Blasts From the Past: Board Games From My Childhood, Part 1

BoardGames

If you’ve been following my blog, you know that I recently rescued a stack of old 70s and 80s board games from my parents’ house, and that has sent me on a trip down memory lane. Last week, I wrote about my life as a (wannabe) gamer and all the best games I remember from my childhood. This week, I’ve had the chance to relive some of them. My husband and I have been playing the games I rescued to see which ones are still fun thirty-plus years later, and it’s time to reveal the results. It’s important to note that the hubby and I are particularly interested in games that are fun for two players, so that was taken into account in our ratings. Also, don’t get too attached to any of these. Some of them are out of print. Others can be found used online in the $20-$60 price range.

Star rating system is as follows:

1 star * = This game was not even fun to play once for nostalgia’s sake.
2 stars * * = This game was fun to play once, for nostalgia’s sake, but now it can go back to the shed.
3 stars * * * = This game was fun, but we probably won’t play it often. Either the instructions were weird or it needs more than two players to be fun, or it would get boring quickly.
4 stars * * * * = This game was fun! We can see ourselves playing it again.
5 stars * * * * * = This game was awesome! It was good for two players, and we either had a lot of laughs while playing, or it was a good strategic game that really made us think. There are definitely rematches in our future.

DungeonDice

Dungeon Dice

Year Released: 1977
Objective: Be the first to dig your way out of your dungeon cell.
Description: The instructions are similar to 10,000, but with some variation. Basically, you earn cards for your tunnel by rolling the dice and hoping for multiples of all the images except the guards, who you want to avoid. Cards can be taken away if you roll too many guards or if another player challenges you.
Rating: * * *
Comments: I was so excited to find Dungeon Dice! I had fond memories of it. I’ve always loved the dice with the cool little emblems and the choice of player cards. (My favorite is the old man with the spoon.) But it wasn’t as much fun as I remembered. It took a long time to play (even with only two people) and the instructions were a little confusing. I think it could be more fun if they were modified a bit.

Isolation

Isolation

Year Released: 1978
Objective: Isolate the other player’s piece before he/she isolates you.
Description: On each turn, you move your piece one space and punch out one square of the board until one player can no longer make a move.
Rating: * * * *
Comments: This is a quick, two-player game. The hubby and I played a best-two-out-of-three round and were pretty equally matched. It’s fun and I can see us playing it again from time to time, but it would probably get repetitive if played too often.

StayAlive

Stay Alive

Year Released: 1978
Objective: Be the last player with marbles on the board.
Description: The board is made up of two layers of criss-crossed plastic slides with holes cut out at various points. Players take turns placing marbles on the board until all are placed. Then they take turns sliding the plastic pieces which drop the marbles into the pit below.
Rating: * * *
Comments: Stay Alive is similar to Isolation, but can be played with up to four people. I loved this game as a kid and it holds up pretty well. I think if you played it too often, you would learn the pattern of the slides and it would be become repetitive, but it’s fun to play once in a while. It’s a neat concept.

SneakySnake

Sneaky Snake

Year Released: 1976
Objective: Make the longest snake.
Description: The snake parts are labeled. Heads are #1, tails are #6, and various middle sections are #2, 3, 4, and 5. You have to roll a 1 to start a snake. Then you roll for middle pieces. As soon as you get a 6, your snake is done. Then you have to roll a 1 to start a new snake. You can’t work on more than one snake at a time. When all the pieces are used, the player with the longest snake wins.
Rating: *
Comments: The first thing I said when we opened up Sneaky Snake was, “Wow. This one looks brand new!” It turns out, there was a reason for that. It hate to say it, but Sneaky Snake stinks. It was so boring, we didn’t even finish playing. However, I will say that if you ignored the rules or made up your own, it could possibly be fun. Also, my cousin has this game too and her four-year-old daughter loves playing with the cute pieces. It’s just not a winner for adults.

MostlyGhostly

Mostly Ghostly

Year Released: 1975
Objective: Be the first player to put together an entire skeleton with no body parts left over.
Description: Spin the spinner, collect the body part shown, and construct a skeleton. You can also steal unconnected body parts from other players or, if necessary, give parts to players if you have extras you need to get rid of. It’s a pretty simple game. Or it would be if it didn’t GLOW IN THE DARK! (You totally didn’t see that coming, did you?) Either wait until night time to play or find a nice dark closet.
Rating: * *
Comments: Mostly Ghostly would be almost as boring as Sneaky Snake if it didn’t glow in the dark. But it does, so that makes it kind of fun. It was entertaining to play once, but I don’t see it making a regular appearance. Also, if you’re going to play, don’t forget you have to charge it up first in some bright light.

EvenElephantsForget

Even Elephants Forget

Year Released: 1981
Objective: The zoo animals have escaped from their cages! Round them up and collect the reward money. The player with the most money at the end wins.
Description: Even Elephants Forget is a combination of a basic roll-the-dice-move-your-player-piece board game and memory. You move around the board based on dice rolls and when you arrive at an empty cage you get to search for the missing animal by drawing one of the memory cards. If you find the animal, you collect the reward money. But if you get it wrong, everyone else sees the card too and then it’s a race to get to that animal’s cage before you forget where it was hiding.
Rating: * * * * *
Comments: I loved this game! We’ve played it twice now, once with four people and once with just the two of us, and it’s been fun both times. I used to love playing Memory, mainly because I was so good at it. In second grade, it rained a lot, which meant we had “indoor recess” a lot, which was just staying in the classroom and playing games. After a while no one would play Memory with me anymore. (I like to think it was because I was unbeatable, but it was probably because I was both unbeatable and a sore winner. Oops.) So I thought I would be a champ at Even Elephants Forget. But no. Apparently age has taken its toll on my Memory skills because I cannot remember where those dang animals are! There is even one card that says “Hole in your pocket—Lose 1 dollar” and I drew it TWICE. Sigh. Despite losing, I loved the game anyway, which shows that I’ve come a long way since second grade.

[The following miscellaneous games are ones I rescued but didn’t play.]

Misc2

Lollypop Game

Year Released: 1981
Objective: Reach the Candy Castle first.
Comments: I enjoyed playing this as a kid, but couldn’t see the hubby wanting to relive it with me, so I gave it to my cousin and her daughter. I hear it was a big hit.

Spirograph

Year Released: 1976
Objective: Make a bunch of crazy shapes.
Comments: Spirograph is not a game, so we didn’t play it. I do plan on making some more awesome Spirograph art one of these days (I’m certain I can do better than when I was four) but I decided not to open that can of worms just yet. It looks like something that could consume many hours.

Bingo

Year Released: ?
Objective: Get BINGO!
Comments: Um… it’s Bingo. Not a whole lot else to say. I didn’t actually mean to grab this game, but it ended up in the stack.

GamePieces

This is only half of the games I brought home!
Stay tuned for results about Laser Attack, Pay Day, All the King’s Men, Uno Wild Tiles, Pokeno, Gomony, and the Garfield game coming soon.

My Life as a Gamer*

(* Wannabe Gamer)

GamePieces

My husband would laugh at me if I called myself a gamer.

It’s true that I can barely work our PS3 controller well enough to watch Netflix and I don’t play MMORPGs (or Massively-Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games for the rest of you n00bs). In fact, I just had to double check with the hubby regarding the correct spelling of “n00b” which I’m certain makes me one. No, in today’s terms, I definitely don’t qualify as a gamer. But the truth is that I LOVE games, and I’ve played them all my life.

When I reach back into my mind for my very first memories of games, I come up with three things: dominoes, the card stand, and the arcade at Richardson Square Mall.

We had lots of dominoes in our house. The adults used them for playing dominoes and 42, a game that all the kids in our family learn eventually and one we still play a lot today. I grew up with the soft clicks of the dominoes being shuffled on our old wooden table and a fascination with the dots long before I understood what they all meant. But when the adults weren’t playing “real” games with them, my brother and I were making swirling shapes on the floor, constructing long domino “snakes” to purposely (and often accidentally) knock down. We even had one of the original Domino Rally sets to add extra pizzazz to our creations.

DominoRally

The card stand was a wooden stand that my dad made for my brother when he was little and that I used later on. My mom taught us to play canasta and other rummy-type games when we were really young. Our little hands were too small to hold all the cards we collected, so we used the stand. My family still likes to play card games when we get together. One of our favorite variations is push rummy.

CardStand

Richardson Square Mall opened the year after I was born, and I spent a lot of time there when I was growing up. It had a Dillards and a Montgomery Wards and a Joske’s, but I spent most of my time in the wing where there was a Striderite (I loved wearing my new shoes home with the old ones in the box) and a Sbarro’s (I can still taste the thick slices of Sicilian pizza with piping hot cheese on top) and an ice cream store (my favorite flavor was fudge ripple). Just a little further down from that, outside the entrance to Sears, across from the movie theater (with TWO whole screens), was the arcade.

The arcade was a small, dark, carpeted room that was constantly beeping and whirring and flashing. My mom would give my older brother and me four quarters each and drop us off there while she shopped. My money would be gone in no time (I didn’t say I was a good gamer), and then I’d be left with nothing to do but watch Pat play Depthcharge or Joust for the next half hour. He was often still on his first twenty-five cents. If he was feeling extra nice or if I bugged him sufficiently, he would sometimes give me one of his quarters. I’d be *so* happy! Briefly. And then I’d be back sulking by his side. Eventually I got better at the arcade games, a few of them anyway. During my years at UT, I often popped into the Dobie Mall to play a few stress-relieving rounds of Galaga between classes.

When I was about eight, my parents bought an Apple IIe computer and we amassed a large number of games on floppy disks. Then a few years later we upgraded to a Nintendo NES and our game world expanded again.

FloppyDisks

But between the arcade games and the video games and the card games, there were always board games. My family bought practically every board game that existed in the late seventies and eighties. We had all the big ones—Candy Land, Operation, Trivial Pursuit, Pictionary—but we also had some really obscure ones like the Garfield game, the Little House on the Prairie game, Mostly Ghostly, and Laser Attack. My poor, sweet, patient mother played those games with me over and over during summer vacations. It must have been boring having to play the same things again and again, but she did, only finally cracking when I got tired of playing two-player and insisted that we use my stuffed animals to fill up all the other cars in the game of Life. An hour later, when we were still less than halfway to retirement and we couldn’t remember which unicorn was the doctor and which unicorn was the lawyer and whether it was Horsey Ears’s turn or Chocolate’s, she called it quits. I can’t really blame her.

These days, I play 42 and push rummy with my family and spider solitaire on my phone. I still know where all the good Galaga games are in town and love going to Pinballz, the huge arcade in north Austin with over 200 games. My husband and I play Scrabble once in a while and occasionally break out Trivial Pursuit. I’ve even started playing Pathfinder with him and his friends, which is a D&D-style role-playing game. I’m a level 6 elf druid named Gleep and I have a badger companion named Leroy who continually saves the butts of everyone else in the party. It’s fun, but it’s also work. Learning to play a game like that around people who’ve been doing it for more than twenty years is kind of like taking a math class in a language you don’t understand.

Pathfinder

But I miss board games, especially the weird ones from my youth. Those games were awesome, and I don’t think they should be discounted just because they use paper cards instead of graphics cards and spinners rather than short cut keys. So last weekend, when I was visiting my parents, I decided to raid their old storage shed. I knew that much of my childhood was sitting in there collecting dust, and I wanted to see what I could find. When I opened the door, I knew I’d hit the jackpot.

BoardGames

To quote my all time favorite Nintendo game, “Now is the beginning of a fantastic story! Let us journey into the cave of monsters!” I journeyed into that dark, dusty cave and I emerged with treasure, in the form of a large stack of board games from my youth. (This pile doesn’t even scratch the surface. I have several more trips to make. Soon my house is going to look like a Toys R Us, circa 1986.) My husband and I have started playing the games I brought home. We’re trying to figure out which ones are fun to play at least once for nostalgia’s sake (i.e. all of them) and which ones best stand the test of time. (Spoiler alert: It’s not Sneaky Snake.) I’ll share our results with you soon.

In the meantime, I will leave you with two top ten lists—my favorite video games (and how/where I played them) and my favorite board games. I made these lists off the top of my head before I began this post, without researching or thinking too hard about it. Chances are, some good ones have been left off, but these are the ones that left the biggest impressions on me.

I may not be a “gamer” by today’s standards, but games have certainly been a big part of my life.

Me, on a visit home from college, still playing Bubble Bobble.
Me, on a visit home from college, still playing Bubble Bobble.

Carie’s Top Ten Favorite Video Games:

1. Bubble Bobble – Nintendo NES
(Yep, this is the source of the “cave of monsters” quote. My Cousin Kelley and I *LOVED* this game! And we loved how you couldn’t beat it alone, you had to do it together. For that reason, I would sometimes ask my brother to play the last screen with me. His only job was NOT TO DIE while I killed the final boss. That was one game that I was actually better at than he was.)
2. Super Mario Bros. – Nintendo NES
3. Galaga – arcade
4. Jumpman – Apple IIe
5. Battle of Olympus – Nintendo NES
6. Ultima V – Apple IIe
7. Lode Runner – Apple IIe
8. Oregon Trail – in the computer lab in junior high
9. Centipede – arcade
10. Various pinball games – arcade

[Note: One arcade game that I have strong negative feelings about is Asteroids, because it was the one in the waiting room of my dentist’s office when I was a kid. I don’t care that it was free. If you want to ruin a game for somebody forever, just associate it with the sound of a dentist drill.]

Memorabilia from Ultima V, including notes between myself and my friend Richard as we collectively tried to beat the game.
Memorabilia from Ultima V, including notes between myself and my friend Richard as we collectively tried to beat the game.

Carie’s Top Ten Favorite Board Games:

1. Pictionary
(Again, this is a Cousin Kelley association. We used to be unbeatable at Pictionary. We had the mind meld. However, there were also some hilarious almost-pee-your-pants moments when one of us failed epically, like the time Kelley got “saber toothed tiger” and drew an impressive walrus.)
2. Trouble
3. Yahtzee
4. Life
5. Mystery Mansion
6. Memory (specifically the game where you had to match mother animals to their babies)
7. Sorry
8. The Magnificent Race
9. Outburst
10. Trivial Pursuit

What should have made the lists?
Share your own favorite childhood games in the comments!

My Nerdy Valentines

I’m not usually a big celebrator of Valentine’s Day, but this week I received a few special treats that brought a big smile to my face.

stargirlOn Wednesday, the elementary school where I work part time as library clerk showed their appreciation for me with breakfast from Torchy’s and a gift card from BookPeople. Books and tacos? Um, yes please! What a great way to make someone feel special! Then on Thursday, the love continued when Nerdy Book Club, one of my favorite blogs, shared my review of Jerry Spinelli’s Stargirl, one of my favorite books. It was an honor to guest post for them!

Ginker

On Friday, my long-time Valentine celebrated a big birthday. Gink, panther extraordinaire, turned sixteen years old. We commemorated the occasion with cuddles, tuna, and looking down our noses at the other members of the household. (Gink’s a bit conceited, but I love him.)

And today, I spent the morning at a workshop offered by the Writers’ League of Texas. “Finding the Write One: Wooing a Great Critique Partner and Being One Yourself” by Nikki Loftin, author of Nightingale’s Nest and the soon-to-debut Wish Girl, was the perfect way to start off my Valentine’s Day. Not only did I learn the good, the bad, and the ugly of critique partner relationships, but I also made some great connections with other local writers.

Now I get to spend the rest of the day with my awesome husband, who listens to my stories, encourages my writing, and shares my love of books, cats, and breakfast tacos. (Breakfast tacos most of all.) It’s been a lovely week indeed. 🙂

PricklyPear

Happy Valentine’s Day, everyone!

(If you have a comment about my Stargirl review, please post it on the Nerdy Book Club site.
Otherwise you can share your thoughts here.)