This board game originated in India some time before the 18th century. There were many versions, each based on different belief systems. This Muslim version is known as the Game of Knowledge. It teaches the player about Islam. The player of this game embarks on a journey during which he will learn that the upward path of the spiritual seeker is a gradual...
Typical spin and move game including cards. Each player chooses one of 4 corners of the board for his "home". The player who spun lowest spins again, and moves Kriss Kringle toward his home the number of spaces spun (each olly leaf is a space). The next player spins, and moves Kriss Kringle toward his home; and so on round and round. When the player gets...
This is a Monopoly spinoff where the properties are various businesses in the community Lansdowne, Pennsylvania. Many of the components are generic, and can be used by similar games about other communities. Only the board and the box are unique to this game about Lansdowne. It appears this game was produced in 1989 as a fundraiser for the Lansdowne United...
The "Game of Law School" challenges players on their knowledge of law in everyday life. The main component of this game is the question cards, each containing 6 questions. Similar to other trivia games, each card has a question from each one of the different categories, with answers on the reverse side. These questions test one's knowledge on either...
Each player is in control of four ‘frogs’. Starting side by side, one for each player on the numbered spaces of 1 thru 4, players begin. They take turns spinning the spinner that is numbered one thru eight and also shows outlines of frogs on each of its numbers. After spinning the arrow, the player can choose the number, at either end of the arrow, to move...
In this age of alternative facts, what better game to play than The Game of Lies, a trivia party game where everything is based on bull***t? But these aren't your normal, boring quiz questions – in this game, you have to sort out fake news from fact, sneak a fib past other players, or spot which unbelievable-sounding reality TV show isn't real. Gameplay:...
Around 1860, Abraham Lincoln grew a beard. A young printer, Milton Bradley, who had been making a living selling pictures of a beardless Lincoln now found himself without a salable product. He turned to making board games, and invented The Checkered Game of Life. Similar to Snakes and Ladders, The Checkered Game of Life has players moving on the board...