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Board Games I've Loved
Board games have long occupied space in closets and on book shelves, and have entertained families of all types and sizes for decades. While growing up, my brother and I spent many days and hours playing games, just like my daughters do today.
I admit, when the original Nintendo came along, I spent far less time with the conventional board game, and shifted most of my focus to video games. Even so, I have so many fond memories attached to board games, so here today I’m taking a trip down memory lane to look at six of my favorite board games from days gone by, and two more recent ones.
Monopoly
When I hear “board game”, Monopoly is the first thing that comes to mind. I would consider it the “Boardwalk” of board games, while all the others are “Vermont Ave” or “St. James Place”.
The current recognized version was first published in 1935 by Parker Brothers. It underwent a major resign in 2008 that saw Mediterranean and Baltic Avenues colors from purple to brown, and GO from red to black. It also changed the Income Tax to a flat $200, and upped Luxury Tax from the original $75 to $100.
When I was a kid, my family would play, but in the beginning, I was too young to be in on the game. When my time finally came, I instantly fell in love with it. I thought I was a big deal when I could barter my way to a “Get Out of Jail Free” card, or buy Oriental Ave. Unfortunately, I didn’t understand back then how the game worked and would usually be quickly put out of the game due to faulty business decisions.
As I grew older, I graduated from playing with family to playing with friends, where the playing field was a little more level. As an adult, my friends and I came up with a set of additional rules that we called “Survival Monopoly”. It threw in things like “everyone moves one chair to the left”, meaning that you now owned all of your neighbor’s property, and left yours behind to be taken over by someone else.
From the simple color schemes, to the simple rules, playing this board game these days always takes me back to another place in time. A place when I was sitting in front of the fire-place, with my brother and my folks enjoying the evening together. It’s one of the things that brings back some of the strongest feelings of nostalgia within me, and makes me ache to go back. But at the same time, the game helps me stay anchored in the present, as I love to play the game with my daughters. I see in their faces the same joys of playing the game that I have always experienced, and know that I am helping to create in them something that one day they will look back on with similar nostalgic feelings.
Battleship
While Battleship may have started around World War I as a pen and paper game, I didn’t stumble upon its existence until the early mid 80’s as my brother and I played it quite often. In 1967, Milton Bradley introduced a version with the now familiar plastic boards and pegs, and in 1977 they introduced Electronic Battleship.
We only had the standard version. My brother and I would play down stairs in the family room in front of the fire-place where we tended to play a lot of our board games. We both stretch out lying down on our stomachs with the boards back to back with each other and kill several hours playing several rounds of Battleship.
Being eight years older than me, he was aware of this thing called “strategy”, and would call out his shots in a specific manner, while I on the other hand would randomly just pick whatever coordinate that appealed to me at the moment. Needless to say, he won way more games than he lost when he played against me.
Although Milton Bradley released Talking Electronic Battleship in 1989, we never picked up that version of the game, nor have I ever had a chance to play it. Even to this day. One of my younger cousins had it, but some how I managed to never get the joy and excitement that it may have brought to the game. These days, my daughters play Battleship quite often, although it usually seems to result in more name calling and accusations of cheating that it does joy.
Operation
Ahh…the board game of the steady hand that featured Cavity Sam getting operated on endlessly by children everywhere. The game was simple in strategy, as all you really could do was hope to draw a card featuring an easy removal, then try to stay steady as everyone else hovered over the board eyeing your every move while you hope your sweating hands didn’t lead you astray and touch one of the metal sides of the cavity signaling you just screwed up.
This simple concept was designed and engineered by a fellow named John Spinello while he was an Industrial Design student at the University of Illinois in 1964. He sold the game to Milton Bradley for $500 and the promise of a job after graduation. Not a bad deal on either side at the time, although I would venture to guess that Mr. Spinello wished he had negotiated some royalties as part of the deal since the game went on to world-wide fame.
For me, this was a board game that I could whip out and play with my Mom. No matter what age I was, it was simple to grasp the rules, and I could be competitive because it just came down to who had the steadier hand. Unless you were going after that blasted Writer’s Cramp pencil. That thing was so thin that it’s cavity was very narrow. It was near impossible to get that thing without setting off the buzzer. A lot of the other pieces like Bread Basket or Broken Heart were much easier, and as a kid, those were the ones I hoped I would draw the card for.
Many an evening my Mom and I would play this game for a little bit while dinner was cooking. I would get it all set up on the kitchen table, and in between stirring whatever was on the stove, she would come over and take her turn. Sometimes, I think she purposely screwed up so I could get more pieces and win the game. But it didn’t really matter, just being able to play a board game with my Mom on a regular basis was a win for me.
Connect Four
Here we are with another game from Milton Bradley, this time from the magical year of 1974. I’ll have to let someone else tell you why it was magical, because I wasn’t born until 1978. But the fact it came out after my brother was born, and before I was born, meant that this was just another game my brother had several years to practice strategy on before I got around to playing. I find it hard to recollect ever beating him at this game.
The concept was a simpler one, where you dropped colored checkers in a standing grid board, and tried to be the first to connect four of your checkers in a straight line. He would always seem to beat me by setting up a diagonal line for the win….much like I do against my daughters now.
Don’t Break the Ice
Don’t Break the Ice came out in 1968 from Schaper Toys, and you can still find it on store shelves today still right beside all the other board games. Usually you can find it on a bottom shelf along with Ants in the Pants, and Don’t Spill the Beans. I picked it up for my daughters several years ago, and even though it’s not one they get out very often, they still play it on occasion.
When I was playing it, it was with my brother (surprise, surprise), and for whatever reason, we seemed to mostly play it on snowy days while out of school. Maybe it was the theme of the game that lined up with the weather outside, but we played the heck out of it on those days.
The version we had was from the late 70’s or early 80’s and featured the little man sitting in a chair as the piece that you didn’t want falling in. These days, I believe the game features an ice skating bear as that character.
We’d get the game set up, and take our slow and easy time pecking away at the blocks trying not to be the one to send the whole thing crashing down. Unlike other games he and I played together, there wasn’t much strategy he could have learned to use against me, and it really came down to just who could pick the best block to know out, and do it in such a fashion as not to loosen all the other blocks as well. But, once we did, we quickly set it up again and start a fresh game. It was a good way to spend a snowy day, and left some great memories of those times with me.
Risk Board Game
The game of global domination….and kitchen table supremacy. The game has been around since the late 50’s, but my first experience with it came at the birthday party of my friend Lance.
Lance had invited about 6 of his best friends to his house for a sleepover birthday party. This would have been 1986 most likely. I was one of the first to arrive, and his Mom had rented Raiders of the Lost Ark and Return of the Jedi for us to watch, and pizza was on the way.
But as cool as that was, what ended up being the main attraction for me was my first time playing the game Risk. I had never seen or heard of the game before, and as Lance set it up, the excitement kept building as I looked at all the cool pieces and the over sized game board. It took me a little while to grasp the rules, but I quickly became engrossed by it all.
There were six of us playing, and the game stretched well into the night, and we had to continue it the following morning. Unfortunately, my Mom showed up to get me before the game was over, but from that moment on, I was hooked.
The only problem with the game was the fact that it took so long to play, it was hard to every find anyone who wanted to play. May family weren’t interested in it at all. So for years I had to make do with just thinking about the game until a computer version came out and then I played it constantly. Once married, my wife and some friends would play on a regular basis, but that’s been several years ago. This is one I need to teach my daughters to play.
Trivial Pursuit DVD Pop Culture
This one came out in the early 2000’s, so it’s not a “retro” item by age, but since it deals with so much retro pop culture, I feel it’s worth including. Now seeing as how I am a fan of all things retro pop culture, this was a must have. My wife, who too is a retro lover, picked it up for me for Christmas one year, and we played it so much, wo wore out the DVD that came with the game. From that point on we had to just skip the interactive DVD portion and continue the game with normal game cards in it’s place. It’s chock full of retro goodness as it features questions about the 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s, as well as Movies, Toys, Television Shows, Sports, Fads, and Celebrities. You can play this game and step back in time for a few hours as the questions and answers stir old memories and emotions, and sometimes you learn something you didn’t already know. If you consider yourself to be a retro buff, you should definitely play this game from time to time to show off your mental muscles.
This game is still available on Amazon, and if you are a retro or nostalgia lover, you should definitely add it to your collection.: Trivial Pursuit DVD Pop Culture Edition
Retro Manic
So this particular board game may not be from our youth, and matter of fact it just came out in early 2016, but it’s so full of retro goodness that it’s definitely worth discussing. Retro Manic is a new board game created by Retro-Daze.com founder, and patron saint of nostalgia, VaporMan87! He has created a game that is not only fun for the family, but also causes retro memories to come flooding back while playing. The point of the game is to go around collecting retro items like video games, music albums, sports cards and such and then get back to the time portal before it closes.
Official Description: “A mysterious time portal has appeared in the quaint little town of Memory Meadows, and a few brave time travelers have risked passing through it. Why? Because the portal leads to the year 1985, and everything new there – from VHS tapes to action figures – is worth big bucks in the present day! In Retro Manic!, you and your friends are those residents hoping to make a fortune with vintage treasure. But watch out, because the residents of 1985 Memory Meadows are none too happy with you taking their stuff. Can you get back to the portal before it closes?”
As the family and I were playing it earlier this week, we kept pausing as I spun tales to the kids about all the cool things I used to have back in the day. Tales of G.I. Joe, He-Man, Hot Wheels, Cartoons, and so much more.
The Retro manic! game is available through Retro-Daze.com, and I give it my highest recommendation to anyone looking for a new fun board game to inject into your game nights.
And so ends another trip down my memory lane. I seem to have vivid memories of times playing these board games, so they were definitely a big part of my childhood. I hope one day my daughters look back on them as fondly as I do.
Which of these games did you always enjoy? What are some of YOUR favorite games that I didn’t include? Drop me a line in the comments and we’ll talk more about them.
Superman Posted on Jul 10, 2017 at 08:09 PM
I'm a huge fan of board games. I've got tons of fond memories of playing them with my cousin and my mom when I was a kid. My favorite was always Checkers because I was practically unbeatable at it within our household.
Hoju Koolander Posted on May 28, 2017 at 01:47 PM
All classics. I think I played Monopoly more than the others, but had I owned Operation it would have been my favorite. I'm waiting for my kids to get older so we can get into games like Retro Manic, I hear good things ;)
Vaporman87 Posted on May 26, 2017 at 07:25 AM
A great list here Mick. For my own list, I would have had to add Sorry and Trouble. Sorry in particular was a staple of any board gaming session. It was pretty much the go-to game for me.
Nice plug for Retro Manic! by the way. LOL. It's a game that is bound to be more fun when you can play it with others who can create some good trivia questions for use in the game. Typically I don't even use those cards when playing with the kids.
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