2 to 4 players enter the maze. First to claim 4 pavilions and leave wins...but will the others catch up? There are two sorts of double-sided maze tiles - fixed and variable. The fixed tiles are arranged in a static pattern, the other tiles are shuffled and laid around the fixed tiles to form a 7 x 7 grid. In your turn, you have the choice of one of 4...
One hundred giant elephants are running amok, but one tiny mouse has got their number! Roll the dice and move the mouse around the board, searching high and low for elephants that are either higher or lower than the number on your card. If you spot a mouse hiding on a card, shout Eeek!and grab the mouse figurine before it scampers away! You’ll need to have...
Contained in the Jack and Jill Book of Games and Puzzles 1969 (pp. 20-21), which has a 1968 copyright. A luck-based roll and move game, but with a couple differences from most such games: 1) Most of the spaces, which make up an horizontal figure 8, have an arrow on them (all pointing forwards); the intersection space has two arrows. Players may choose to...
Trying to recall this from memory, as it's been close to 30 years since I last played this one. Hide n' Seek is a childrens game. For those days when you couldn't play outside, and playing the real thing inside would have driven mom nuts. One player is "it". The other players put their pawns under any of the 9 hiding locations, and up to two players can...
Be the first player to find two moneybags, put them into a truck, and reach the bank without being robbed! Players take turns hiding their moneybags under their colored houses. Then roll the dice to move your van, and peek under any of the other players' houses -- find a bag of loot and add it to your van! But if you find a thief instead, you lose the loot...
Hier kommt die Maus is a simple die-rolling game for children that features the main character of a popular German children's TV program, "Die Sendung mit der Maus" (The Program with the Mouse), which first aired in 1971. Players take turns rolling the die and moving accordingly. If they end up on a spot showing two arrows, they they have to move forwards...
Described as "the Game of Intrigue, Passion and Treachery", Hierarchy is played on a triangular board with players starting at the bottom right before progressing in a snake towards the top of the "pyramid". In turns, players roll two dice to determine the colour (subject) and the difficulty of the next question. Get the question right and the player gets...