Board games bring back clean fun
by Jennifer Beckett
7 months ago | 1171 views | 2 2 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Don’t get bored, get board games.

That’s what some students are doing these days in the “loveliest village on The Plains.”

“People are looking for something to do at home with their families,” said Steve Ziegler, owner of HobbyTown USA in Opelika. “They just don’t get out and travel as much in these (hard economic) times.”

Instead of paying $9.25 to see a movie at the theater, students can shell out $15 or $20 for a game they can play whenever they want.

“(Board games) are an inexpensive way to socialize,” said Madison Martin,

sophomore in pre-medicine. “I feel like, by playing board games, you can get to know someone and see a side of their personality you don’t always see.”

Beside being easy on the wallet, board games offer an alternative way to interact and connect with people.

“Unlike playing video games or going out to bars, you get to interact with people in ways you don’t normally get to interact with them, and you get to see them be goofy,” said Jordan Luke, sophomore in English and Spanish. “I feel like it’s a great way to get to know people.”

Luke said she participates in a weekly game night that began as a small group of friends, but has morphed into a group of around 15 people.

“There’s no drinking or food or anything like that,” Luke said. “It’s just 9 o’clock on a Sunday night after everybody’s done with everything. It’s a good way to relax and end the weekend having fun.”

Caleb Rodgers, freshman in pre-building science, said he plays Taboo with his girlfriend and her family on a regular basis.

“Also, my family has always had people over to play dominoes about once a week during the summer,” Rodgers said.

These kinds of games can serve as a link to the past, a reminder of simpler times when the biggest worry was a scraped knee or lost Barbie shoe.

“I think college students play board games for nostalgia,” Luke said. “Everyone played board games when they were little, and it’s fun to go back.” Classics like Monopoly, Hi Ho! Cherry-O, LIFE and Sorry! were among students’ childhood favorites.

“I used to play Parcheesi with my grandfather,” Luke said, “and that was a fun one because not a lot of kids my age played it.”

Even the simplest games help teach life lessons, like how to lose gracefully.

“I wasn’t a sore loser,”

Luke said. “I didn’t get too upset, especially because in some of the games, like Monopoly, you can never get to the winner, anyway.”

It looks as though board games are here to stay, Rodgers said.

“I still enjoy playing Life, Monopoly, Clue, Catch Phrase and The game of things... ,” Martin said.

The game of things... by Hasbro provides a category like “Things you should do on a first date,” and each player writes down his or her ideas and passes them to the designated reader.

“The reader reads them all out loud, and then you go around the circle guessing who said what,” Martin said. “Some of it gets highly inappropriate, but it’s all in good fun.”
comments (2)
« ToDesco wrote on Friday, Jan 29 at 01:40 PM »
Desco,

Why do you have enough time and mental energy to leave that comment? I enjoyed the article, thought it was well-written, and personally like the classic board games. My friends and I play Clue, Scrabble, Monopoly, Life, and The game of Things... on a regular basis. Regular enough, I suppose, to enjoy this article. But obviously you are board gamer extraordinaire, the elite of the elite, the cream of the "get a life" crop. Please excuse us common folk for not being up to speed on games like "Carcassone" and "Battlestar Galactica: Board Game Edition." We can't all be superstars like yourself.

« Desco wrote on Thursday, Jan 28 at 10:17 AM »
Yet another article about the "comeback" of board games, but can only talk about those horrible "classics" like Monopoly, Clue, and Life-- completely failing to mention any of the board games that has been created in the last two decades that have actually spurned the board game revolution. Party games like Cranium and Catch Phrase are okay for a party, but games like Settlers of Catan, Ticket to Ride, and Puerto Rico are great strategy games that play quick but require good decision making to win.

For those that want more theme with pop-culture tie-ins, try Last Night on Earth: the Zombie Game, the Battlestar Galactica board game, War of the Ring (based on Lord of the Rings), or Arkham Horror (based on the H.P. Lovecraft Cthulhu mythos), instead of the latest and worst of the Monopoly retreads like the Star Wars edition, Oakland Raiders edition, Dog Lovers edition, etc... (I'm not making this s**t up!)

Just you and your spouse/boyfriend/girlfriend? Try Domonion, Lost Cities, and Carcassone, which all provide fun and interesting game play, and are actually also good for more players (except Lost Cities, which is 2 player only)

How 'bout co-operative board games where you play WITH the other players to beat the game, instead of competing against them? Pandemic, HeroQuest, and the previously-mentioned Arkham Horror teams up the players against the game, while Shadows over Camelot and Battlestar Galactica make one or two players secretly traitors, which gets really interesting when everyone's paranoid about who is the traitor!

Get a clue:

http://boardgamenews.com/

http://boardgamegeek.com/