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Designer Diary: The History of Faux●Cabulary Thus Far

the Monkey
United States

North Carolina
designer
publisher
The origin of Faux●Cabulary goes back to a party that my wife (then girlfriend) and I had back in 2006. Unfortunately, I don't recall the party or what sparked the inspiration – I guess it was a rough night – I just remember waking up with a name that I wanted to build a game around. That name was not Faux●Cabulary (which would come later), but "What the Bluff?" I had what I thought was a funny name and I wanted to create a solid party game around it.

The first version of What the Bluff? was a card game. The game included "fake word" cards and players bluffed their made-up definitions for these words. I spent a year showing it around the industry to great reaction, just no takers. I received a laundry list of reasons why people weren’t interested: too many card games on the market, word games don't make good party games, the name was possibly offensive. So I moved onto the next project, and then the next. I had forgotten about the game all together.

Then, sometime around 2009, two things happened that brought What the Bluff? back to life. The first was I met Al Waller, the owner of Out of the Box Publishing. The second was the creation of another game I did called A Bee C Match Game (Endless Games). When I met Al, I immediately took to him and his team. I knew they had a keen sense of how to sell a party game – just look at their track record! I wanted to publish a game with Out of the Box.

I went back to the studio and dug up a few concepts including What the Bluff? I playtested all of my old concepts again and found that What the Bluff? did not stand out the way I remembered it. I found the card game aspect to be too traditional – yawn! I wanted to create something that didn't just play well, but felt different in your hands, too. This is where A Bee C Match Game came in. I had spent the previous year building a children's spelling game with letter dice. My testing showed that people loved the dice aspect, so I ditched the cards and added dice for creating the fake words. I tested the game all over the country – with friends, family, friends of family...whoever would play it!

I presented the game to Al in October 2009 at the Dallas Toy Preview. He immediately liked the game, but we felt it needed polishing. Al took a copy of the game back to Out of the Box and played it with his team. With feedback from Out of the Box and my playtest groups, I simplified the game by prewriting all the definitions and reversed the rules so that one person read the definition and the other players came up with the fake words.

We reconvened in February 2010 at the New York Toy Fair. This time, my cousin Chris and I met with the entire Out of the Box team for a few rounds of the new and improved What the Bluff? The game was a smash hit. A few weeks later we had a deal in place.

Over the next few months, my team and Out of the Box continually tested and fine-tuned the content. Some of the content was toned down – the original was a bit racier – and some of the dud word-parts and definitions were rewritten or replaced with better ones. The hardest part was the name. I always loved What the Bluff?, but the game had changed so much since its inception that the name was no longer relevant. My team and I spent months going back and forth with Out of the Box with new name suggestions. Hundreds of names were thrown around, and ultimately we all decided on Faux●Cabulary. It fit the game perfectly: "Faux" (pronounced "Fo") from the French, meaning fake, and "Cabulary" from the word vocabulary. From there, my team and I did the artwork for the box and cards.

That's the history of Faux●Cabulary thus far. The future of Faux●Cabulary is not yet defined – I guess we'll need to create a word for that!

Matt Nuccio
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2 Comments
Subscribe sub options Wed Feb 9, 2011 6:30 am
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Freelance Police
United States
Palo Alto
California
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Quote:
too many card games on the market, word games don't make good party games


Sorry to hear that. I'd recommend you demo and playtest the game at local Meetup social groups with boardgame events. Party games and word games are popular, at least with the Meetup groups I'm at.

And you may be familiar with a certain card-based party game Out of the Box Games sold to Milton Bradley. It's called Apples to Apples...
 
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  • Posted Sat Jul 30, 2011 7:01 pm
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Lee Fisher
United States
Downingtown
Pennsylvania
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Sam and Max wrote:
Quote:
too many card games on the market, word games don't make good party games


Sorry to hear that. I'd recommend you demo and playtest the game at local Meetup social groups with boardgame events. Party games and word games are popular, at least with the Meetup groups I'm at.

And you may be familiar with a certain card-based party game Out of the Box Games sold to Milton Bradley. It's called Apples to Apples...


Did you read beyond that sentence?
 
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  • Posted Sat Jul 30, 2011 9:03 pm
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