The present invention relates generally to indoor games and, more particularly, to a game of chance that simulates the play of a round of golf.
The game of golf is enormously popular world wide. There is often a desire on the part of golfers and fans of golf to simulate the play of golf in an indoor setting. Computerized golf games are an example of this phenomenon.
The present invention is directed to an indoor golf game that is simple to use, portable, and low-tech.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, a golf game is provided. The game comprises, in combination: a rollable game piece having a plurality of flat sides therearound; and information relevant to the play of a round of golf located on the plurality of flat sides.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, a golf game is provided. The game comprises, in combination: a rollable game piece having a plurality of flat sides therearound; information relevant to the play of a round of golf located on the plurality of flat sides; a scorecard; wherein the game piece is hollow and wherein the scorecard may be stored therein; and a writing implement utilizable with the scorecard and storable within the hollow game piece; wherein the information is organized into a plurality of bands arranged side-by-side along the game piece, and wherein each the band contains a different type of information relevant to the play of golf; wherein one the band contains information relevant to the play of a par 3 golf hole; wherein one the band contains information relevant to the play of a par 4 golf hole; wherein one the band contains information relevant to the play of a par 5 golf hole; wherein one the band contains information relevant to weather conditions; wherein one the band contains information relevant to hazards; wherein one the band contains information relevant to club selection; and wherein one the band contains information relevant to risks and rewards.
In accordance with still another embodiment of the present invention, a method for playing a golf game is disclosed. The method comprises the steps of: providing a rollable game piece having a plurality of flat sides therearound; providing information relevant to the play of a round of golf on the plurality of flat sides; rolling the game piece; and recording a score for a golf hole based on the information displayed on one of the plurality of flat sides.
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Preferably, the marker 18 is of the dry erase type, and the scorecard 20 has a surface that permits the permits the erasable use of a dry erase marker thereon, so that the scorecard 20 can be re-used.
Preferably, a set of game instructions, such as those shown in
A golf game utilizing different embodiments of the game components described herein can take a variety of forms. An exemplary set of rules describing different game versions is provided in
In one version, referred to in the rules as the “Duffers Game,” players take turn rolling the game piece 10. In this version, players only pay attention to the second, fourth and sixth columns shown in
It can be seen that it may be desired to provide a simplified game piece 10 having only three columns, with scores for par 3, par 4 and par 5 holes. (Indeed, if the game piece 10 is to be used to simulate the play of an executive type golf course, two columns, with scores for par 3 and par 4 holes, may be sufficient.) It may desired to provide a set of game pieces 10 of varying column number and complexity suitable for the play of different variations of the golf game of the present invention.
In another version of the game, called Mulligan play in the exemplary instructions, the same columns used in the play of the Duffers game are also the only columns used. What distinguishes Mulligan play from the Duffers Game is that, in Mulligan play, the scorecard is completed in order. For example, since hole 1 on the scorecard 20 is a par 4, the player must accept the score for the par 4 that appears on game piece 10, and may not select the par 3 or par 5 scores even if these are better.
For both the Duffers play and Mulligan play versions, it can be seen that there are several results which can require a second roll of the game piece 10. These are an ace (hole-in-one) on a par 3, an eagle on a par 4, or an eagle on a par 5. If a second roll yields the same score, the player receives that score. If not, the player receives a score that is one stroke worse than the first-rolled score (i.e., a birdie instead of an ace or an eagle).
In another version of a golf game consistent with an embodiment of the present invention, referred to in the instructions as “Tournament Play,” play proceeds similarly to the Mulligan play version, in the sense that the holes are played in order and no use is made of weather, hazard, or risk reward information. However, players are given the opportunity, through an additional roll of the game piece, to better certain scores. For example, a player playing a par 3 and rolling a par or a bogie with the first roll can better his/her score by one by rolling a second time and coming up with “putter” or any “wild” in the club column. A player playing a par 4 and rolling a par or a bogie with the first roll can better his/her score by one by rolling a second time and coming up with “wedge” or any “wild” in the club column. A player playing a par 5 and rolling a par or a bogie with the first roll can better his/her score by one by rolling a second time and coming up with “driver” or any “wild” in the club column.
The final version of a golf game consistent with an embodiment of the present invention is referred to in the instructions as “Championship Play.” In this version, additional variables are added to the play, which proceeds in the normal hole order. Preferably, prior to the start of the round, the game piece 10 is rolled to determine weather—i.e., perfect, windy, gusty, wind and rain. Additionally, it may be desired to allow each player to roll the game piece 10, to determine if that player will be affected by the weather condition. For example, if the first roll is “rain” and the player also rolls “rain,” that player will not be affected by weather in his/her scoring. However, if the two weather conditions do not match, the player will be affected by the first rolled weather condition.
If the weather is “perfect,” players should be given the opportunity to improve their score for each hole played, when they score a par or a bogie, by making a second role—as described above.
As an added element of difficulty, “challenges” can be incorporated into the game. For example, as shown in
A player rolling in response to a challenge must take into account not only the score for the hole being played (par 3, par 4 or par 5), but also the score shown in the hazard column (the third column from the left). In this embodiment, a stroke is added if the player has rolled OB (out of bounds), UPL (unplayable lie), or water. If the player rolls rough or sandtrap, the player rolls again. If he/she rolls the a putter for a par 3, a wedge for par 4, or a driver for par 5, no extra stroke is added—if not, a single stroke is added to the player's score.