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I forgot Scrabble-My Grandmother liked this game.Played it at her house when we visited her for the summer.Sometimes a Scrabble game would go on for most of the night!She would put the game board on a lazy susan turntable to make it easier to use.
 
She would put the game board on a lazy susan turntable to make it easier to use.

 

There is--or at least once was--a version that board with built-in turntable IIRC.


 

Although I've sometimes thought that having a large Lazy Susan might be better, since it could also be used for other games (and other applications).
 
Had quite a few board games as a kid. My friends and I would play for hours!

Never did learn how to play cards, though--with the exception of Crazy 8's and Old Maid. As Ralph mentioned upthread, I, too, was not great at strategizing and looking ahead. Have never played poker or bridge, etc.

We played Yahtzee with close family friends almost weekly. The wife would always serve slices of round pinwheel bread smeared with cheese spread and dotted with sliced green olives. She also introduced me to Colby cheese. I loved both of those appetizers.

Perhaps these games will trigger memories for those among us old enough to remember the Ed Sullivan Show, LOL.

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Thanks, Frigilux!

I'm sixty-two and played every one of these games as a kid. 'Operation' came out when I was in junior high. The Game of Life was just one of my favorites back then, with those little plastic cars and pegs for family.

I think one thing that you and I can count as a benefit from that time is that these games required more than one child. Today, children sit like zombies interacting with computer games. It's already been documented that those coming along now lack certainly skills that you and I learned and now take for granted.

Thanks again!
 
I agree: Although kids have amazingly (frighteningly?) real-looking video games to play, they seem, for the most part, to be more isolated than we were. They don't play outside most of the day with the "gang from the block" the way we often did.

Of course, much of my childhood was spent in a town of about 2,000 with many other tail-end baby boomers. We'd head out in the morning on our bikes, have lunch at someone's house, then take off again for the rest of the day. All our parents required was a phone call to let them know our plans.

It was time to head home when the street lights came on.
 
You are so right-

I was wedded to my bike in the town of 10K where I grew up. As it was a relatively new city then (about 15 years old) the streets and sidewalks were all excellent. It started a lifetime love of cycling that only died when I had my spine ruined in an infection several years ago.

It was such a blessing to have those friends, a couple of guys who grew up on my street now go to my church since I moved back to that town (now 30K), and though our looks have all changed, we are still the same. We played together, swam together, cycled all over the city together, and grew up together.

I truly can't conceive growing up in some huge-ass anonymous city without green grass and trees, without seeing friendly people who knew me, and having to worry about getting kidnapped. Even today, though people are more careful here today (even locking cars now!), it can be an idyllic place to raise children.
 
Well, it's not just the youth of today who are isolated... I was pretty isolated when I was growing up in the 70s/80s. I had a few "friends" here and there...but the relationships tended to be shallow and flawed. Most interaction was at school IIRC. When our paths diverged, most often that was that.

 

My experience was different from what kids might experience today, of course--we didn't have the video games that they have now. (And my exposure was very limited to video games. I only knew about Pac Man by reputation!)

 

 
 
Trivial Pursuit was my favorite.

 

Funny story about the Operation game that involves me.  When I was little I was terrified of the dark and frequently had nightmares as well as sleep paralysis.  I don't know why (to this day I can't sleep in a room with the closet door open even a crack, nor will I allow any body part to stick out from under the covers..childhood fears run deep).  Well, my sister and I had an Operation game.  It was under my bed, and the lid was off the box.  Batteries were in the game.  It was cold weather as I remember a blanket being on the bed and it hung down almost to the floor.  I turned over in the bed and that game started buzzing.  I screamed bloody murder thinking the Devil was coming up through the floor with a chainsaw!  I laugh at myself now that I'm 46.5 years old, but back when I was 3 or 4, it was a traumatic experience!
 
Concentration

That Concentration game rings a bell. I reckon my childhood friend Colin had it and we played it often, but I can't remember it clearly.

Some sort of memory game, wasn't it? Didn't you have to remember where pairs of things were behind a face card? You scored points by collecting pairs?
 
Gizmo-

The Concentration board game was a take-off of the long-running TV quiz show of the same name. Go to YouTube and search 'Concentration'. It made a household name of Hugh Downs.
 
John mentioned Chess

There's a man who comes to this library several evenings a week to give chess lessons to children. I've noticed all his students are foreign, mainly from India, about equally split between boys and girls. Most are between ages 8 & 14.
 
It Would Figure

That the students would be from other countries, unfortunately. I've casually asked around among the teenagers with whom I come into contact, and I'm amazed how many have never held a pack of cards or played any games. The cheapest, most flexible game concept the world's ever known, and they have no clue. It's really sad to me.
 
I love playing board games. A favorite that a friend and I like to play is called Park and Shop. You draw cards of items you have to buy, then you have to park your car in a garage, go to the various shops to buy the items on your cards, make your way back to your car, and get back home. My kind of game!
 
I was trying to find one that challenged my intelligence

<span style="font-size: 14pt; color: #008000;">...but I guess Mr. Potato Head doesn't count as a board game, not even the one from my childhood that used a real potato.</span>

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I'm Old Enough

to remember when we had to use a real potato for those! Like the smell of Play-Doh, some memories are just etched on our hard drives forever...
 
We had several home versions of TV game shows. Concentration and Password were popular ones. In fact, I've still got a Password set somewhere.

Some oddball ones:

King of the Hill was a child's game. It came with a board shaped something like a volcano. There was a path that wound around it, with indentations for the playing pieces, which were marbles. Some of the spaces were holes; if you landed one one, your marble dropped into the hole and re-emerged somewhere further down. The idea was to get to the top and drop your marble into a crown-shaped thing. One thing I recall was that instead of a spinner to determine how many spaces to move, it came with a small tip table.

Dealer's Choice was a sort of card game, around the theme of used cars. You could buy and sell cars with other players, inflict them with various sorts of calamities (crashes, theft, fire, etc.), and buy insurance. I don't recall what the object of the game was.

Tripoly was sort of a cross between spades and poker. It came with a vinyl mat marked with various sorts of hands (such as a flush, a straight, etc.). You dealt a certain number of cards, and anyone who had a certain type of hand got to claim the pot for that, from off the mat. Otherwise, it carried over to the next round.

Oh Hell is a simplified version of bridge. You deal cards, and then each player bids how many tricks you think you can win with those cards. You can bid any number including zero. The tricks are then played. If you win the exact number of tricks you bid, you get 10 points plus your bid, unless you bid zero, in which case you get 5 points plus the total number of tricks in the hand. The first hand is played with each player being dealt one card, the second with two cards, and so on until the last hand, which uses the entire deck. My mom still has a set of the cards, and we play whenever we go visit her.

I also recall having a three-dimensional Aggrevation game. There were two levels, and pieces could jump from one level to the other at certain points. The top level also rotated.
 
Anyone for Monotony?

An interesting video on why one should NEVER play Monopoly. I'm not sure I'd go so far as to say "never"...but the video makes some good points.

 

 
Someone was anxious at ca$hing in the Hatchimals trend, to make a board game out of something that after the only fun of it is when (sometimes IF) it hatches, just to become an ordinary stuffed animal...

So, unlike that, this is something to endlessly play, but maybe, me, being several decades older than my daughter, just couldn't see any fun in this...

I had found the directions misleading & after me being too withdrawn to figure out how to play this, she accordingly lost all interest, as well... (So, BORED game is what you call this!)

Doesn't help that we lost the die, (which we found) and after the photo was taken, I found a couple more cards, and I believe we are now short a token...

-- Dave

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Mr. Potato Head

The Mr. Potato Head concept has met the digital age in KTuberling. Although I'm guessing most people here won't be able to run it, since KDE software is designed for "Unix family" computer operating systems. I've run it with Linux.

 

Still, some might enjoy seeing this page about it. Quote:

 

KTuberling is a game intended for small children. Of course, it may be suitable for adults who have remained young at heart.

 

It is a "potato editor". That means that you can drag and drop eyes, mouths, mustache, and other parts of face and goodies onto a potato-like guy. Similarly, you have other playgrounds with different themes.

 

https://games.kde.org/game.php?game=ktuberling
 
I'd wrongly spoken too soon--my daughter has a friend here, who's sleeping over this whole weekend, so before & after a trip to the mall, the Hatchimals game has been going non-stop:

Regarding Monopoly: Wasn't it invented in a sort of Rockefeller-ian era? I don't believe there needs to be any criticism on the "game of chance nature" much as I can see the young man's point in his philosophy, after watching that video... A good perspective, but it can't be much of a game, if it isn't at least PLAYFULLY trading on Property Trading and turning what is only INCIDENTALLY under control or beyond control into something I always although LONG a board game that I'd thought was "soon much fun!"...

-- Dave

http://https//www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-Xw4WfDeog
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