I have two children aged 8 and 6 and they like to play board games. Some of the ones they have are for very young children and boring for an adult to play. Are there any suggestions for games that they will understand and I can enjoy?
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closed as not constructive by Pat Ludwig♦ Jan 8 '12 at 6:36
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Legendary Uno. Its card game. Description from BGG:
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Ticket to ride is good balance to play with children and parents. Only from 8 though. |
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Mastermind - It's only playable by two people at a time (and one of them will have to be you), but my mom got it for me when I was about 7 or 8 and I loved it. In fact, I still have it and even broke it out again the other night. It's challenging, educational, and it's a game that makes kids think, but can be just as rewarding for adults. |
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Give Scotland Yard a shot.
Scotland Yard a great game where one person is Mr. X, a fugitive from the law, and the other players team up as detectives. Mr. X takes various modes of public transportation to move stealthily around the city of London, and it's up to the detectives to figure out where he is and capture him. This is a great game of deduction and logical thinking, plus it's tons of fun. It's fun for Mr. X, since there's something exciting about trying to escape from London's finest, and it's fun for the detectives since they get to work as a team to capture the slippery scofflaw. This game won the prestigious Spiel des Jahres (Game of the Year) award in 1983, and I think it is a game that has aged quite well. |
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Blokus. My 6 and 10 year old equally love this game of fitting pieces on the board. As a parent I find its even more challenging to work with the stuff my 6 year old does and extend the game.
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I would recommend Creationary. Especially if the kids already enjoy LEGOs. The game works very similar to Pictionary, but instead of drawing an image for others to guess, you build it with LEGO pieces. The rules allow for a lot of flexibility and also promote the use of other LEGOs to be used to build your creations. It's very fun for adults, but I can imagine that children of 6 and 8 would also enjoy it. |
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Carcassonne is great with kids. Not too complicated, and they learn to divide their attention between long term and short term goals. |
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My 8 year old daughter has really enjoyed playing the Fluxx games. |
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Battleship is a ease to setup and play. |
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Tsuro is simple and easy to follow. It also plays fairly quickly and requires very minimal setup. The game can play anywhere from 2-8 people, useful if you need a game to play with a group of kids. While the suggested age is 8 and up, the users on BoardGameGeek have suggested it for 6 and up. |
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The Game of Life could be good. Your kids should be able to follow what's going on in the game. |
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This game is very fun from 8 to 80 years old. It's like a domino game. |
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Set should be a challenging game for all of you. You lay out a number of cards with figures on them. The cards differ in the number, shape, color and shading of the figures on it. All players play concurrently trying to locate three cards where each attribute is either the same on all cards or different on all cards. The player who locates (and takes) the most sets wins. |
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Some of my (7yo) son's and my favorites:
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My personal favourite is Zooloretto. As you would expect from Rio Grande Games, it has a great board, good pieces and good gameplay. It is also very easy to learn, and because it is based on a Zoo, it keeps the interest of the kids. I have known kids of 7 and 8 playing this game, and in a few years time being introduced to the more adult games such as Agricola and Puerto Rico etc. It is easy enough for them to understand, but has enough variety to make it strategic enough for adults to play and enjoy. According to boardgamegeek, its users recommend it for ages 6 and up, although the manufacturer says 8 and up. Most of the other games in the Family Rank are generally for kids of 8 and upwards. Unfortunately, by daughter is only two, so I am still playing Snail's Pace Race with her. |
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I liked to play Concentration with my parents when I was a kid. It's entertaining and doesn't have complicated rules -- you just need to use your memory! |
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Here are four games that I would recommend for families: For the 6 and under group:
For the older than 6 group, we play:
Edit: My son's 4th Birthday was last weekend and we got:
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I love Ubongo, even as an adult. Form tangram-like shapes, and collect shiny objects. What more do you want? |
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We used to play Shadows Over Camelot with my son and his friends when he was younger. The cooperative nature of the game meant that giving advice was OK and that the kids weren't pitted against adults. We established a few house rules for kid games that allowed easier victories - the one I remember off the top of my head was that the first quest completed just disappeared instead of remaining on the table, flipped over, causing catapults or Saxons to appear. I'll bet several of the current generation of cooperative games could be played this way with bright kids. |
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I have to admit I have not yet tried it but I have two children aged 6 at home and I just bought a copy of The Alley Cats on ebay hoping it will be the game we can play with them. |
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Senku/Peg Solitaire is a good game to players of every age. |
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My kids are now sixteen and eight. They have been raised, steeped in board games. The first "real" game that my son was able to play with adults was Atilla. And the first one my daughter got was Settlers. In both cases, they were in that same 6-8 age-range that you're talking about. Those might be good ones to try for you. |
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Assuming you have a fourth player I can recommend Dog as an awesome family game. Similar to Pachisi but you play in teams of 2 and instead of throwing dice you play cards. This adds teamplay and a lot of strategy to the game. One of our favorite games at home and among friends. |
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Just saw a commercial for a game called Hedbanz on TV, looked like it could be fun. It's more of a card/party game. The gameplay is kind of like 20 Questions. |
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Elkfest |
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Attempting to pick a "fun" game is fairly subjective, but I think a good answer is a game that has fairly simple mechanics along with a depth of strategy. Also, when trying to play against your kids, you can assume that you would always do better given the same amount of time to think and strategize. Also, I would interpret "fun" as "not having to dumb down your play too much to give your kid a chance to win."
2 games in this list fit that criteria. Scotland Yard: There is a Mr. X and everyone else. The adult can play Mr. X while the kids work together to catch him. It's possible to make sub-optimal moves fairly easily to give the kids a chance. Mastermind: One person attempts to discover a code, the other creates it. It makes sense for the adult to pick codes based on the child level of understanding to make it easier or harder. These games allow for a child not to have to compare their skill directly against yours. For instance "solving" a single mastermind code says nothing about who is better at solving. Running away in Scotland Yard is a different skill set that can't be compared directly with catching Mr. X. "Fixing Games": If the game is such that everyone has the same goals, you can attempt to "meta" game somewhat. For instance in Monopoly you could refuse to build improvements and attempt trades to even the others' chances. Or in Risk you could purposely hole up in a single location and become a large army to beat as last challenge for the other players. In this case, the "fun" is in attempting to keep a game balanced or just becoming a self enforced game mechanic the others have to overcome. You're moving the game into an area where you have different goals than the kids. Games of luck like Uno can be fun for them since you can't always beat them even if you try. (But then there is really nothing redeeming in making people play a game with out real decisions where you can't improve over time. Nobody learns anything. Unless you really just need to waste time.) |
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Wandering a bit away from "board game", you could try Zombie Dice from Steve Jackson Games. Fun for the grownups, teaches counting and decision making (do I roll again? Am I winning?), and just random enough that you won't have to cheat to let the kids win. (My four-year-old is either way better or way luckier at this game than I am, for instance). |
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Snakes and Ladders is a very interesting game if you want to play with children . |
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