers, you can participate for just as long as you want, and they’re suitable for all ages.
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Dominion is an awesome game! We also love Power Grid, Ingenious, and Brass.
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My teenage sons tend to leave the room if a parent walks in, but suggest that we play a game together and they both come running!
Add to the list of great board games:
* Aladdin’s Dragons (bid on gemstones to later use to buy treasures to eventually satisfy the dragon – lots of strategy)
* DaVinci’s Challenge (kinda like Tangoes meets Scrabble – you place differently shaped tiles on a printed gameboard to create specific shapes to earn points or block your opponent from creating shapes)
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Oh, I’m so glad there are so many fellow geeks out there! I’ve learned to adapt my game choices to the crowd I’m with (i.e. not everyone appreciates an epic round of Munchkin…)
For a frugal (and sometimes kid-friendly) approach, why not mod some of your existing games?
-Play Scrabble with only made-up words. They need to make phonetic sense, and you need to define them as a part of your turn.
-Play Scrabble with genre-specific words. (Sex terms Scrabble was way more fun than it should have been)
-Play Scrabble to practice vocab in a second language
-Play Pictionary 3-D (Using Play-Doh instead of markers)
-Any card game, although you need very patient friends if you plan on teaching them Euchre!
-Dominos have TONS of different games to play
-Multi-Dimensional Risk, if you have a REALLY nerdy crowd and MANY hours. Treat an area on a Risk board as a portal to another world. Have a second Risk board up to represent that world. In order to conquer the area on the first board, you must win the second game of Risk.
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I’m looking for suggestions. My husband and I are divers and some locations we go don’t have a lot of evening entertainment. What would you the well versed game nerds recommend for 2 player (flexible for others would be nice) game that doesn’t require a large board/lots pieces so that it could be packed in a small suitcase? We do take a standard deck of cards, so those games are covered.
Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
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Settlers of Catan is awesome, and definitely not a kindergarten game (it’s long, kind of slow, and all about strategy–older kids might enjoy it, but I would not try to play it with a kindergartener). Someone brought it on a college/grad school campout and everyone (including the professor) loved it.
Board games are not all for kids. Many are specifically aimed at adults. Board games are not all simple and mindless (nor are card games). Many are complicated and promote strategic and logical thinking.
In my kidfree apartment we also like Bone Wars, a moderately complex and kind of silly game of ruthless paleontology (http://www.zygotegames.com/bw.html), card games (especially cribbage and Spite & Malice), and chess. I wish I had someone to play Scrabble with, but my dyslexic partner can’t spell and it would be like torturing him (and no fun for me).
In the past, my adult social group has also held regular game nights, which were quite fun. And yes, we did chat at these gatherings, too.
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I’m looking for suggestions. My husband and I are divers and some locations we go don’t have a lot of evening entertainment. What would you the well versed game nerds recommend for 2 player (flexible for others would be nice) game that doesn’t require a large board/lots pieces so that it could be packed in a small suitcase? We do take a standard deck of cards, so those games are covered.
Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
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I’ve got a question for readers of Get rich slowly.
How do you cover up dented floor tiles? (vinyl on wood)? My husband accidentally dropped something heavy in the kitchen, and now there are some dents in the floor and the wall.
We’re moving out soon, so we dont want to pay a huge fine for it. Is there any way to repair or cover the damage?
The floor looks to be wood, covered with vinyl tiles. If just the tile was scratched, it could be replaced, but the wood below has been dented, as in a 1 inch long oblong crack that has given in, so there is a small depression at that place.There are three of them, and there is a similar dent on the wall.
I’m worried the apartment might say that the entire wood has to be replaced and retiled at our cost, and I hope to avoid that.
Any suggestions will be welcomed.
Thanks.
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Meredith – we always bring along a small bag of games to fight boredom if it rains as well as a deck of playing cards for each member of the family (for playing WAR). Our game bag includes:
Card games: Scrabble Slam!, Uno, Phase 10, and the old fashioned PassWord cards with decoder sleeves
Dice games: Yahtzee, Cinq-o, Toss Up, LCR (Left Center Right), Las Vegas Jackpot, Swipe, Phase 10 Dice, and Travel Scattegories
They all fit in one gallon-size ziploc bag!
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I recently attended PAX East and it was worth the $50 price of admission for one thing–the game room. Here, you could check out one of dozens of these board games, take it away, play with your friends, and return it. Since the more expensive of these games can run $50-$80 each, it was a great way to test drive them and see if they’d be worth the investment.
As at least one other person said, if you have a gaming specialty store in your area, they may well have store copies for the same purpose.
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The public library in my town has several games that you can borrow. It is a good way to try a game before buying it.
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I’d recommend wooly bully for two players. Up to 4 can play, but it works great for two and packs up into a small box.
My husband and I have pretty much played it to death and have made up all sorts of variants for it.
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I used to think I hated board games… but it turns out what I really hate is board games that are simple and competitive. I hate having to lie or bluff. But my husband LOVES playing games, so we searched for a long time for something I liked.
Turns out I really like the cooperative board games – Pandemic, Arkham Horror (so much fun, but **extremely** complex), even Lord of the Rings. Also, there are board games where you are technically competing, but it’s more like you’re playing side-by-side, like Agricola. I love Agricola, but I’m terrible at it.
My point is, if you think you hate board games, you may not have played the right ones yet.
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Woot! This is a great post on board games! I love Carcassonne because you build the ‘board’ and it changes every time you play.
I love PowerGrid because of its economics.
Puerto Rico and Settlers of Catan, too.
In groups, I find tons of fun with Bang! and Guillotine.
I found that I became frustrated by some games of luck or chance and enjoy having a bit more strategy.
Granted – my old time favorite is The Farming Game.
Board games might be expensive and might fill up my closet – but we play games together for fun filled nights in place of other more expensive events. So the cost is an upfront cost and the storage space is well worth it.
Happy Gaming Everyone!
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Several of my work friends and I get together 3 times a week and play board games during our lunch break. Our current favorites:
Catan
Formula-D
Power Grid
Puerto Rico
Robo Rally
Every six months or so, someone will pick up a new game and we’ll try it out. If it’s good (and quick, we only have an hour), it makes it into the rotation.
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Long time back we invited three of my wife’s cousins and their spouses. The 8 of us really did not know each other. I brought out “Kill Dr Lucky” and I think we played for about 6 hours (many iterations) and at the same time came to know each other very well.
It has been almost 8 years but we still remember how we got to know each other…
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When the family actually stops running so hard to here and there, we have a great time playing board games. There are so many good times and laughs from spending this great time together.
I think we are going to have to break out a board game tonight in your honor.
Thanks for the post and reminder.
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@Meredith:
We dive too, and travel everywhere with our Folio Scrabble game (lots of pieces, but easily packed up) and Travel Boggle (no pieces at all- all you need is two pieces of paper and two pens).
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This website is full of cooperative games. My family and I are enjoying many of them
http://familypastimes.com/
My husband is blind, and cooperative games help us being able to play with him being intimately involved with the game instead of just as a “spectator”.
Bwahahaha, he’d laugh too if he knew what I wrote.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doppelkopf
@Meredith (#57) – Hive is a good portable game for 2 players and you can easily fit all of the pieces into a small case (one usually comes with the game, in fact).
Thanks for all of your comments! I’m glad to see many more game suggestions for everyone. For those of you who mentioned Pandemic, I just played that for the first time last month and really enjoyed it. I’ll have to try it again soon.
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I play Risk once a month with my 18 years old brother and it is usually 4-6 hrs long. Sometimes, we have taken up to 12 hrs.
I also play Scrabble once a month with my mother in law.
Board game is not costly when you are focusing on the relationships during the play. I buy my board games from garage sales and I only buy a couple. The cost for me is about less than $5 for the last 8 years.
What we enjoy about the board game is the give and take (not always fun but we try. To keep Risk from destroying our relationship, we set different teams each time now and we have the whole family watch and comment so that it’s a raucous fun beer drinking, snack eating, hooting and hollering sport. That has worked well for us.
I also play a free version of Risk and Scrabble on my Iphone when I’m bored.
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To all you Scrabble lovers out there, I highly recommend that you get Super Scrabble! It has twice the amount of letters as the regular Scrabble, so 200 tiles instead of 100. Also, you get 2 “y’s”, 2 “z’”, 2 “q’s” and so on. Now you can make words like “drizzle”, etc. And triple word scores aren’t the highest either. In addition to that, Super Scrabble has quadruple word scores! Fun! Fun! Fun! Be warned that Super Scrabble takes twice as long, so you probably can’t finish it in one sitting (which has never been a problem for me, continuing the game later) – or you can put a time limit on it and call it over once you reach your time limit. Another thing I like about Super Scrabble is that the board is twice as big so you are never without a place to put a word and the game moves much faster. Everyone I’ve talked to, myself included, has said that once they’ve played Super Scrabble, they can’t go back to regular Scrabble. (You can order Super Scrabble from Amazon, and they even have a Super Scrabble dictionary out that you can order from Amazon as well).
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I loved all sorts of board games growing up. A few years ago, my husband and I and our best friends were addicted to a dice based game called HeroClix, and we spent ridiculous amounts of money accumulating pieces for it…but we did have a lot of fun, and still break it out every now and then. (Want to see Wonder Woman beat up Wolverine? Here’s your chance!)
My 4 year old loves Candy Land, Chutes and Ladders, Memory, and a little game called Pengoloo that has little wooden penguins with colored eggs…but she gets upset if anyone else finds the green eggs! As she gets bigger I hope to introduce her to my old faves. My husband and I like chess and Trivial Pursuit (I always win the geography, and he always wins the entertainment), and Scene It, since we are both big movie dorks.
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I’m with Karen (I’m a Karen too, truth be told), and the board games just don’t do it for me. I was so glad they came up with computer monopoly, so my husband can play and leave me out of it. But every once in awhile, a nice big jigsaw puzzle can get me going:)
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I always loved board games growing up, but have had little opportunity to play them as an adult. However, my (ex-)boyfriend loved playing video games, though I didn’t really care about them, so he downloaded to his PS3 a couple “board games” so that we could play together — we had TONS of fun playing Settlers of Catan and Ticket to Ride! I love that they both provide a mental workout, but not so much that they get dull. Thanks for the post — it just may give me the kick to start seeking out more board gaming opportunities!
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I like the idea of going to a club for board games; I was thinking recently that it will be nice when my nephews are old enough to play these games, so that I’ve got an opportunity to play them again myself!
I’ve never actually played “Monopoly” with the official rules, i.e. putting a property up for auction if the person who lands on it doesn’t want to buy it. I’ve heard that this makes the game much more interesting.
On the frugal aspect, the nice thing about board games is that you get everything you need in one go. Several of my friends are keen on “Magic the Gathering” (a collectible card game), and it’s certainly tempting to keep buying more cards to improve your decks.
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How to get people to play with you? Ask another couple over to play with you and yours, or a group of friends. Just say you are “in the mood for somethig different,” if you want to downplay the nerd factor. By just asking, you may find other closet-nerds, and if they say no, it’s no big deal.
Also, go for more complex games, they have high replayability.
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I discovered another benefit of boardgames: I met my husband at the weekly “game night” the author mentions. In fact, Katie was the one who introduced us!
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I’ve loved Settlers of Catan since someone introduced it to me in college — around 1998, I think. I was too cheap to buy an expansion set and made my own using Sculpee. I have the Seafarers version and its expansion set too but haven’t tried the newer additions.
I was so excited when my sons started being interested in board games (they’re 4 and 6 now). I think Candyland and Chutes and Ladders are evil — games intended for preschoolers should have a 15 min limit and no possibility of endlessness.
My older son and I both love Quirkle — we’re spatial reasoning people and he and I can both trounce anyone, but I can’t help but show people when there’s a great play to be made, so I don’t get too competitive.
They got Monopoly Jr for Christmas and even the 4 year old can play that one with a little assistance with the money. They have a Disney version, which I thought would make me crazy, but I was impressed with how it was designed. It’s straightforward but is a good introduction to the full game.
Other games for the kindergarten and younger set that I like — The Orchard Game (sort of a German Hi Ho Cherry-o). Lots of edible pieces if you’ve got a grabby baby, though. Dwarves and Dice is different from other games — a speed game that’s easy for parents to cheat on if their kid needs to win. We’ve got an old board game called Lego Creator that my Lego-obsessed kids could play all day. It seems like most options for young kids are variations on Memory and that gets boring.
For adults, our extended family divides into super-competitive and just-let-us-chat-while-we-play. The chatters like Apples to Apples and Bananagrams. The competitive ones like Settlers and 500 (the card game). We’ve been known to play Spoons with everyone age 3-90 where the youngest kids get spooooon before they’re out.
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Oh, I forgot Blokus! My kids like to play with the pieces but don’t really play the real game yet. It’s another good spatial reasoning game for those of us who were Tetris fans.
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I think that board games are vastly underrated. You can have hours of fun with them, you can play them over and over, and its got to be much better for you than sitting in front of the TV all nite.
I say board games rock!
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We’ve played many games and eventually got bored with most of them – even Settlers of Catan. Took up Bridge. It is an amazing game that you can improve your playing in infinitely -therefore it NEVER gets boring! It is not just an old peoples game ( a whole group of us love it and none of us is old:-)
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Hey J.D.
I have a correction, but only for people who already own the the games you listed. The cost is zero. That’s what we’re going to be doing later today, as it’s snowing again today. Sunny right now, but was really coming down earlier.
Thanks for the reminder that I have to dust off monopoly and make sure we have all the pieces before tonight.
Cheers,
Guy
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#4 @Karen – what she said! Board games, cards, puzzles, etc – boring and complete time wasters just as bad as video games and computer solitare. Why would I want a head full of trivia?
We have a stack of unused board games received as gifts that we can’t even Freecycle away.
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Meredith –
My wife and I have a few of the Euro-style board games mentioned here: Agricola, Thurn and Taxis, Railroad Tycoon, Settlers of Catan. Our first, and still favourite, is Carcassonne. It’s really easy to learn, fairly inexpensive, and a great two player game. There’s a travel version of the game as well, which wouldn’t take up much room in a suitcase. There is no ‘board’ – the tiles you draw make up the map. You can play on a table or the floor. We’ve introduced this one to many friends and everyone has gone out and found their own copy.
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@Meredith 57: I like Qwirkle as a 2-player game – you don’t even need the box, just the bag of tiles and a pad of paper to keep score.
San Juan could likewise be shrunk down for travel (though the box is pretty small already).
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I just love Carcassone, a city/castle building board game, one of Worlds top award winning games. And it got like 6 expansions if you like it enough.
And a frugality tip here. If you buy the game+all the expansions in one big box, it costs like 3 times less than buying separate.
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Glad to see there’s a lot of board game lovers here. In my family, we play all sorts. I’m a little surprised at the few who called games “time wasters” — we often chat and rib each other as we play games, and it’s great fun. I guess it’s a “to each his own” kind of thing; gossiping over a glass of wine sounds super boring to me.
My boyfriend and I are tentatively discussing a wedding. One thing we’ve definitely decided on: instead of dancing at the reception, we’ll have board games. While we like dancing just fine, our extended families are not big dancers. But we are all huge board game/card players. I imagine we’ll have old classics like cribbage, go fish, checkers, shoots & ladders, and connect 4 intermingled with some newer games that are fun, easy to learn, and don’t take too long to play. Our intent is that people get to know each other through playing.
@S #86: I’ll take your games! Seriously! Maybe I should get on my local freecycle and start building up games now. I never even thought of that.
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I myself learned so much about money by playing monopoly as a kid. It still works today.
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My family loves board games! My boys (10 & 12) like Jenga, Blokus, Battleship and Whoonu best. I enjoy all of those but prefer Scrabble, Backgammon or tile rummy (i.e. Rummikub). We also love to play trivia games with subjects that are a common interest to all 4 of us – I picked up a Star Wars Trivial Pursuit at a yard sale for $5 and that’s provided hours of entertainment! Most of our board game collection is either hand me downs or yard sale finds, so the investment’s been very low for us. We received Pandemic as a gift at Christmas and have enjoyed that one, too. I confess I don’t care for Monopoly at all, it’s referred to as “Monotony” at our house
We play a lot of card games around here, too.
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Meredith –
My husband and I have a few standard travel games that don’t take up a lot of room in luggage and keep us entertained …
Cribbage = Get a travel set that has 3 tracks and you can also play 3-player and 4-player versions (most rules should include these options.) Plus you also have a deck of cards for standard card games.
Lost Cities = A great 2-player game that I can’t recommend highly enough! We took the cards out of the box (you don’t need the board that the piles go on – just make your own piles) and printed off the rules online. Snap a rubber band around cards and folded up rules, and you’re good to go!
Farkle = An extremely compact dice game “for 2 or more players.” Six dice and the rules. I would imagine that most game stores sell the “pocket Farkle” boxes = 3 inches by 2 inches by 3/4 inch. This lives in my purse.
5 Crowns = 2-7 player card game. Everyone in my family likes this one. Easy to learn.
Skip-Bo = 2-6 player card game, from the makers of Uno. A nice feature is that it’s easy to make the game play in a shorter length of time, if desired. Also easy to learn.
San Juan = The largest game I’m recommending, although it would be easy enough to take the componants out of the box and back them into zip-lock bags. 2-4 players. The box itself is 9 1/4 imches by 7 1/4 inches by 1 1/2inches. Despite the relatively larger size of the box I’m still recommending this because my husband and I LOVE this game. There are many strategies which can lead to winning, and we’re pretty evenly matched.
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Back in “The Day” my friends and I would play Dungeons & Dragons. Talk about nerd city LOL! That’s when we actually had to use our imagination instead of allowing a computer to create our scenery for us. Although I can’t attest to it being frugal. You could accessorize yourself to death.
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What a great topic! I love games like LeHavre, Power Grid, Pandemic, Race for the Galaxy and Dominion. I wouldn’t exactly call the hobby cheap, but the cost is usually a one time expense and you can keep the game for years.
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I wish more kids did play boardgames rather than all these video games. It seems like they are taking over their minds.
Whatever happened to sitting down with family or friends and playing a good old board game like Monopoly?
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#81 – about Candyland lasting too long for pre-schoolers – what I did was remove about half (or more) of the single colored cards out of the deck. And also the cards that can send people back to the first part of the game. With mostly double colored cards – the game goes a lot quicker!
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This is awesome, I will be referring back to this article and its comments frequently. I grew up playing board games and card games, and my husband is a lover of them as well, but we rarely step outside the box (haha!) and look for new games. We were introduced to Settlers by a friend a few years back, and that was amazing. Another friend introduced us to Apples to Apples, as a fun social party-type game, and I recently purchased Bananagrams, as a great game to throw in my purse to bring to restaurants! The games we end up playing the most? Risk, Risk 2210, Axis and Allies, and Munchkin. But I would LOVE to introduce a new game into the mix.
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I was given Carcassonne for my birthday yesterday and had a couple of quick games with 16 year old sprog 5. Great game! But the best part of the gift was a promise from the beloved to play. She wone my heart playing Civilisation (one of the great trinity of classic games devised by Hartland Trefoil in the 70s) but hasn’t played for 20 years, ever since my brother and I made some disparaging comments when she beat us both at .Curse of the Mummy’s Tomb. I am so excited at the thought of getting her back!
I agree that Monopoly is a horrid, soul destroying game. And also add my vote for Ticket to Ride, Settlers and Bohnanza.
We have recently been blessed in Reading, UK, with a fantastic games shop. (Eclectic Games) They are happy to chat for half an hour and would rather you walk out with nothing than with the wrong game. Old fashioned service, up to date product.
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My wife and I have played many hours of Catan. It is a fantastic game. About a year ago, it was only $19.99 on Amazon…..not sure why. We recommended it to all of family and I’d say about 50% are really into it. It’s up to $31.95 now and shows as the #1 Strategy Game on Amazon.
The best part is that the game board itself changes (random variation) as opposed to Monopoly.
I had never even heard of it, but then read an article on the top 10 board games. I had played most of the others (Monopoly, Risk, Stratego). Catan has been by far the best.
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