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The Definitive Childrens Game Geek List -- School Age list
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OK, so there really isn't any such thing as the definitive kids game geek list, but I sure wish there were. I spent the last weeks looking over all the games with at least 30 ratings (plus a few more) that were listed as "children's games" here at BGG.

Now, I fully realize that the data is sketchy. Many games that are surely kids games (e.g. Don't Break the Ice) aren't listed as such. Many others that are not kids games (Avalon Hill's tactical hunting game Yellowstone, Montgolfiere, Smart Mouth, some Pirate game from Hilary's Toy Box, plus many more) are listed as such. And then there are the Monopoly editions that are hit and miss (Simpsons is kids, but LotR isn't--neither should be). Some people even think Bang! is a kids game. But I'm not looking for opinions, just hoping to look for games where the manufacturer was targeting, specifically, youngsters. Not adult games that make good games for kids.

So, I tried to whittle down the list to remove games that seemed not to be purely directed at children. I also eliminated any games listed in the databases as for children but also listed as either "war" or "trivia," so I could eliminate wargames that grognards might relegate to status of childish along with ditching "educational" games of trivia.

I discovered that the world of childrens' games here on BGG is woefully lacking. There really needs to be a couple of different categories for kids' games: Pre-school (roughly under age 6) and School Age (that'd be 6-14 or so). And games that are good for kids, but not directed to kids, shouldn't be in either grouping (like, apparently, Razzia).

Anyway, awhile back, Dale Stephenson came up with a nifty geek list to discover which party games have the most fans ( http://www.boardgamegeek.com/geeklist.php3?action=view&listi...). He pointed out that party games, like childrens' games, are ill-suited for the one-rating-fits-all system here at BGG. See, for wargames or sports games or blind bidding games, people who really dislike those genres simply don't play them and don't rate most of the games of that ilk. Not true for party games--everyone plays party games, whether they like to or not. His theory was that those who rate such games with a 7 or above are the true fans of "party games," so his geek list calculated the raw data amongst fans of only that type of game. To him, a rating of 7+ is equivalent to a “thumbs-up” in the new BGG parlance.

Well, I took a similar approach with Childrens' Games. I removed all votes below 7 and checked to see which games had the highest averages amongst fans of the game--presumably, those who either like to play kids games or rate them from the point of view of a child. This geek list is the result of that tedious process.

So, I recalculated over hundred games based only on the ratings of 7 or more. Games with too few ratings of at least 7 were smoothed (yep, that Bayesian thing at work), so that Monkey Madness, Jack Straws, and Railroader didn't look like the best kid games ever. For those with inquiring minds, "too few" is defined as 14 for pre-school games and 21 for school-age games.

In this list, I'll present the games for school-age children. Like with the other list, I don't care if your 3rd grader just loooooves Die Macher. Bully for him or her. But that game isn't designed to be a kids game, so it doesn't belong on this list. I'm trying to keep this to the targeted audience--kids who aren't spawned from game geeks. You know, average, normal kids. :)

If you know of other great candidates that are really, really designed specifically for kids, please add a general comment so that I can calculate their numbers and add them to the list. But remember, don't include adult games that work well with kids--I want only games designed for children as the primary audience. Those I don't feel fit in will be deleted.

And to make a long intro even longer, each header line includes a note at the end called “FORM.” This is Tim Benjamin’s statistically accurate method of calculating a game’s total worth along three attributes: popularity (lots of votes), quality (ratings), and consensus (standard deviation). I have included the “kiddie FORM” rating for each game (with the rank in parentheses) just to show which games are foremost in the minds of kiddie gamers. Not necessarily the best, but the best of the ones you’ll hear about on the streets. Take if for what it’s worth—another data point.
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Posted Fri Jun 23, 2006 5:35 pm
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1. Board Game: Fireball Island [Average Rating:6.34 Overall Rank:1544]
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1) Fireball Island - 7.848, 56 ratings of 7+ (138 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 37th -- FORM: 58.7 (30)

I can't say that I recall this game. It seems to have come out somewhere around the time of the Indiana Jones first installment, so I guess that's where the idea came from. Otherwise, it looks a lot like other old American games where a dropped marble is the randomizer for who is pushed back to the start (like that old haunted witch mansion game from the 1970s).

All that said, this game is beloved by kids and kids-at-heart, according to the numbers here on BGG. Maybe that's because it's targeted to the older echelon of school kids? On the other hand, the opinion is divided enough (standard deviation, in stat speak) that this rates only #30 by the FORM calculation, so it may be a good game, but not well known or commonly perceived as good.
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I LOVED this game as a kid. There was a neighborhood friend of ours who ALWAYS wanted to come over and play it. I was hoping to see it on this list, but didn't expect it to be the very first entry. Good stuff. Glad to see its still getting some love.

On a semi-related note, here's a silly article I wrote that was inspired by Fireball Island.
http://www.boardgamegeek.com/article/924579#924579

Tom DeMarco
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If I remember correctly, the rolling marble didn't choose a random player to send back, but if you ended up on the wrong space (on a fireball track), anyone could play a card to send a fireball (marble) down the track to send you back (but not to start).
Ted Nolan
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One of my son's favorite- we just played it the other day. It's a race-to-the-center and then race-to-the-end roll and move game. You are basically always on a path that can be set back by rolling a marble. If you roll a 1 on your turn, you must roll a Fireball and knock someone back to one of several "smolder pits" on the board. Multiplayer games can be tense toward the end because the mechanics tend to slow down the leader, making for a fun finish.
2. Board Game: Book of Classic Board Games [Average Rating:6.58 Overall Rank:1543]
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2) Book of Classic Board Games - 7.819, 47 ratings of 7+ (87 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 8th -- FORM: 53.1 (35)

Looking at the picture here, I may have gotten this one as a gift a long time ago. Because it's by Sid Sackson, it will have those high ratings due to his pending canonization ("Saint Sid" has quite a ring to it). Anyway, I'm not sue it belongs here, but someone listed it as "childrens game" and I haven't yet submitted a correction to fix that. Should I?
Lawson V.
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I don't know that I'd consider this to be targeted to kids. It's not a black/white call, though, partly because I think that the older end of the "school-aged" range is capable of playing just about anything, and partly because this book includes a lot of different games, some of which might be intended primarily for children.

I'll say this, though -- this book/game set is fabulous. The dollar-to-gaming-enjoyment ratio is the best of anything I have. Also, it's supremely portable -- we bring it on every family trip. And, for whatever it's worth, I hadn't heard of Sid Sackson when I bought it and didn't realize his involvement until this moment, so my love for the book isn't swayed by that.
Brad Weage
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It is a great book for everyone. The company that produces it markets it to kids - along with a huge line of other items - and the words and reading level say "I'm aimed at older kids rather than adults" so maybe it should stay in the kids category.
3. Board Game: Apples to Apples Kids [Average Rating:6.63 Overall Rank:1179]
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3) Apples to Apples Junior! - 7.746, 63 ratings of 7+ (114 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 5th -- FORM: 75.2 (18)

I'm not much of a fan of the grown-up version of this game (how different can they be?). But I can see how kids would enjoy the randomness of it moreso than adults do. Nonetheless, I'm guessing that the high rating here is more based on the parents liking the original, not based on how kids would rate this edition.
David Bohnenberger
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I've played both versions with kids, and it goes over very well. The "Adult" version contains cards the kids might not know. I remember one kid asking "Who's Princess Di?" pronouncing it "Dee".
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My kids LOVE this edition! They seem to never get tired of playing.
Germán R. Gómez
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We play with a giant stack of random picture cards.
Dale Stephenson
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I think most "junior" editions of party games (such as this, or Pictionary Jr., or Scattegories Jr., or Catch Phrase Jr. etcetera) have the same mechanics, but less obscure things to draw/match/guess. I would expect them to age better than parents using topical answers, though I haven't actually played Outburst Jr. to test my theory.

My nephews have really enjoyed this particular game.
4. Board Game: Which Witch? [Average Rating:5.00 Overall Rank:5490]
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4) Which Witch? - 7.719, 17 ratings of 7+ (55 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 45th -- FORM: 28.2 (54)

Witch, thy name is Niche. The few who rate it 7 and above seem to remember this game fondly. But the FORM rating doesn't mean it's a good mainstream game.

Now this game gets much better marks than Ghost Castle, which was apparently a rip off. I mentioned playing this in Cousin Teresa's "playhouse" in the Ghost Castle entry. Now, her playhouse was set off at the far back corner of their yard (so, about a half-acre away from the house proper). And it was a free-standing one-room house about 500 square feet with a covered area outside that was twice the size of the "playhouse." Is that odd? Is that an odd memory? Should I be talking about Which Witch?
Lori
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Recently showed this game to a fellow grownup gamer, who pointed out that once you make the decision to play the game, that's the last actual decision made by any of the players. And you know, I thought about it and realized he was right. There are three sources of randomization: the die roll, the card drawn off the deck, and when Ghoulish Gertie drops it down the chimney (metal ball can roll into any of the four rooms, smiting players therein). But there is absolutely no point in the game at which any player has free choice between two different courses of action.

Of course this would elicit massive scorn here on BGG, and probably cause some people to immediately label it "not a game." But while I acknowledge the criticism, I still have fond memories of playing this as a kid. In fact, it got onto the table at my house a few Christmases ago for a nostalgia play, and we had a great time. Sometimes--even if you didn't make it happen and can't make it stop--it's just still fun to have your kid brother turned into a rat. :devil:

I'd still think this was enjoyable for young enough kids, but I wonder if that might not be true for geek-raised kids. I spent my whole childhood playing games, but we didn't have the kind of games that BGGers' kids have today, nor did we have the sort of outside-the-box "Sure, why wouldn't my two-year-old be able to play Carcassonne?" attitude.

This has also made me reflect on how many other childhood classics are decision-free. Certainly Candyland is. And isn't that true of Mousetrap as well? I think Candyland falls into the "played by those too little to know better" category (though I admit that it can teach things like taking your turn). But Mousetrap really belongs in the same category as Which Witch--cool, elaborate bits, strong theme, and multiple sources of random input mask the fact that there is no decision-making by the players.
Richard Pomeroy
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I loved this game back in grade school!
5. Board Game: Kapitän Wackelpudding [Average Rating:6.20 Overall Rank:2311]
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5) Kapitän Wackelpudding - 7.692, 26 ratings of 7+ (75 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 25th -- FORM: 46.1 (42)

I've played this twice and enjoyed it none. I even watched a live-action version of it in a swimming pool. That wasn't any better, just slower. Maybe kids would enjoy it, but I don't think I would have when I was of a lesser age.
6. Board Game: Guess Who [Average Rating:4.82 Overall Rank:5613]
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6) Guess Who - 7.686, 40 ratings of 7+ (263 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 57th -- FORM: 56.1 (33)

I never played this as a youngster. Of course, if it came out in 1987 like the database says, I couldn't have done that. But I think I would have really liked it. Maybe when my kids reach school age, we'll have to check it out. Problem there is that we game geeks think that our school kids should cut their teeth on Adel Verpflichtet, rather than Hangman and Guess Who.

Note: those who don't think this is so great give it an average rating below 4.5, which is very low for this group of games. So, don't expect to enjoy playing this with all adults.
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Another game my kids request ALL the time.
T Michels
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It's actually a pretty good kids game. They use reasoning and deduction to figure it out. Maybe simplistic, but it works.
7. Board Game: Dancing Eggs [Average Rating:6.70 Overall Rank:739]
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7) Eiertanz - 7.668, 61 ratings of 7+ (86 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 4th -- FORM: 84.5 (15)

I've seen this played once. That was enough for me to know two things: 1) I don't want to play it and 2) I don't need to see it played again. But for those who have children who are so hyper that they need to be running around the kitchen table during would-be boardgaming sessions, maybe this is the one for you.
Dave Peters
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A failure again, I am. My children (all of them: ages 3 through 11) think the occasional session of Eiertanz is a delightful treat. So I suggest it to them periodically.
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Kid hyperactivity isn't a parental failure. It's just that some children are, uh, more demanding than others.
Donald Wilbur III
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Boy, I'm torn on this one. My daughter is the perfect "type" for this, but I'm sure I'd hate it. I'll have to think about it some more.
8. Board Game: Kupferkessel Co. [Average Rating:7.06 Overall Rank:381]
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8) Kupferkessel Co. - 7.641, 215 ratings of 7+ (291 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 2nd -- FORM: 142.2 (5)

I've seen this one listed by a lot of people as a good kids game. I have no reason to doubt it. When our kids are older, I should look into it. Box says for ages 8 and up, so that puts it firmly into the school-age category. But is it really just a good game kids happen to be able to play?
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I do so love this game. Theme, mechanics, art. It's charming, and fun, and there's too much going on to calculate everything, but all the pieces in this set collection and memory game are on the board to see so you could spend a long time thinking about it. The recipe cards push it out of the 'kid' category in my opinion, with so much going on, but I imagine it will be fun to play with my son when he's older.
Brad Weage
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I'm not sure I would call this a "kids game". Good for some kids - yes. But so is Atlanteon or King's Gate. I would also have to agree that using the recipe cards (optional)seems to put it out of the kids category.
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Not a kid's game per se, but playable (sans recipe cards) by a game-savvy 6 year old.
9. Board Game: Weapons & Warriors - Castle Siege Game [Average Rating:5.57 Overall Rank:4399]
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9) Weapons & Warriors - Castle Siege Game - 7.62, 25 ratings of 7+ (116 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 44th -- FORM: 50.5 (38)

Looks like Advanced Crossbows & Catapults to me. Why not just go outside and play with a slingshot or BB gun?

I have a theory here, but it won't necessarily be taken well by some. I think some of these gadget games that hurl things designed to destroy the target are secretely cherished by adult males. Call me a bigot if you will, but that's my guess.
Dale Stephenson
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Why go outside and shoot a BB gun or slingshot in a residential neighborhood, when you can destroy things inside tthe comfort of your own home? I think the real question is what distinguishes a set-em-up, knock-em-down "game" from merely constructing forts out of Lincoln Logs, placing plastic army men inside, and then trying to knock them down from a distance by throwing building blocks. Depending on how spectacular the results are, it's certainly possible for a game like this to be better than the public domain version.

Of course these sort of games are boosted by adult males who cherish the idea of destroying things. Nothing secret about it -- I think most guys' reaction to the idea of hurling a volkswagon with a homemade catapult would be "Cool!". Destroying things is fun.

Less than two weeks to Independence Day now. I've got to find some illegal fireworks and blow something up.
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Quote:
I think the real question is what distinguishes a set-em-up, knock-em-down "game" from merely constructing forts out of Lincoln Logs, placing plastic army men inside, and then trying to knock them down from a distance by throwing building blocks. Depending on how spectacular the results are, it's certainly possible for a game like this to be better than the public domain version.

I have many very fond memories of this sort of thing. I also would build spaceships out of Legos and toss them across the room just to see them explode.

Quote:
I think most guys' reaction to the idea of hurling a volkswagon with a homemade catapult would be "Cool!".

I hate to step into this, but that does sound really cool.
Donald Wilbur III
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You're not a bigot you're just describing a large percentage of the American Male population. I'm not too much into it myself, but some most of my friends are.
10. Board Game: Hare & Tortoise [Average Rating:6.72 Overall Rank:440]
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10) Hare and Tortoise - 7.62, 565 ratings of 7+ (911 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 6th -- FORM: 239.3 (1)

Not sure this belongs on the list. It's not listed as a "children's game" in the database, but most people seem to think of it that way. I think it's just a good "family game," and isn't really all that great without kids involved. Anyway, it's surprising that this Spiele des Jahres winner rates lower than Dorada when you remove all the thumbs-up votes (the 7-and-above lot). In fact, it's also behind Kupferkessel & Co, Mole in the Hole, that Eggdance thing, and Apples to Apples Jr, too.

No surprise that this game is #1 in FORM, meaning that it's the best game in terms of availability, quality, and lack of wildly divergent opinions. It's had so many more votes than any other game on this list that it was almost assured of the #1 FORM slot.
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This is one that fell flatter than flat, both with my kids and my wife. The fun factor is very low--the math factor very high. I would not call this a children's game at all.
Sean Martin
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By the inventor's admission this game suffers from being an adult game that looks like a children's game. I like it a lot, but I think it's definitely a twelve-and-up.
11. Board Game: Klondike [Average Rating:6.36 Overall Rank:1687]
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11) Klondike - 7.616, 43 ratings of 7+ (90 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 26th -- FORM: 93.7 (11)

Another find that I think I'll have to look into when the kids are older. Panning for gold with a real silvery dish and marbles representing gold and gravel. Sounds like a lot of fun, but I think it'd have to be much older kids to handle the dexterity elements.
Germán R. Gómez
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The dexterity aspect is not an issue with younger players, the betting/gambling aspect is. Younger kids may not get it.
12. Board Game: Halli Galli [Average Rating:5.88 Overall Rank:2478]
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12) Halli Galli - 7.595, 63 ratings of 7+ (170 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 32nd -- FORM: 71.2 (19)

The box says "6 and up," so I guess it's a kids game. Funny, all the pictures on the 'geek seem to show adults playing it. So, do adults consider it a party game? A drinking game? I dunno. Seems a little too much like an educational game to me. You know, in the way Fizz Buzz is educational.
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My kids like to ring the bell and giggle more than anything else. They like to play it for that reason.
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Suitable and educational for anyone who wants to do arithmetic based on the number five. We recommend this for age five and up.
13. Board Game: The Mole in the Hole [Average Rating:6.39 Overall Rank:1369]
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13) Mole in the Hole, the - 7.588, 50 ratings of 7+ (116 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 3rd -- FORM: 80.4 (16)

Looks like the box says "8 and up," so it's a kids game. Funny thing: I've been introduced to a lot of games on these two geek lists that are obviously designed for kids, but they were presented to me as just good games from Germany. I wonder if there is less of a stigma against kid games in Germany than here.

Anyway, I liked this one as an adult. So if my kids like it (give 'em a few years), that'll just make it better.
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My copy says for eight and up, though my kids, now 4 and 6, were able to play just fine. They actually like it enough to remember to ask for it.
14. Board Game: Sub Search [Average Rating:5.42 Overall Rank:4744]
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14) Sub Search - 7.571, 13 ratings of 7+ (73 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 40th -- FORM: 25.6 (56)

Secret information. 3-D Battleship. I don't mind Battleship, so I'd probably enjoy this one somewhat, though I'd probably prefer the 2-D game.
15. Board Game: Heimlich & Co. [Average Rating:6.36 Overall Rank:881]
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15) Under Cover - 7.56, 250 ratings of 7+ (523 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 15th -- FORM: 156.8 (3)

This game is so underappreciated that it isn't even listed as a children's game here on BGG. I can't find an image of the back of the box. If it says 14+ or something like that for the age (hell, even if it says 10+), I'll consider it to be an "adult game." Until then, I'm logging it as a kiddie game. And a good one at that (but I really like secret identy games).

And if Great-Grandma Gertrude asks for a good game for a third grader, this might be the ticket, what with that strong FORM score.
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My copy says for 8 and up. I've yet to play it with my kids though.
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My copy says 8 - adult.
16. Board Game: The Magnificent Race [Average Rating:6.22 Overall Rank:2451]
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16) Magnificent Race, The - 7.554, 26 ratings of 7+ (59 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 34th -- FORM: 51.4 (37)

Is this based on the old cartoon from the 70s (or maybe earlier)? I remember the name "Dastardly Dan" from that show (along with "Penelope Pitstop"). Anyway, it looks like a fun, old-school game.
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Still have it. Played it a ton as a kid. Now it holds a certain nostalgic fun for me. Back in the 70s this game was a lot more fun than the standard fare!
Tom DeMarco
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Looking at the picture, I don't think this game has anything to do with the "Wacky Races" TV show with Dick Dastardly (voiced by Paul Winchell), Muttley (voiced by Don Messick), and Penelope Pitstop (voiced by the Janet Waldo), although "Wacky Races" was based on "The Great Race" movie with Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, Jack Lemmon, and Peter Falk.
17. Board Game: Key to the Kingdom [Average Rating:4.81 Overall Rank:5590]
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17) Key to the Kingdom - 7.548, 19 ratings of 7+ (163 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 58th -- FORM: 40.1 (44)

I know nothing about this game (though I may actually own it). Looks too fantasyish for me, but others will surely take a shine to it. For those who don't give it a thumbs-up, it rates very low in the list (56th out of 69).
Blake Crawford
United States
Richardson
Texas
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Taught it to my kids last year, it's too slow. I did not think it would ever end. It would have been cute for a 20 min. game but it lasted well over an hour.
NinjaBob
United States

UT
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I had the same experience as Blake. :(
Lori
United States
Triangle
North Carolina
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We had this, in fact I'm sure my parents have still got it somewhere. Only ever played once or twice, both because it was long and because, as I vividly recall, it had one of the worst rule sets ever. This was one of those games that makes you shake your head in bewilderment, asking yourself "Did anyone playtest this game at ALL???" Ambiguities and lacunae in the rules arose constantly.

If we had taken the time to battle through these issues and play a bunch of times, we probably could have established a satisfactory set of house rules and rendered the game enjoyable. I do think the board gimmick was kind of neat, and something I haven't seen anywhere else. (I'm not sure how well you can see it in the picture, but there are two whirlpools, and when you jump into one--the board is folded over on itself and the whirlpool is a hole in the top layer--the board unfolds, expanding and changing the territory. But alas, the designer & publisher didn't take the time to refine this game to the point of functionality, and neither did we.
18. Board Game: Midnight Party [Average Rating:6.45 Overall Rank:945]
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United States
Clemson
South Carolina
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18) Midnight Party - 7.545, 134 ratings of 7+ (274 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 16th -- FORM: 123.9 (6)

This game sounds like a lot of fun. I may even own it (my brother had it for his son, and I may have gotten it somehow). Otherwise, I know nothing more than what I can read here on BGG and that sounds interesting.
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Dave Peters
United States
Belmont
California
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My elder two (two and six years of schooling) think that Midnight Party is a load of fun. It's sufficiently compelling that my wife - who normally confines herself to word games - is happy to play to. One of the few games that works for my whole family.
NinjaBob
United States

UT
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Good family game thumbsup
David G.
United States
Moorpark
California
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I paid good money for this on EBay... and it makes my little ones cry. They don't like getting "captured" by the ghost. I've tried all sorts of things to make it a gentler experience, but, nothing seems to work.

I suppose time will correct it. Once they're older they'll do better with it.
Sean Gregory
United States
Napa
California
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Hugo isn't scary :D. He just wants to play.
Peter Johns
United States
Houston
Texas
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I've played this a lot with various adults and it always goes over well....though it always amazes me that the more childish the game, the more adult the language from the players :what:
Donald Wilbur III
United States
Sacramento
California
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High on my radar.
19. Board Game: Rat-a-Tat Cat [Average Rating:6.23 Overall Rank:1291]
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Clemson
South Carolina
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19) Rat-a-Tat Cat - 7.541, 96 ratings of 7+ (213 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 19th -- FORM: 102.9 (10)

If our kids get the hang of card games (I have a theory that some just never do come to enjoy card games), then this one may be necessary.
Sue Hemberger

Washington
Dist of Columbia
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I'd say this is a preschool-2nd grade game. Corsari is probably better from 2nd grade on up.
20. Board Game: Reiner Knizia's Amazing Flea Circus [Average Rating:5.92 Overall Rank:2573]
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Clemson
South Carolina
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20) Reiner Knizia's Amazing Flea Circus - 7.533, 30 ratings of 7+ (100 total ratings). Thumbs-down rank: 18th -- FORM: 50.3 (39)

Looks cute. That's all I can say, as I'm otherwise unfamiliar with it. On the other hand, Knizia's adult press-your-luck game Zirkus Flohcati is outstanding.
J (RBG)
Canada
Edmonton
AB
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