1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates, generally, to board games. More particularly, it relates to a board game where the players attempt to form words from vowels and consonants that are randomly selected by moving game pieces on a board or otherwise acquired by drawing cards or by trading with other players of the game.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Board games are known where players are randomly awarded vowels or consonants, hereinafter also referred to as characters, and where the winner is the first to form a word.
Perhaps the most common drawback to board games involving word formation is that such games typically have complex rules and thus are difficult to understand and play.
A need therefore exists for a word formation board game where the rules are easy to understand and the game is easy to play.
Some well-known word formation board games take a long time to play.
Thus there is a need for a word formation board game that can be played in a relatively short time.
Moreover, sometimes a player can win such games even if that player uses a limited vocabulary but is lucky in hitting positions that double or triple the value of a character or of an entire word.
A need therefore exists for a board game that does not rely on a lucky physical location of a word on a game board to enhance the value of a word.
There are also times in such games where all of the players are unable to form any further words, and play must stop.
Thus there is a need for a game that can be divided into rounds so that when no player is able to win a game, points can be allotted for formation of relatively short words so that a winner can be declared after the playing of a few such rounds.
Another drawback of many known board games is that a running score must be recorded for each word formed. Then, at the end of play, the scores must be totaled to determine who won the game.
A need therefore exists for a game where a score need not be recorded after each player has formed a word. More particularly, there is a need for a game where only a single score is recorded at the end of a round where no player was able to win the game. Thus, if a player wins the game, there is no need to record any score. If a player forms a word that qualifies as a round-ending word, then points are totaled for that player only when the round ends.
Some of the known games are also difficult to adapt for young players of limited vocabulary and are equally difficult to adapt for advanced players who command large vocabularies.
A need therefore exists for a game that is easy to adapt to young players and equally easy to adapt to very advanced players with a large vocabulary.
Some of the earlier board games also require each player to maintain his or her collection of characters in secrecy from the other players.
Thus there is a need for a board game where the characters possessed by each player are visible to all other players of the game.
A further need exists for a game where opposing players can take a character from each other to thwart an opponent from forming a word.
There is also a need for a game where strategic trades of characters may be made among the players of the game.
However, in view of the prior art considered as a whole at the time the present invention was made, it was not obvious to those of ordinary skill in the pertinent art how such needs could be fulfilled in a board game that is easy to understand and play.
The long-standing but heretofore unfulfilled need for an improved word-formation board game is now met by a new, useful, and nonobvious invention.
The steps of the novel method for playing the board game include the steps of providing a first track, hereinafter referred to as the set-up walk, defining a first path of travel along which respective game pieces controlled by players of the board game advance. The set-up walk includes a plurality of squares where a first plurality of squares represents vowels and a second plurality of squares represents consonants. A player acquires a vowel when that player's game piece arrives at the end of a move on a square in the set-up walk representing a vowel. A player acquires a consonant when the player's game piece arrives at the end of a move on a square in the set-up walk representing a consonant.
More particularly, a player landing on a vowel square draws a vowel card from a stack of vowel cards and a player landing on a consonant square draws a consonant from a stack of consonant cards. Each player is provided with a relatively rigid support surface, hereafter referred to as a wordgram, that is divided into a plurality of spaces each of which is adapted to support a vowel card or a consonant card. As each vowel card or consonant card is acquired by a player, the player positions the card on his or her wordgram with the vowel or consonant face up so that other players can see said vowels and consonants.
The set-up walk also includes a plurality of squares that are neither vowel nor consonant squares. These squares are known as Ideation squares (from which the commercial name of the game is taken). A player whose game piece lands on such a square must pick an Ideation card from a stack of Ideation cards and follow the instructions thereon.
All players begin play from a designated Start square that forms a part of the set-up walk. Upon acquiring a predetermined number of characters, each player leaves the set-up walk.
A second track, hereinafter referred to as the final walk, defines a second path of travel along which the respective game pieces advance after leaving the set-up walk. The final walk is constructed of a plurality of squares where a first plurality of squares represents vowels and a second plurality of squares represents consonants. A player acquires a vowel (in the form of a vowel card, as when traveling through the set-up walk) when the player's game piece arrives at the end of a move on a square representing a vowel and the player acquires a consonant (in the form of a consonant card) when the player's game piece arrives at the end of a move on a square representing a consonant.
The final walk further includes a plurality of Choice of Vowel or Consonant squares. A player whose game piece lands upon such a square may draw a vowel card from the stack of vowel cards or a consonant card from the stack of consonant cards at his or her election.
As in the set-up walk, each vowel card or consonant card acquired on the final walk is placed on a player's wordgram face side up, i.e., with the vowel or consonant visible to the other players.
Moreover, the final walk also includes a plurality of Ideation squares and a player whose game piece lands thereupon must draw an Ideation card and follow its instructions.
The final walk also includes a plurality of squares, known as Personal Color Squares, each of which represents a separate starting point and is identified as associated with a particular game piece by color-coding. Upon jumping from the set-up walk upon the acquisition of a predetermined number of characters, each player begins play on the final walk at the Personal Color Square associated with that player's game piece.
The final walk is discontinuous from the set-up walk.
In a preferred embodiment, the game piece of a player exits the set-up walk and enters the final walk at a starting point on the final walk associated with that player's game piece when the player has accumulated five (5) vowels, consonants, or combinations thereof while advancing along the set-up walk.
The game ends when a player forms a word consisting of a first predetermined number of vowels and consonants.
In the event none of the players can form a word having a sufficient number of vowels and consonants to win the game, the game is divided into a predetermined number of rounds. A round ends when a player forms a word including a second predetermined number of consonants and vowels less than the first predetermined number thereof required to win the game. The player forming a word including the second predetermined number of vowels and consonants is awarded a first predetermined number of points.
When a player wins a round by announcing the formation of a word having the second number of predetermined consonants or vowels, the remaining players attempt to form words with the vowel and consonant cards on their wordgram at the time of the round-ending announcement. Characters remaining on the wordgram of a non-winning player that do not form part of a word of predetermined length are deemed to be “abandoned” characters and the winner of the round is awarded a point for each abandoned character on each of the opponent's wordgrams. However, characters on the round-winner's wordgram that are not used by the round-winner are deducted from the round-winner's total.
In the preferred embodiment of this invention, an “abandoned” vowel or consonant is a vowel or consonant on a player's wordgram that does not form a part of a five (5), six (6), or seven (7) letter word, (for non-round-winners) or an eight (8) or nine (9) letter word (for the round-winner).
However, as mentioned earlier, the number of characters required to form a word may be lowered for children's versions of the game or increased for advanced players. Accordingly, the number of characters required to form round-ending words, as distinguished from game-ending words, may be varied at will. Similarly, the number of characters required to be in a word formed by the non-winning players at the end of a round to avoid abandonment of the characters in said word may also be increased or decreased depending upon whether the game is being played by children or advanced players.
If no player can form a word having said second predetermined number of vowels and consonants, a round ends when a player forms a word including a third predetermined number of consonants and vowels less than the second predetermined number thereof. A player forming the third predetermined number of vowels and consonants is awarded a second predetermined number of points less than the first predetermined number of points.
The player who forms a word including the second predetermined of vowels and consonants is further awarded a point for each “abandoned” vowel or consonant remaining in the possession of each opponent at the time the word including the second predetermined number of vowels and consonants was formed.
The player who forms a word including the third predetermined of vowels and consonants is further awarded a point for each abandoned vowel or consonant remaining in the possession of each opponent at the time the word including the third predetermined number of vowels and consonants was formed.
The number of rounds in each game is preferably limited to the number of players of the game.
The total number of vowel and consonant cards that each player may position atop his or her wordgram is limited to a predetermined number. A player having a total number of vowel and consonant cards on a wordgram that exceeds the predetermined number is penalized. The penalized player is required to discard a predetermined number of cards from the wordgram used by the penalized player. The penalized player is further penalized by requiring said penalized player to lose one turn.
A dictionary is pre-approved prior to the playing of the game and is consulted in the event the authenticity of a word is challenged during a game. Each player may challenge the authenticity of a word submitted by any other player as a game or round-winning word by demonstrating that the word is either not found in the pre-approved dictionary or, if found, that the word is misspelled.
A player who submits a game or round-winning word that is successfully challenged as lacking authenticity is required to remove a predetermined number of cards from that player's wordgram. The player also loses one turn.
A player whose game piece lands on a square on the final walk that is associated with the game piece of another player is also penalized by requiring that player to lose a vowel or a consonant in the possession of the penalized player to the player with whom the square is associated. Moreover, the player with whom the square is associated may choose which of the vowels or consonants in the possession of the penalized player is to be acquired.
Further rules regulate how characters are traded, how a turn may be lost by means other than those summarized herein, and the like.
An important object of this invention is to provide a board game for forming words where the rules are easy to understand and the game is easy to play.
Another important object is to provide a board game that can be played in a relatively short time.
Another object is to provide a board game that does not rely on a lucky physical location of a word on a game board to enhance the value of a word.
Another object is to provide a board game that can be divided into rounds so that when no player is able to win the game, points can be allotted for formation of relatively short words so that a winner can be declared after the playing of a few such rounds.
Still another object is to provide a board game where only one score is recorded at the end of a round where no player was able to win the game. If a player wins the game, there is no need to record any score.
Another object is to provide a board game that is easy to adapt to young players and equally easy to adapt to very advanced players having a large vocabulary.
Another object is to provide a board game where the characters possessed by each player are visible to all other players of the game.
These and other important objects, advantages, and features of the invention will become clear as this description proceeds.
The invention accordingly comprises the features of construction, combination of elements, and arrangement of parts that will be exemplified in the description set forth hereinafter and the scope of the invention will be indicated in the claims.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
Board game 10 includes in inner track 12, also known as a “set-up walk,” an outer track 14, also known as a “final walk,” and a center area 16.
As best depicted in
Play begins with all game pieces positioned at said “Start” square on the set-up walk.
Final walk 14 includes four (4) color-coded “Start” squares, all of which are used in a four (4) player game, any three (3) of which are used in a three (3) player game, and any two (2) of which are used in a two (2) player game.
Although any colors may be used, in this particular embodiment “Start” square 26 (
The notation “PCS” on each of said yellow markers is an acronym for Personal Color Square. Thus, a player who has selected a red playing piece, upon advancing from set-up walk 12 to final walk 14, begins at “Start” square 26 because said red square is that player's Personal Color Square.
Final walk 14, like set-up walk 12, also includes, a plurality of “Ideation” squares, collectively denoted 34, a plurality of “V” squares, collectively denoted 36, and a plurality of “C” squares, collectively denoted 38. Unlike set-up walk 12, final walk 14 further includes at least one “Choice of Vowel or Consonant” square. In this example, two of such squares are provided and are collectively denoted 37 (
As best depicted in
Center area 16 also includes legend 42 (
Legend 42 further includes “C pick” legend 42b which advises players that landing on a “C” square requires them to draw a consonant card from the stack of consonant cards. A stack of such consonant cards is denoted 45 in
In a preferred, illustrative embodiment of the novel game, two hundred (200) consonant cards 45 are provided. The consonant “Y” is treated as a consonant or a vowel in this game because it may play either role. For example, it is a vowel in English words such as type, pyramid, polygon, etc., and it is a consonant in English words such as yesterday, yield, kayak, etc.
All vowel or consonant cards could be printed on both sides but the same vowel or consonant cannot be printed on both sides. In this way, the drawer of a card cannot know what vowel or consonant is being selected. Such double-sided printing would reduce by half the number of cards needed to play the game.
The game is played with two (2) die, neither of which is conventional. As indicated in
If a player rolls 2 blanks in one roll he loses his turn
The box, not shown, within which the board is packaged is also adapted to hold the cards, die, game pieces, and other unillustrated miscellaneous equipment such as a score pad and pencil, for example.
When a game piece 44 lands on a square at the end of a move, the player associated with that game piece picks a card from the deck of cards designated by that square. The card is placed, face up, on a card support surface, known in this game as a wordgram that is denoted in
Specifically, landing on a “V” square requires the player to take the top card from the stack of vowel cards 43. The cards in the stack are face down so only the back of the top card is visible as depicted in
Landing on a “C” square requires the player to take the top card from the stack of consonant cards 45. The player drawing a consonant card places it, face up, on his or her wordgram 50.
Landing on a Choice of Vowel or Consonant square (also known as the Choice of Deck square 37, as depicted in
Landing on an “Ideation” square requires the player to take the top card from the stack of Ideation cards 41a and to follow the instructions thereon.
In a preferred embodiment, the object of the game is to be the first player to form a ten (10) character word on wordgram 50 from the vowels and consonant cards acquired during moves along the set-up walk and the final walk.
The game commences in a conventional fashion. Each player rolls the dice and the player rolling the highest number begins the game, with play moving clockwise around the table.
Each player begins play in the set-up walk on the “Start” square. Each player jumps from the set-up walk to the final walk at his or her designated color-coded Personal Color Square on said final walk upon acquiring five (5) characters. In a first version of the game, if a player ever has less than five (5) characters on his or her wordgram, that player must return to the “Start” square of the set-up walk and progress along the set-up walk until five (5) characters are again acquired at which time a jump is made to that player's Personal Color Square on the final walk. In a second, preferred version, a player who falls below the five (5) character threshold suffers no penalty, i.e., is not required to return to the set-up walk.
As depicted in
A “round” is defined as a game segment where play comes to an end with no player having formed a ten (10) character word to win the game. Points are awarded to the winner of each round, but if any player forms a ten (10) character word, the game ends and there is no need to assign points.
A round may end when a player forms an eight or nine character word, thereby preventing an opponent from forming a ten (10) character word. Upon forming an eight or nine character word, the player announces “Round over” and that player is awarded points for that round. Specifically, five (5) points are awarded for formation of an eight (8) character word and ten (10) points are awarded for formation of a nine (9) character word.
The winner of a round is also awarded one (1) point for each abandoned card remaining on each opponent's wordgram 50 at the end of the round. When a player announces “Round over,” the remaining players attempt to form words that have at least five (5) characters on their respective wordgrams. If one player has nine (9) cards on his or her wordgram when “Round over” is announced, and if that player can form a seven (7) character word from those nine (9) characters, then the winner of the round is awarded an additional two (2) points for the cards not used in formation of said seven (7) character word. The winner of the round acquires points from all of the non-winning players in this way.
However, any abandoned vowel or consonant cards remaining on the wordgram of the round winner costs the round winner one point per abandoned card.
Where only two (2) players are playing the game, only two (2) rounds are played before the point totals of the two rounds are totaled to determine a winner of the game. Three (3) rounds are played if there are three (3) players in the game, and four (4) rounds are played if there are four (4) players.
Points are totaled at the completion of a predetermined number of rounds only if no player wins the game outright by completing a ten (10) character word. This prevents the game from becoming too lengthy in the event the players are unable to form a ten (10) character word within a reasonable time. Non-winning players are never awarded points. Instead, as mentioned above, if they can form a five (5), six (6), or seven (7) character word when “Round over” is announced, the cards remaining on their respective wordgrams that do not form a part of such word are deemed abandoned and one point for each abandoned card on each non-winning player's wordgram is added to the point total of the round winner. Again, abandoned cards in the possession of the round winner are deducted from the round winner's total, one point per abandoned card.
If a player declares “Round over” upon formation of an eight (8) or nine (9) character word and if that word is challenged by an opposing player and that word cannot be found in the pre-approved dictionary that the players have accepted as the authoritative dictionary for that game, then the round continues but the player who pre-maturely announced the end of the round must remove all but five (5) cards from his or her wordgram. For example, if a player announces “Round over” upon completion of the eight (8) character word “calandar,” and if an opposing player recognizes the misspelling of said word, challenges it, and proves by using the pre-authorized dictionary that the correct spelling of the word is “calendar,” then the player who announced that the round was over must discard all but five (5) of the cards on his or her wordgram. In this example, three (3) cards would have to be discarded. However, the discarding player may choose which cards to discard. Play then resumes as before with the player in the clockwise position to the punished player then taking a turn.
As in Scrabble® and other popular word games, proper names, place names, or hyphenated words are not permitted.
If a player lands on an Ideation square, he or she must draw an Ideation card and follow the instructions thereon. Some ideation cards are helpful, but some are not. For example, if a player draws an Ideation card with the instruction “Go Back” printed thereon, that player must roll both dice and retreat the number of squares represented by the total of the die. Eight (8) is the largest number of squares that a player could possibly have to retreat because four (4) is the highest number on each die. If the game piece lands on a “V,” “C,” or “Choice of Vowel or Consonant” square at the end of a “Go Back” move, a vowel, a consonant, or either a vowel or consonant card, respectively, of the player's choice must be removed from that player's wordgram and returned to the bottom of the appropriate stack of cards. If a vowel card is drawn and the player has no vowel card, a consonant card is discarded. If a consonant card is drawn and the player has no consonant card, a vowel card is discarded. If a player has no cards to discard, there is no penalty. Nor is there a penalty for landing on any other square at the end of a “Go Back” move.
For example, if the game piece lands on another “Ideation” card square at the end of a “Go Back” move, no “Ideation” card is drawn. In other words, a player can draw only one (1) “Ideation” card per turn.
As a further example, if a player landing on an “Ideation” square draws an “Ideation” card having the word “Trade” imprinted thereon, that player must take one (1) card of his or her choice from his or her wordgram and exchange it with the player sitting to his or her left (the clockwise position). The other player may exchange any card from his or her wordgram, but the players involved in the trade may not simply exchange cards bearing the same character between them. Upon completion of the first trade, the player who drew the “Trade” card must then consummate another trade with the next player, and so on until a trade has been consummated with each opposing player if so required by the drawn card. Some cards may instruct a player to perform only one (1) trade.
A player dissatisfied with his or her cards may trade in one (1), two (2), or three (3) cards when it is his or her turn to play. This trade is not made with another player but is made with the stacks of vowel or consonant cards, or both. For example, a player who wants to get rid of a Q and an E may place the Q at the bottom of the consonant card stack and draw a consonant card from the top of the consonant stack, and repeat that procedure with the E card and the vowel card stack. The player loses his or her turn as the price of the trade.
If a player is required by an Ideation card instruction to give up a vowel but has none, that player must give up a consonant instead, with no penalty. If a player is required to lose a consonant but has none, that player must give up a vowel, with no penalty.
When a game piece lands on a Personal Color Square of an opposing player, that opposing player shall take one card of his or her choice from the wordgram of the player whose game piece landed on said Personal Color Square.
Some of the words employed in this specification that qualify as ten character words include: background, consonants, characters, understand, relatively, vocabulary, collection, nonobvious, embodiment, hyphenated, and particular, to name a few.
It will thus be seen that the objects set forth above, and those made apparent from the foregoing description, are efficiently attained. Since certain changes may be made in the above construction without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matters contained in the foregoing description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein described, and all statements of the scope of the invention that, as a matter of language, might be said to fall therebetween.
Now that the invention has been described,
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