Home > Scrapbooking Paper > Best Boardgames 2009

Best Boardgames 2009

November 22nd, 2009

“I don’t think board games are going away,” says Toy Industry Specialist, Chris Byrne. “In a screen-driven world, we really need human interaction — that is something that board games have that hasn’t been replicated.” Over the years, boardgames are famous for surviving economic downturns. Parcheesi and the Monopoly board game fared particularly well during wartimes, for instance. Despite the onslaught of video games and the constant stream of blockbuster movies coming out, Byrne says that many families find good, old-fashioned board games to be less expensive and even more fun.

According to Games Magazine, the “Best Game of the Year” is Tzaar, a game about making choices, using three different game pieces to form a trinity and force your opponent out of one type of piece. The “Best Abstract Strategy Game of the Year” is Ponte del Diavolo, which has you building stone bridges over Venice canals to score the most points. Key Harvest won the “Best Advanced Strategy Game of the Year” as you win points by placing tiles on your country board. The “Best Family Game” is Pandemic, which has you racing to cure four diseases before mankind is wiped out. The “Best Family Card Game” is called Palastgeflüster, which involves courtyard martials, kings and magicians tangled in a royal mystery. The “Best Party Game” is Go Nuts, which awards players points by rolling dice and adding up acorns. Additionally, Doris won the best of the puzzle board games and Jumbulaya won the best of the word board games.

The 2009 American International Toy Fair in New York City introduced some great new boardgames this year. Pants on Fire (3 or more players, ages 10+) is a fun story-telling game, where a player writes brief stories about each of the three topics revealed. For example, a “bad date” or a “first job,” and the other players have to guess if the story is “true or false.” Another fun boardgame, Pressure Point (3 to 8 players, ages 10+) has players racing against the clock to give answers down a list of questions as quickly as possible, while other players bet on the number of correct answers they think the player will give. Masters of Venice (2 to 5 players, ages 10+) uses games strategy where players must act as 15th century Italian merchants trading spices, silks, gems, iron and grain, while playing alternate characters like thieves, harbor masters and gondoliers. Time’s Up: Title Recall (4 to 8 players, ages 12+) is a fun party game that asks players to guess the famous person associated with famous books, movies, songs and albums. A new 10th anniversary edition of Time’s Up has also been released this year.

You will be happy to hear Mensa has released the five winners of their 2009 Mind Boardgames competition. Their press release stated: “Mensa Select games are chosen based on a variety of categories including aesthetics, instructions, originality, play appeal and play value.” Cornerstone is their favorite of the 3-D strategy building games, which challenges players to have a steady hand and clever mind. Dominion is a strategy game where players try to earn the most victory points by building the best deck including buying action, treasure and victory cards. Marrakech has everyone role-playing salesmen who are rolling dice, moving pawns and making decisions, while trying to outwit the competitors. Stratum has players layering pieces to cover their opponents. Tic-Tac-Ku is similar to Tic-Tac-Toe except that there are nine playing areas.

Matthew McMillan is a leading expert in the cure for genital warts. His works are regularly featured in online health publications on matters relating to natural cure for genital warts. For more information, visit treatmentforgenitalwarts.com.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Scrapbooking Paper

  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.