1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to memory-based card matching games, and more particularly to such a game where players may employ the aid of mnemonic coding.
2. Description of the Prior Art
It has been known in the past to play a memory-based card matching game commonly known as concentration. In concentration, a series of cards are provided with indicia located on one side thereof. Two cards (or at least an even number of cards) have matching indicia. The cards are placed in a playing area face down. Players take turns selecting two cards and turning them face up. If the indicia on the cards match, the player keeps the matching pair. If the indicia you do not match, the cards are turned face down again, and the next player selects two cards attempting to find matching indicia. The object of the game is to collect as many pairs of matching cards as possible. This is accomplished by using one's memory to track the location of previously exposed cards.
Concentration is a very simple game. However, it is the game's simplicity that causes players to lose interest in it over a relatively short period of time. New twists need to be added to make the game play a more exciting, competitive, and mentally challenging, and retain players' interest for a longer period of time. The other problem of concentration, is that little or no strategy is involved.
Thus, it is an object of the present invention to provide a memory-based card matching game with novel game playing differences.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide such a game with strategic elements.
It is with the above objects in mind that the present game was developed. The game uses a deck of cards or other tiles with indicia located on a front side. The deck actually comprises groups of tiles, and in the case of the preferred embodiment, they are pairs. Each pair (or group) has matching indicia. The backs of the tiles are used as a coding region for players to place mnemonic coding to aid them in remembering the location and/or details of previously exposed tiles.
In its simplest form, the present invention plays like concentration, except that after selecting two tiles without matching indicia, the player is permitted to place a coded mnemonic on the back of one of the tiles to aid him in remembering what was on the face of that tile, preferably using a code of his or her own design, that other players will not be able to decipher. In the preferred embodiment, only one of the selected tiles in a given turn is exposed to everyone and the other is only exposed to the player selecting it. The player then gets to place a mnemonic, which hopefully only he or she will understand, on the back of privately viewed tile.
Alternative embodiments of the present invention include new variations that add a modicum of strategy to the game. One addition involves the association of a characteristic to each indicium, and permitting the removal of a matched pair of tiles only on a turn when the associated characteristic is deemed “active.” Subvariations on that include using wildcard indicia that are associated with any characteristic, and the use of a token given to each player at the start of the game to activate the next set of characteristics. Another addition rewards players for finding three consecutive pairs of matching indicia by permitting that player to take a matched pair from another player. Other tiles may be added that affect a player's or an opponent's coding.
Another alternative embodiment involves collecting tiles with a consecutive sequence of ordered indicia (e.g. a 2-3-4 tile run). This game would be more similar to traditional rummy with the addition of the coding element of the preferred embodiment.
Like traditional concentration, the game ends when all of the tiles have been matched. The player with the most pairs of tiles is declared the winner.
So that the manner in which the above-identified features, advantages, and objects of the present invention are attained and can be understood in detail, a more particular description of the invention, briefly summarized above, may be had by reference to the embodiment thereof which is illustrated in the appended drawings.
It is noted however, that the appended drawings illustrate only a typical embodiment of this invention and is therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments. Reference the appended drawings, wherein:
The invention is a tile or card matching game, wherein the object is for the players to find, from memory, pairs of cards with matching indicia. Referring now to
In the example shown in
Referring now to
In the example shown in
In its most general form, the preferred embodiment is played as follows. A plurality of tiles 10 are arranged in a playing area, face down.
In some variations, it is possible to give another player an opportunity to code one or both tiles 10. In fact, in the preferred embodiment, the player to the right of the player whose turn it is, is permitted to code the first (exposed) tile 10, while the player whose turn it is, is coding the second (unexposed) tile 10.
Play then passes to the next player, who attempts to locate a matching pair in the same manner, by using his or her memory, his or her own codes, and/or any codes of opponents that he or she has deciphered (or thinks that he or she has deciphered). After all of the tiles have been matched, the player with the most sets of tiles 10 is declared the winner.
Players are not bound to keep a consistent coding schema. Each player is entitled to change his or her coding schema as often as he or she wishes during a game, and may even place intentionally inconsistent codes to deceive his or her opponents.
Other variations of the preferred embodiment are possible to make game playing more interesting and to add additional strategic elements. In one such variation, characteristic icons 14 are included with each indicium. An indicator 18, as shown in
As shown in
In an alternative embodiment, the indicator 18 can change every turn. In another alternative embodiment, each player is given a token 28 (or more than one) at the beginning of the game which can be redeemed to change the indicator 18 out of sequence. In yet another embodiment, one or more passes 24 are distributed randomly among the regular tiles 10. The pass 24 appears identical to the other tiles 10 on the back side, so that players will not be able to distinguish the pass 24 from the other tiles 10 until it is selected. When a player selects a pass 24 on his/her turn, he is entitled to use the pass on that or a subsequent turn to get a free look at any tile 10.
When using the characteristics indicator 18, certain indicia 12 are designated as wildcards—that is they have no associated characteristics. Thus, these wildcard tiles 10 may be removed when matched regardless of the status of the indicator 18. Indicia may be shown as wild cards by displaying no characteristics icon 14 therewith. In yet another embodiment, the tiles 10 are not removed when matched. Instead, the indicia 12 are arbitrarily ordered, and potentially numbers representing that order are located on the tiles 10 adjacent to the indicia 12. The object in this alternative embodiment is to find three tiles 10 with consecutively ordered indicia 12. In a subvariation thereof, a player who has found three consecutively ordered indicia 12, may at his or her option select a fourth tile 10 seeking an indicium 12 that would extend the consecutive run (either upward or downward). If, however, he or she did not find a tile 10 that extended the run, all of the tiles 10 selected on the turn would have to be replaced. If the run were extended, he or she may optionally risk all of the tiles 10 again by selecting an additional tile 10 in a further attempt to extend the run, and so forth. In this subvariation, the winner is the player collecting the most tiles.
The game may also be computerized. In a possible computer version, each player is located at a separate computer or terminal, connected by local area network (LAN) or the Internet. Each tile is an abstract computerized object, which can be exposed to only one player by displaying the indicium associated with the tile on the screen of that player. The coding regions in this version would not be on the physical backs of tiles, but would be logically associated with tiles in a one-to-one correspondence.
While the foregoing is directed to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, other and future embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims which follow.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070018394 A1 | Jan 2007 | US |