The present invention relates generally to a board game, and more particularly, to a board game of chance that includes a tower assembly with pivotal stairs that selectively collapse to cause players' pawns to fall from the tower.
Board or table games are well known. Some of the more famous brands are household names, including the games MONOPOLY, RISK, CLUE, SORRY, BATTLESHIP and STRATEGO, all owned by Hasbro. Each of these games has provided fun and excitement for many years, and in some cases, several generations. New games are constantly being developed with the desire and hope of duplicating the popularity of the abovementioned classical games.
Several board games have been patented in the past. For example, a 1997 U.S. Pat. No. 5,683,087, issued to Henshaw et al., for “Apparatus And Method For Playing A Game” purports to disclose a game with a playing board having marked spaces along with game pieces to be moved based on the throw of a die where the object is to assemble a miniature house piece by piece, including a ground slab, walls, a ceiling and a chimney. The first player to build an entire structure wins. A Patent issued in 1998, U.S. Pat. No. 5,722,658 to Talmage et al., for a “Safety Board Game” purports to disclose a board game for teaching industrial safety rules based on moving playing pieces after successfully answering question cards. The following year, U.S. Pat. No. 5,951,010 issued to Ordinas for a “Table Game” with a board shaped like a truncated pyramid in the style of a Babylonian or ziggurat temple. The board is provided with steps of diminishing size indicating more difficult questions. The first player reaching the top wins. Another U.S. Pat. No. 6,446,968, issued to Koch for a “Themed Board Game” purports to disclose a board game depicting a number of locations and two identical sets of cards in which players vie with each other to solve a multi-part mystery by deducing which cards, randomly selected at the start, have no match. Another U.S. Pat. No. 7,219,894, issued to Stewart et al., relates to a board game in which players move pawns on a board and attempt to collect indicia-bearing tokens or markers to attach to player wearable costume components.
In accordance with the present invention, an advantageous game assembly is provided that is competitive, fun and has excellent play value. The present invention also provides an advantageous method for playing the game. The game is fast paced, intellectually stimulating and enjoyable. A preferred embodiment described below includes an apparatus that is robust, easy to use and relatively inexpensive, with a unique structure in which the game objective is to be the first to descend a series of stairs that selectively collapse from time to time in a sequence unknown to the players, and reach a specific board location.
Briefly summarized, the invention includes a game assembly having a base, an upstanding structure mounted to the base, a plurality of outwardly extending structures mounted to the upstanding structure, each of the outwardly extending structures being movable relative to the upstanding structure, a mechanism operator mounted to the upstanding structure for causing selective outwardly extending structures to move, a movable structure connecting the mechanism operator and the outwardly extending structures, a plurality of player pawns for selective movement along the outwardly extending structures, and chance structure for indicating how the player pawns are to be moved.
The invention also relates to a method for playing the board game including the steps of assigning a player pawn to each player of the game, mounting all player pawns on the upstanding structure with outwardly extending structures, the outwardly extending structures being movably connected to the upstanding structure, operating the chance structure sequentially by each player to determine the extent of movement of that player's pawn, and selectively operating a mechanism to selectively move the outwardly extending structures to cause unattached player pawns on the selected outwardly extending structures to fall from the outwardly extending structures.
The invention further relates to a game apparatus including a base, a tower mounted to the base, a vertically moveable tube mounted to the tower, a plurality of stairs movably connected to and extending away from the tower, and an operator structure mounted to the tower and in contact with the tube for moving the tube to cause selected stairs to pivot.
For the purpose of facilitating an understanding of the invention, the accompanying drawings and description illustrate a preferred embodiment thereof, from which the invention, its structures, its construction and operation, its processes, and many related advantages may be readily understood and appreciated.
The following description is provided to enable those skilled in the art to make and use the described embodiment set forth in the best mode contemplated for carrying out the invention. Various modifications, equivalents, variations, and alternatives, however, will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. Any and all such modifications, variations, equivalents, and alternatives are intended to fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention as set forth in the appended claims.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention is a board game based on a movie released in 2008, “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skulls.” The competitive, action-packed game features a plastic tower with collapsing stairs. Players must connect to the tower or to the stairs and avoid falling as players race down the tower to a winning location. The various elements of the board game assembly 10 are shown in
The game assembly 10 also includes a plurality of player pawns, and chance structure. The pawns are in the form of four small plastic figures 60, 62, 64, 66. Each pawn looks like the Indiana Jones character from the abovementioned movie, and is used by a player to move along the tower and the base. The board game is played using a three-part turn. First, a player throws one of the die, and second, the player moves his/her pawn in accordance with the number showing on the topside of the die. The chance structure comes in two forms, first, a pair of dice 68, 70, to indicate movements to be made by the pawns, and second, a deck of cards 72 for indicating what other movements of the pawns or other actions are to be taken. The depressible tower top 48 operates against a spring that biases a vertically movable structure in the form of a tube mounted inside of the tower and a plurality of horizontally slideable pegs mounted to the tower. When the tower top is depressed by a player 73, as illustrated in
The base 12 includes a supported paper insert 74 printed with three game steps 80, 82, 84 similar in form to the stairs, a card deposit location 86, called the “Fallen Skull pile,” for collecting specific kinds of cards, and a winner location 88 referred to as the “Throne Room Entrance.” Each of the stairs and steps 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 80, 82, 84 is divided into three spaces, such as the stair 20,
The pawns are moved down the stairs and along the steps from one space to a corresponding space and/or along spaces on the same stair or step. Four of the stairs 22, 28, 34, 38, each includes a protrusion in the outer space, such as a hook 104 on the stair 28, for engaging the Indiana Jones pawns. The tower openings 96, 98, 100, 102 are spaced relative to the stairs 26, 30, 32, 36 for allowing the pawns to engage the tower when on the inner spaces of those stairs. In both circumstances, pawns located on the outer spaces of the stairs 22, 28, 34, 38, and pawns located on the inner spaces of the stairs 26, 30, 32, 36 will be connected, respectively, to the stairs or to the tower, and when any of the stairs collapse, the connected pawns will not slide off as will other unconnected pawns.
The tower top 48 may be selectively rotated and depressed based on instructions received from the cards in the deck of cards 72. Depending upon the number of rotations, when the tower top is depressed, different combinations of stairs will pivot from a horizontal position, as shown in
Alternatively, instead of a tower, the upstanding structure may be a generally planar wall with pivotal stairs in a descending pattern and may be made by material other than plastic. Stairs may have less or more than three spaces, and the protrusions may be in other configurations than hooks. Different designs may be used for attachment of the pawns to the tower other than the openings in the tower. For example, Velcro brand fasteners or pressure sensitive glue or tape may be used to secure pawns. Also, the pawns may move from bottom to top of an upstanding structure such that a fallen pawn is conveniently located to start over at the bottom. Another alternative is for the stairs to retract into the wall to knock off any pawns.
Each of the pawns, such the pawn 60,
The Indiana Jones pawns are formed of plastic, but in the alternative, the pawns may be paper cutouts or have non-descript shapes. The pawns may also be configured differently. Furthermore, other themes may be used instead of the Indiana Jones character and pawns may be devised accordingly.
In the preferred embodiment of the game assembly one of the dice, such as the die 68,
The deck of cards 72 includes, in the preferred embodiment, four different types of cards, several “Doom” cards, several “character” cards, several “Run” cards and several “Crystal Skull” cards. Every player starts play using the first die 68 to learn how far his/her pawn is to move. Once a player acquires a Crystal Skull card 160,
There are four Crystal Skull cards in the deck, and eight character cards. The character cards include two “Spalko” cards 162,
The board game in the preferred embodiment is played by having up to four players place their Indiana Jones pawns of different colors on the start platform 16 near the top of the tower 14. The first stair 18 of the fourteen descending stairs is adjacent to the platform and the remaining stairs are configured in a spiral fashion down to the three equal-level steps 80, 82, 84 printed on the base insert 74. Each player then has a three-part turn. The first part of each turn requires the roll of a chance structure, such as one of the dice 68, 70, the second part of the turn has the player moving his/her Indiana Jones pawn according to the die roll, and the third part of the turn requires the player to pick a card from the deck of cards 72 and follow the instruction on the card. During the first turn for each player, the die shown in
Moving the pawn is generally downwardly along the stairs from one of the three spaces on each stair. Moving down from stair to stair the number of spaces rolled on the die is done directly, outer space to outer space, or middle space to middle space, or inner space to inner space, unless another player's pawn is on the same space, outer, middle or inner, on the next lower stair. In such a situation the moving player must move his/her pawn laterally along the three spaces of the upper stair until the corresponding space on the next lower stair is clear of another player's pawn. For example, if the pawn of the player who is to move five spaces is on the outer space of upper stair 20, a second player's pawn is on the outer space of the next lower stair 22, and the pawn of a third player is on the following lower stair 24 in the middle space, the moving player must use a first move to go to the middle space of the upper stair 20 to avoid the second player's pawn, before moving the pawn down to the middle space of the lower stair 22, a second move. Next, the player must make a third move to the inner space of the stair 22 to avoid the pawn of the third player on the stair 24. The moving player is then able to jump the pawn down, move four, to the inner space of the stair 24. For the final move of the turn the player jumps the pawn downwardly to the inner space of the next lower stair 26.
The example illustrates that with a move of five spaces, the player's pawn is able to descend from the upper stair 20 to the lower stair 26 while evading pawns of other players. In addition, the stair 26 is a “safe” stair because the player connects the integral whip of the pawn to the tower so that if a follow-on player is instructed to depress the tower top, collapsing the stair 26, there is no effect on the first player's pawn.
As mentioned above, some of the cards of the deck of cards instruct a player to rotate the tower top a certain number of notches, and some other cards instruct a player to do both, turn the tower top a certain number of notches and then depress it. Depressing the tower top causes selected stairs to pivot and results in unattached pawns on those stairs falling off. A fallen pawn requires the corresponding player to start again on the platform 16 at the upper portion of the tower, unless the player has a Mutt card 170 that allows the player to return his/her pawn to the stair on which the pawn was situated before falling.
In certain stair locations, such as a stair having a hook on its outer space, or where the tower has an opening that can be reached by a pawn's whip when the pawn is on an inner space of a stair, pivoting of the stairs will not result in a pawn sliding off and falling. These stairs, therefore, have desirable spaces for those who can reach them before occupation by another player.
When a pawn has fallen, any Crystal Skull card 160 held by that player must be placed on the Fallen Skull pile location 86 on the base insert 74. Once a player reaches the bottom stair 44, he/she must move four more spaces (unless other player's pawns are present so as to require more than four moves) to reach the Throne Room Entrance location 88 and win, provided he/she possesses a Skull card.
It may now be appreciated that the board game 10 is competitive, intellectually stimulating, fast paced and fun.
The structure of the tower is illustrated in
A top portion 216 of the tower is disk-shaped with a central hole 218 and a series of eight peripheral holes 220, 222, 224, 226, 228, 230, 232, 234. Beneath the top portion of the tower is a curved flange 240 to mount a top sleeve 242,
Mounted to the top and bottom sleeves 242, 274 within the tower 14 is part of a movable structure in the form of an internal tube 282,
Located within the tube 282, but formed as part of the bottom sleeve 274 is a spindle 370,
Each stair includes a pair of small shafts extending in opposite horizontal directions at an inner end portion of the stair, such as the left shaft 420,
Referring now to
In operation during play, when a card instructs a player to turn the tower top, the player grips the upstanding shaft 50 and rotates the shaft once, twice or three times, as instructed. This rotation aligns the circumferential openings of the tube relative to the pegs in a fashion hidden from the players. When rotating the tower top, there is a tactile feel in the upstanding shaft 50 of the detent mechanism disengaging and then engaging, that is, during rotation the bumps of the lower disk 380 are removed from the holes of the upper disk 390 and then are reengaged with the holes after rotating forty-five degrees or one notch. The detent ensures alignment of the columns of tube openings with the pegs. When a card then instructs the player to push down on the tower top, the newly aligned tube will move axially downwardly against the spring, while being prevented from rotating, and align a column of circumferential openings in the outer surface with selective pegs. The result is that the selected pegs are pushed inwardly so as to enable the corresponding stairs to pivot downwardly and cause any pawns on those stairs to slide off and fall, unless the base of a pawn is connected to a hook, or the whip of the pawn is engaged to the tower through one of the tower whip openings. When the depressing force is released, the spring biases the tube upwardly thereby causing the outer surface of the tube to push against the pegs that slid inwardly. The tube causes the inwardly located pegs to move outwardly against the tabs integral with the collapsed stairs. The outward movement of the pegs causes the stairs to return to horizontal positions and the game goes on. Because the tower top must be rotated before being depressed, the next time a card instructs that the tower top is to be depressed, the tube will have been circumferentially moved to another column of openings so that the players will not know which stairs will collapse when the tower top is again depressed.
The tower, the tube, the base, the tower top, the stair, the pegs, the peg bushings, the dice and the disks may all be molded of a suitable plastic and either fastened or snapped together. The cards and base insert may be formed of a suitable paper. In the alternative, other suitable materials may be used. It may now be appreciated that the game apparatus is robust, relatively inexpensive and easily manipulated, even for children as young as age seven. Chance introduced by the dice, the cards and the rotation of the tube enhances the fun and excitement of play.
From the foregoing, it can be seen that there has been provided features and advantages for an improved board game assembly and game apparatus, as well as a method for playing the board game. While a particular embodiment of the present invention has been shown and described in detail, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the invention in its broader aspects. Therefore, the aim here is to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims. The matters set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings are offered by way of illustrations only and not as claim limitations. The actual scope of the invention is to be defined by the subsequent claims when viewed in their proper perspective based on the prior art.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3369811 | Glass et al. | Feb 1968 | A |
3610628 | Promin | Oct 1971 | A |
4348028 | Barlow | Sep 1982 | A |
5169153 | Levy et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
5683087 | Henshaw et al. | Nov 1997 | A |
5722658 | Talmage et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
5951010 | Ordinas | Sep 1999 | A |
6352258 | Fitzgerald et al. | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6446968 | Koch | Sep 2002 | B1 |
7219894 | Stewart et al. | May 2007 | B2 |
20060091604 | Sargent | May 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100032901 A1 | Feb 2010 | US |