Traditional dart board games have existed for many years. The game usually is made up of a circular board, which is mounted upon a wall, and a plurality of darts, each of which has a sharp end which, when thrown, is supposed to stick in and cause the whole dart to stay stuck in the dart board until it is manually pulled out. The board is often made of a substance like sisal fibers, hemp fibers, bristle, cork or rolled paper, which darts can stick into over and over again, and be easily removed.
A traditional dart board has a small circle in the middle of its face, which circle is made of metal wire—this is the bullseye. A larger wire circle designates the outer limit of the area of the dartboard where a player can earn points. A plurality of wire spokes extend in a radial direction from the edge of the bullseye to the wire circle designating the limit of the scoring area, creating a plurality of minor sectors (excluding any area within the bullseye) of equal size. A dart board commonly has 20 or 12 of these sectors.
In the area between the outer circumference of the dart board and the circle designating the limit of the scoring area, numbers label each sector, to tell how many points a dart landing in that sector will score. The numbers are often also made of wire. A player stands a specified distance away from the dart board, and throws some number of darts at the board, one by one, trying to score points by causing the darts to stick in the bullseye area or in the sectors.
Most dart boards have a color scheme where the bullseye is a first color, and the sectors alternate in a second and a third color, so that it is easy to see the boundaries between the various zones of the dart board.
Recently, it has become possible to order a dart board with any image on its face, instead of a sector pattern. Usually the metal wires designating the sectors, bullseye and point values are still present, for scoring purposes.
The invention is a new type of dart game, which relies upon a realistic, lifelike image with markings on the face of the dart board for scoring, rather than sectors. It is designed to appeal to hunters, and often depicts a game animal.
The image on the face of the dart board includes a small circle in the ideal kill zone for that animal, which serves as the bullseye, and the most points for a hit, for example, 10. A larger concentric circle surrounds the bullseye, and a dart sticking in the area inside of the larger circle but outside of the bullseye scores a lesser amount of points, for example, 8. Any dart which lands outside of the larger circle but inside of the body of the pictured animal scores a lesser amount of points, for example, 5. No score is earned if the dart sticks outside of the body of the pictured animal.
The game can be played with different sets of rules, as to how many darts are thrown in each round, and how many rounds, and the object of the game.
The invention is a game which includes a dart board with a realistic, lifelike image on its face, and a plurality of darts. A player scores points by throwing and causing a dart to stick in one of the scoring regions of the image on the dart board.
The face of the dart board may be circular, or of any shape.
In one embodiment, shown in
In a second embodiment, shown in
In either embodiment, a plurality of game animals may be pictured in the single image, each animal with its own three regions for scoring purposes. Alternatively, the image may be of something other than a game animal, with the scoring regions located in appropriate locations for the given image.
Penalty regions may be present on the image, where a dart scores a negative number of points.
To play a 300 point game, a player has three darts which are thrown in ten rounds. The first region scores 10 points; the second region 8 points; the third region 5 points; and a hit in any other area of the dart board scores 0 points. For each round, the maximum score is 30 points, if all three darts stick in the first region. The minimum score for each round could be negative, depending upon whether penalty regions are present, and how many points are deducted for a hit in each penalty region. A player may play all ten rounds with the same image, or the player may change the image on the dart board each round, or may change the image less often during the game.
To play a 21 point game, players take turns throwing darts, trying to hit the first, second and third regions. A hit to each region scores one point, to a maximum of 7 points per region. The first player to hit each region at least 7 times scores 21 points and wins.
The dart board may be made of any traditional or novel substance, including but not limited to sisal fiber, bristle, hemp fiber, cork or paper, so long as the hits the darts make can be easily recorded. Usually this means that the sharp end of the dart sticks into the substance of the dart board. It could also be an electronic dart board with soft tip darts that stick into small holes in the board, which can be made of nylon, plastic, e-bristle or other substances.
Darts or similar projectiles may be thrown at the target by hand, or launched with an assisting device, such as a pistol, blowgun, or a mini-bow.
The image shown on the face of the dart board may be directly printed upon the dart board, or it may be printed upon a piece of paper or other substance which is fastened to the face of the dart board, or it may be projected so that it shows on the face of the dart board with any type of image projector, or other methods may be used. The image should be realistic and lifelike. If the image is projected, then it may move during the game.
If the dart board is electronic with scoring capability, then it may be programmed to record the scores, even if the image and scoring regions move. The dart board may also be implemented on a motion sensing type of game console, such as Wii, Kinect or Playstation Move. In this version, the darts would probably not stick to the image, or the darts may be virtual, but hits would be recorded by the hardware and software for scoring purposes.
In one embodiment, shown in
In another embodiment, paper targets may be held onto the face of the dart board with a frame 14. After each round, the used target 13 may be removed from the frame, revealing another target 12 with a new image underneath, or a new target may be placed into the frame.
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