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Board Game Entry
Information
Designed By
Art By
Published By
Year Published
1941
# of Players:
2 − 2
User Suggested # of Players
Best with 1 players
Recommended with 1, 2 players
(1 voter) [poll]
Playing Time
60 minutes
Mfg Suggested Ages
10 and up
User Suggested Ages
(no votes yet)
(0 voters) [poll]
Language Dependence
(no votes yet)
(0 voters) [poll]
Category
Mechanic
Primary Name
All-Star Baseball
Alternate Names
All Star Baseball
Expanded By Show Expansions »
Families
Description Edit | History

Designed by former major league player Ethan Allen and introduced in 1941, All-Star Baseball became one of the most popular sports games of all time. The game is essentially a batting simulation of major league baseball, built around a spinner and player disks that are divided into sections in such a manner that a hitter has the probabilty of reproducing his real-life statistics in such important categories as home runs, triples, doubles, singles, walks, and strikeouts. In general, the game follows the basic rules of major league baseball. Teams are created from the player disks supplied with the game (often a mix of current players and all-time greats such as Babe Ruth) and from player disks for other seasons published separately. The team at bats places the appropriate player disk on the spinner, spins, and reads off the resulting number. The game does not attempt to realistically simulate pitching and defense. Thus a hitter's result from a time at bat is not affected by the opposing pitcher or the defensive prowess of the fielder to whom the ball may be hit, although the player in the field on some play outcomes is required to spin a second spinner to determine the advancement of base runners and other certain details. Results of each play are recorded on the field using plastic pegs for the base runners, while runs and outs are tallied on a rotating scoreboard. Cumulative runs scored are tallied on paper score sheets. Strategy discs are included that enable plays like sacrifice flies, stealing bases, bunting, hit and run, etc. The team with the most runs after nine innings (or extra innings, if needed) is the winner.

More Information Edit | History

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Files
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0 1975 Reds.pdf
1975 Reds
2007-01-31
0 1922 Browns.pdf
1922 St. Louis Browns
2007-01-31
1 1919 White Sox.pdf
1919 White Sox
2007-01-29
0 scoresheet.pdf
Blank Scoresheet (2 sided)
2007-01-22
0 scorecard.pdf
Blank Scorecard
2007-01-22
0 1986 Mets.pdf
1986 Mets
2007-01-22
2 1927 yankees.pdf
1927 Yankees
2006-06-07
Statistics
User Rank: 4101
Num Ratings: 80
Average Rating: 5.63
Standard Deviation: 1.70
Num Views: 17770
GeekBuddy Analysis: Analyze
Similarly Rated: View
Avg. Game Weight: 1.4 moreinfo
Fans: 1
Personal Comments: 48
Users Owning: 103
Users Wanting: 0
Users Trading: 10
Has Parts For Trade: 1
Want Parts In Trade: 2
Price History: View
Total Plays: 23
Plays This Month: 0
User Information
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