I love boardgames. Dan wooed me with Scrabble. He won my father over by winning at Trivial Pursuit. Basically, I grew up in a boardgame family.
Finally after way too much Candyland, the kids are all ready for bigger and better forms of sedentary competition (no more gumdrop mountains for me). Our favorite family boardgames are best broken into two categories (1) those that T can play with us (kindergartner; can't read yet); and (2) those for which second grade is a requirement.
- All that's required is some (small?) degree of fine motor skills. * ThinkFun Zingo
- Bingo with words and pictures. This can be rather boring. Well until your whole family fights like crazy over the winning tile. And by "fights" I mean someone becomes physically injured.
- Dan hates attaching an unknown word to his forehead. He's also shockingly good at figuring out what that word is. I like games that make us all look silly and this one wins. But of all the games listed, we rarely play this one. (Also, Hedbanz seems a little redundant since we often play the Heads Up app at restaurants)
- Now we're actually getting somewhere. This is like Scrabble except with colors and symbols instead of words (so reading isn't a requirement). It involves some luck and some strategy and can actually be really fun.
- If you want a gamer kid this is a good place to start. Catan Jr. gameplay is similar to its adult counterpart, Settlers of Catan (now made famous by the Greenbay Packers and
Ben from Parks and Recreation), but the the rules and strategy are more basic. Junior is also relatively enjoyable for adults (well, until you play the adult version, then it is hard to go back).
- This is F's favorite game. It requires at least three people and we play it a lot. But if you've ever played Cards Against Humanity, Apples to Apples becomes crazy boring by comparison.
- Two person code-breaking game that I played obsessively as a child. I'm not sure why my children aren't more obsessed with this one, though they play it often enough. Their apathy confuses me.
- Cubu involves recognizing patterns. There's also a speed version we haven't played yet. Each round moves rather quickly. But after awhile it hurts your eyes.
- This is where things start getting good. Unlike previously mentioned games, Ticket to Ride necessitates a decent amount of strategy (it also takes about an hour to play). Plus kids learn geography. * The Settlers of Catan
- SO SO FUN!! Though games can be somewhat long and if F isn't winning, she complains continually of boredom (though when winning she starts asking if we can play all the time). Still so. much. awesomeness.
- Game play for this one is cooperative, so the family either wins or loses together. I found the set up a little tricky at first, but once we got the hang of it everyone really liked working together. We almost always beat the island, thus causing Dan to complain that the game isn't hard enough (but who cares? I like being a winner).
What about everyone else? Any board game suggestions?