The present invention is generally directed to a tabletop basketball game and more particularly directed to an interactive tabletop basketball game having an arena (basketball court and seating), sound, lighting, timer, figurines, means for keeping score, and a miniature sized basketball hoop and balls for players to shoot baskets in order to score points during the game.
The product consists of three elements (games), a board game, a skill game requiring a miniature basketball to be bounced on a hard surface and aimed at an opening in a vertical surface slightly larger than the diameter of the miniature ball, and a half-court basketball arena with basket, small rigid balls covered with either hook or loop fastening material, and a backboard behind the basket consisting of alternating sections of hook and loop fastener material.
The board Game. A heavy cardstock board is imprinted with an image of a basketball court and a simulated arena seating area, which is divided into many sequential segments, surrounding the center court area. The playing board is imprinted on the inside surface of the cover of the game container. Objective of the game: Each player has a playing piece to move on the board. Players throw one or more dice to advance their playing piece around the segmented area outside the court. The segments on the board have positive and negative attributes, which may advance or retreat the players if they land on a particular segment. Points are also accrued along the way by landing on certain segments. The first player to accrue a given number of points is the winner, or the player who accrues the greatest number of points at the end of one circuit of the playing area is the winner. (A tally of the points earned is entered on a counter device that is used on all three games).
The bounced ball skill game. A cardstock rectangular shaped box with a plastic face is mounted vertically on a hard surface (the half-court of the third game). The rectangular box is taller than it is wide and has a hole in the front face (the basket hole), located towards the upper half of the front face and slightly larger than the size of the miniature elastomer balls used in the game. The rectangular box also has an opening in the base of the front face to allow balls that have entered the hole in the box to be returned to the player for further play. Objective of the Game: Each player has a given time, or a given number of shots, at the basket hole by bouncing one ball at a time on the hard horizontal surface of the playing area, attempting to get the ball into the basket hole. A tally is kept of the number of balls that successfully enter the hole. Alternately, the player may choose to toss the ball at the basket hole to get it in. The winner is the player that scores the greatest number of “baskets” in a given length of time or a given number of shots.
The half-court skill game. A reinforced cardstock container, consisting of a five-sided base box (the half-court floor) and a five-sided cover box (the half-court ceiling), separated by four cylindrical columns inserted into the corner bracket pockets, form the basketball half-court floor and ceiling structure. The base and cover fit together forming the shipping container when the game is disassembled for storage. An additional vertical panel (the “backboard”), in a modified “U” shape, forms the backdrop with basket, backboard and arena audience images, and is secured between the base and cover. The backboard has a printed surface containing the image of an arena with a backboard surrounding a basket attached to the panel. The area immediately surrounding the backboard contains alternating segments of hook and loop material (Velcro). The game contains a total of ten balls, five each of spheres made of hard, but resilient material (hard rubber, wood or plastic) covered with either a hook or loop material. Two point counters are included to tally the scores achieved by each player. These are manually advanced three digit indicators, which are used with all three games. Objective of the game: Each player has a given length of time, or a given number of shots with a set of hook or loop balls to make baskets until no balls are returned for retry by the player. Achieving a basket is worth two points, getting the ball to stick to a corresponding hook or loop fastener on the backboard is worth one point. Balls that make it through the basket are collected below the basket, balls that do not stick rebound off the backboard and are returned to the player for another try.
This application claims priority to provisional patent application having Ser. No. 60/818,756, filed Jul. 6, 2006, which is herein incorporated in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60818756 | Jul 2006 | US |