Players compose conspiracy theories from the "Them" and "What" cards in their hands and vote to determine which one they like best. Each round is started by the player holding the "Lanceur d'Alerte" card (= first player card) and begins with each player having 3 "Them" and 3 "What" cards. Players cannot vote for themselves during voting. On each round, the...
The Chemical Chaos promotional expansion pack adds 14 new Compounds and 1 additional Lab Fire to your game of Compounded (marked by chemical element symbol in corner of cards). These mix in more strategic play and chaos to the game. When playing with the Chemical Chaos expansion pack, remove the starting Compound cards from the game. Shuffle the 14 new...
Style No. 105 Copyright 1970. A general gaming board based on simultaneous selection of buttons by two players to show the result of a game play via a light underneath a semi-transparent board. This game has four games -- two each on two different plastic skins that fit over top of the base unit. Baseball, Football, Hockey, Basketball. Rule book includes...
While many of the electronic sports board games from EDC shared a common board and used overlays to portray different sports, Computamatic Tennis is a unique game. It relies on a large array of 24 light bulbs under a translucent board depicting a tennis court. The game is battery operated. Players sit at opposite ends of the board where they have a series...
Here's all the excitement of an afternoon at the old ball park -- The difference is you play the game. You figure your plays -- your strategy. The game gives you the results. Home runs -- grounder to second -- foul -- strike. It's all here in Computer Baseball. Electronic Data Controls Corporation released a series of electronic board games under their...
Brings the thrill of the basketball court to your own easy chair. You and your opponent analyze your own plays -- choose your winning strategy. Game gives you all the results. Baskets scored -- fouls -- out of bounds, etc. The fun, action, and excitement of the basketball court. It's all here. Electronic Data Controls Corporation released a series of...
With all the fun and excitement of the gridiron. You attempt to out score your opponent. Game immediately gives you the results. Yards lost or gained -- pass intercepted -- ball fumbled -- etc. Fun, excitement, suspense. Electronic Data Controls Corporation released a series of electronic board games under their "Computer Games" line, primarily consisting...
Box blurb: "Fast paced and exciting. An electronic football game that tests your football knowledge." A smaller format version of the earlier "computer" sports games by Electronic Data Controls Corporation (EDC). Instead of the circuitry and buttons being placed inside an oversized table-filling board, Scrimmage used a small plastic board and console. The...
"No need to reserve a tee off time. Enjoy Computer Golf -- at home. Here's all the fun of an afternoon on the course. Designed for two players, three or a foursome. Computer Golf loses your ball, gets you in and out of the woods, shoots a birdie, etc. All the fun and frustration of the real thing." Electronic Data Controls Corporation released a series of...
Spend an afternoon on the 'ice'. Hockey played the electronic way has all the fun and fast-paced action of the real thing . . . Your ingenuity keeps the game fascinating. Outwit your opponent for a goal. Electronic Data Controls Corporation released a series of electronic board games under their "Computer Games" line, primarily consisting of two-player...
In the late sixties, Electronic Data Controls Corporation released a series of electronic board games under their "Computer Games" line, primarily consisting of two-player sports games. The games typically used large wooden game boards depicting the playing field and a game matrix of various results. Each end of the game board had a set of buttons (i.e....
Enter the heart of the election of the New Pontiff, where tradition, intrigue, and ambition collide. In Conclave, players take on the roles of Cardinals from different religious orders, each faction representing distinct interests within the Catholic Church. Your mission? Influence the election of the next Pope by supporting a candidate whose...