T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1199.1 | in addition to those already mentioned | GEMVAX::WARREN | | Mon Nov 04 1991 15:17 | 12 |
| My daughter has a game from Discovery Toys with birds that works like
Yahtzee. I can't remember the name.
Both kids like Cootie Bug. Also, Caileigh has a game with a tape and
a board with pictures. You listen to the sounds on the tape and tryp
to identify the appropriate picture with Bingo chips.
My neighbor's five-year-old has a junior version of Uno, a junior
version of Monopoly, and a game called Uncle Wiggily that she enjoys.
-Tracy
|
1199.2 | from the time Steven was old enough to count with help | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Mon Nov 04 1991 16:15 | 3 |
| Sorry has always been a big favorite at our house.
--bonnie
|
1199.3 | Some more | MR4DEC::LHOLM | | Mon Nov 04 1991 16:30 | 11 |
| We like Sorry in our house as well. Some other games to try:
Don't drop Mama
Topple
Boggle Jr.
Don't break the Ice
Don't spill the beans
My 5 year old loves all of these and they can be fun for adults too!
Lisa
|
1199.4 | Memory | POWDML::SATOW | | Mon Nov 04 1991 16:40 | 37 |
| Gee, I'd be willing to SWEAR that I've written about this before, but
it must've been in an earlier version. I guess I've been hanging out in
Parenting too long.
I personally HATE "Candyland." There've been many times that I seem to
stay stuck in the molasses swamp forever, and many times that I get almost
to the end, but then draw the "lollipop" or whatever the one is that causes
you to go way back to the beginning. It makes ME so mad that it's not
mystery to me that some kids have been known to throw tantrums.
One of my favorite games is "Memory", by the Ravensburger Company.
Ravensburger products tend to be in the boutique type toy stores, the same
type of places that sell Brio type stuff. "Memory" is similar to the card
game "Concentration." The playing pieces consist of square cards. On one
side of each card is a picture that is identical to the picture on one, and
only one, other card. The backs of all the cards are identical.
To play the game, the cards are spread out, back side up. The first
player turns over two cards. If the two cards do not match, the player turns
them back over and it's the other players turn. If the two cards match, the
player keeps the cards, and continues to turn over pairs of cards until s/he
turns over a pair that doesn't match. At the end of the game, the player
with more pairs of cards wins.
One think that I like about the game is that, at least with our family,
is that even though the game is structured such that the result is much more
dependent on skill (actually object memory) than on luck, that both of my
children have been able to compete pretty much successfully with me from a
very young age -- four or so. (It would be probably more accurate to say
that they've been consistently beating me from a very young age. Object
memory ain't one of my strong points.)
Another game that I like is called "Enchanted Forest", that adds the
element of luck (you roll dice) to short term memory.
Clay
|
1199.5 | a few more | FSOA::DJANCAITIS | Que sera, sera | Mon Nov 04 1991 17:03 | 16 |
| Games : Candyland
Chutes & Ladders
Uno (not the Jr version, the regular one)
We were also able to find some neat "games" at one of the Teacher's Helpers
stores that also taught something - the ones we focused on at the time were
designed to help teach telling time but they also had others.
One particular game Matt loves that we all play (not a board game tho') is
DOMINOES - he learned the idea of how to play at about 5 yrs.old and it's
one of the first things he'll pick if he wants to play a game.
Also, CARD GAMES that the whole family joins in on - Crazy Eights, Donkey,
Go Fish, Rummy
Debbi J
|
1199.6 | Games We Play | BSS::SHUTE | | Mon Nov 04 1991 17:34 | 14 |
| I have a 3 1/2 year old and almost 7 year old). We play:
Candyland
Checkers
Boggle (my 6 year old is picking 3-4 letter words out of regular one)
Memory games (Sesame Street; one where you have to pick the card in
order of sequence on board)
Battleship
Cards (Uno, Go Fish, Old Maid, Crazy 8, Concentration)
Twister
Puzzles (watching them put it together and helping when needed)
Karen
|
1199.7 | Labyrinth | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Tue Nov 05 1991 04:59 | 28 |
| In addition to many of my favorites which have already been mentioned, we all
still love a rather new game that my children (now 11 nd 13) have been playing
for years called Labyrinth. The board is a matrix of movable and immovable
squares like this (X: not movable and O: movable)
X O X O X O X O X
O O O O O O O O O
X O X O X O X O X
O O O O O O O O O
X O X O X O X O X
O O O O O O O O O
X O X O X O X O X
There is one piece more than the board. The pieces have pictures of items on
them (ghost, icon, spider, etc.) and tunnel paths in three different shapes
(straight, corner, or "T"). The player gets a number of cards with the same
pictures as on the board and tries to move his piece through the maze to
the tile marked with his picture. The extra piece is used after each move
to "push" one of the rows or columns of movable tiles, thus constantly
rearranging the maze.
It's very suitable for younger children because it is so visual and requires no
reading. But older children like it too because it can be very strategic.
We also played a game called HI-Ho-Cherrio which involved picking cherries
from a tree. You have to fight a crow who keeps eating the cherries and a
dog who upsets the cherry basket. The winner is the first to get all his
cherries off. Not suitable for older children.
|
1199.8 | other traditional family favortites | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Tue Nov 05 1991 09:58 | 18 |
| My kids, and their parents, found Candyland way too frustrating,
too.
You can play concentration with all or part of a regular deck of
cards, too -- match red 10's, black jacks, etc. For younger kids,
sort out the face cards and aces and just use them, or allow any
color match, or whatever makes sense for your kids. Much cheaper
than the board games.
In card games, there's go fish, crazy 8's, rummy...
Checkers.
Chinese Checkers.
Give chess a try. Your kids may surprise you.
--bonnie
|
1199.9 | An uncomman game... | WONDER::MAKRIANIS | Patty | Tue Nov 05 1991 10:13 | 21 |
|
There was a game that as kids we used to play at Grandma's house. Just
a couple of years ago I found it in Brookstone (a great store) and
bought it. The game is called MANKALA: The African Stone Game. It
consists of an oblong board with scooped out areas to hold the stones.
It's a game for two players and can be made as easy or difficult at you
want by the number of stones you start out with. It's actually a fun
game and helps with counting. I would try and explain it but it would
probably take me forever. I'll try to keep it basic: Each player starts
with so many stones in each "bucket" in front of them. There is also a
bucket at each end, one for each player. These start out empty. You
pick up the stones from a bucket and going around the board drop one
stone in each bucket until those stones are gone. It is then the other
players turn. If your last stone lands in an empty bucket you get to
play again by using the stones directly across from the bucket you just
put your last stone in. The object of the game is to accumulate the
most stones in your end bucket. I think there might be more complicated
rules but this is the jist of it. I remember having a great time
playing this game when I was probably between 5 and 10.
Patty
|
1199.10 | The Sleeping Grump | LEZAH::MINER | Mom...I'm as happy as a shark | Tue Nov 05 1991 10:19 | 12 |
|
I remember the African Stone game! It was one of my favorites too.
The stones were fun.
Another game that we have run across but I have yet to find in a store
is called "The Sleeping Grump" which is a non-competitive board game
where the players need to collect different colored "gems" before the
grump wakes up. If they have more than one of a certain color gem,
they share with another player who is missing that gem. It's a cooperative
effort and pretty nice for a change of pace. It probably can be found
in a specialty toy shop.
dorothy
|
1199.11 | Glad someone's heard of it... | WONDER::MAKRIANIS | Patty | Tue Nov 05 1991 10:26 | 5 |
|
My goodness, that one brings back some vague memories. Our
parents/grandparents must of shopped at the same stores. :^)
Patty
|
1199.12 | And I think I saw it in an Eddie Bauer catalog too | STAR::LEWIS | | Tue Nov 05 1991 12:59 | 4 |
| Brookstone's carries the African Stone game. I bought one for
something to do while in labor - ha ha. I remember playing it
as a child, too.
|
1199.13 | B-I-N-G-O | SQM::DBLFDG::TOTTON | Nancy Totton | Thu Nov 07 1991 10:52 | 3 |
| In addition to the previous notes, we also play
Bingo and Ants in the Pants
|
1199.14 | My list | CUPMK::JETTE | | Thu Nov 07 1991 11:21 | 9 |
| Favorite games
Topple
Don't Break the Ice
Old Maid
Don't wake the dragon
Kathy
|
1199.15 | More games.... | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Nov 19 1991 00:19 | 55 |
| We play a lot of what's been mentioned so far, PLUS;
Uncle Wiggly (personally I hate this game as I always ALWAYS lose, but
Chris and Dad LOVE IT! ...probably because I always lose
(-:)
Crackers in My Bed (matching game, along the lines of Concentration).
Pick-up Stix
Smoke/Fire (nothing more than 52-pickup. A black card is SMOKE, a red
card is FIRE, and when they say FIRE, you flip the cards at them - for
some reason they find this hysterical....)
I think that MOUSETRAP would be good for that age. Monster Mash is too
complex still (we found...)
And our favorite -- TAKARADI. Brookstone and LL Bean sell this -
basically rectangular shaped blocks that you create a building with and
then try to remove 1 block at a time without knocking the building
down. The kids do *GREAT* at this !! There's a slight variation that
Milton Bradley(I think) puts out called something like Ju?n?o. I
forget. Takaradi's easier for the little ones though.
RE: .9 We used to play a game like that, but the rules were different.
FIRST OF ALL, you can save yourself about $25.00, and make the game
from an egg carton and some small rocks or marbles, and 1 small
dish/container each. Put 3 rocks into each of the egg cups. Put the
empty dishes 1 at each end of the egg carton. Sit, two people, one at
each end of the egg carton, "Your" side is your right hand side. One
player starts from anyplace on their side, pick up the rocks in any
cup, and working clockwise around the egg carton, drop 1 rock into each
cup, until there are no more rocks in your hand. Count your dish as
one cup. If you land in your dish by exact count, you get another
turn. The idea is to get the most rocks. If you don't end up in your
dish, and the last rock goes into a cup with other rocks, pick up ALL
the rocks and keep dropping them until you land in an empty cup, then
it's the next person's turn. You ALWAYS drop 1 rock in your dish on
the way by, NEVER in their dish on the way around. You can start your
turn from ANY cup on your side of the board.
So for example, the best move for your first turn would be to take the
3 rocks in the 3rd cup. Drop one in the second cup, 1 in the first
cup, and the last rock in your dish. Another turn, start from the 4th
cup away from you, pick up 3 rocks, drop 1 in cup 3, 1 in 2, and the
last one in 1. Pick up the 4 rocks in that cup (you now have 5), drop
one in HOME (your dish), and the other 4 up the left hand side, pick up
the 3 in that cup, drop 1 at a time cloockwise around the egg carton, I
think that'll bring you down to the second cup on your side, and you
keep going around until you land in an empty cup, and then it's the
other person's turn. They start from any cup on their side.
You keep going till there aren't any rocks left, the person with the
most rocks in the end wins.
It's a GREAT hot weather or rainy day game.... not a bad drinking game
either! (did I say that??)
|
1199.16 | | XLIB::CHANG | Wendy Chang, ISV Support | Wed Dec 11 1991 09:42 | 11 |
| My 3.5 years old enjoys
- Memory games
- Connect Four (it is for age 7 and up, but Eric is really good at it)
- Puzzles (Eric is now into 63 pieces puzzle)
I enjoy all these games too.
Wendy
|
1199.17 | games | DELNI::BRYDON | | Wed Dec 11 1991 10:31 | 13 |
|
Monopoly Jr. is also good. Its fun and help develop reading and
math skills. Its fun for adults to play with children. The games
aren't as long as regular monopoly. It also allows for a transition
into the adult Monopoly game.
Also have Clue Jr. Found it difficult to play with non-readers.
Once the kids read well enough it was fun. The deductive reasoning
skills needed also required a learning curve.
/kathy
|
1199.18 | Monopoly - the fast version! | SHRMAX::ROGUSKA | | Wed Dec 11 1991 13:17 | 12 |
| re: .17
"The games aren't as long as regular monopoly."
Yeah, and if you are really in a hurry to move the game a long you
can 'cheat' like my husband does - deal yourself out less money,
and 'forget' to collect your $2 when you pass GO! (Boy, the things
you learn about folks after their 100th game of monopoly in a month!)
:^)
Kathy
|
1199.19 | | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed Dec 11 1991 15:12 | 7 |
| Boy, I can see how Monopoly Jr. would go faster if you only collect
*two dollars* when you pass Go! Do they call it an allowance instead
of a salary? :')
Leslie-who-has-just-started-her-first-marathon-(real)-Monopoly-game-
with-Alex-and-who-still-pays-Chance-into-the-middle-so-she-can-collect-
it-on-Free-Parking-no-matter-what-the-rules-say
|