Category Archives: Games

Day 121: Ticket to Ride

Friends introduced me to this game as an app, Ticket to Ride. You are an old-timey railroad mogul, building train routes across America and Europe based on tickets you select throughout the game. Longer routes are worth more points and specific tracks are often coveted by multiple players, making for an interesting game of strategy.

Because the app is based on a board game (combined with the subject matter and characters), I assumed this game was actually an old game that someone made in to an app. I was wrong. The inventor, Alan Moon, debuted the game in 2004, yet it feels so authentically old fashioned, which is one of the things I like best about it.

The app is a little pricey–iPad is easier to use than iPhone–but it includes solo, online, pass-and-play, and, network, so you can easily play with a variety of opponents. The hubs and I play against each other all the time on separate iPads, and we’ve have four people on our couch, on four different iPads playing together (I know).

Tonight, I just played against the computer. But sometimes, it is so satisfying to beat the computer.

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Day 107: The Family that Plays Together

When I go home to Iowa, I always enforce family game nights. Some people drag their feet, but I know my family has fun and bonds over games. Well, now that my dad has a smart phone (finally), all of us can continue to play games even though we aren’t physically together.

Tonight I started Words With Friends games with my dad, mom, sister, brother-in-law, and, of course, the hubs. After an extended break from app games, I decided to return just to Words With Friends and not get sucked in to all the other “With Friends” games like I was previously. (Seriously, I had a problem). It is a small fun thing I can do each day to connect even more with family.

Also, I should give credit where credit is due; this fun thing was my sister’s idea.

Day 102: S#!t Head

S#!t Head is a card game I’ve played since college. My friends came back from their semester in Ireland and taught everyone this addictive game. We would play for hours on breaks from writing papers, in the middle of parties or just any old time. Some years later, I taught the hubs and our friend John. Both of them are now addicted; I submit as proof the fact that we just spent two hours playing on a Friday night. The rules may sound a little complicated, but once you get the hang of it, it is really quite simple and fun!

Everyone is dealt three cards down that they MAY NOT look at and that remain face down until the end of the game. Everyone is then dealt three cards up and three cards down. Players pick up their cards and select the best three (or whatever strategy you choose) to place face up, one on top of each face down card to play later, leaving three cards for their hand to start the game. It should look like this.

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The rest of the deck becomes the draw pile. A black three starts. If no one has one, black four. If no one has that, black five, etc. Once someone starts by laying down a card, the next person just has to play the same number/face or higher. Play does NOT have to go in strict order (3s followed 4s followed by 5s etc) and players may play multiples of the same number/face. Note: if someone plays three Jacks, one Queen MAY be played on top. This is NOT like other games where you have to beat the number/face AND the number of cards played.

Players must have at least three cards in their hand at all times, so players draw from the draw pile at the end of their turn if, on their turn, they went below three. If a player cannot beat what’s been played to them, that player must pick up the whole pile of played cards. Play then continues to the next player who may start with whatever card, she/he wishes.

Play continues. When the draw pile is gone, players play until they have no cards left. Then they may pick up those three cards they placed face up in front of them, leaving the ones they’ve never seen face down. This will happen at different points in the game for everyone. A player must have an empty hand with no cards in the draw pile to pick up these three cards.

Play continues. Once a player’s hand empties again, he/she may play a face down card on their next turn. Only ONE and the player may not look at it until it is their turn. If that player has to pick up the pile, she/he cannot play another face down card until she/he empties his/her entire hand again. This continues until someone runs out of cards completely and wins!

Here’s the catch; there are wild or “special” cards.
2: can be played on anything and resets the pile at two.
3 (red only): can be played on anything and acts like an invisibility cloak (it is the same as the card it is played upon).
7: must be played in order, but the next person must play a seven or lower.
8: must be played in order, skips the next player. Two 8s skip two players, etc.
10: can be played on anything and clears the pile. The player who lays the 10 gets to start again with anything she/he wishes.
Ace: highest card in the game and the player may decide who to send the ace to if they wish to force someone other than the person who plays after them to beat it. (This is particularly useful when playing the blind cards at the end).

A few other tricks: four of a kind also clears the pile. The player who plays the fourth card in four of a kind gets to start with any card. If a player plays a card (say a Jack) and then draws a Jack from the draw pile, said player is permitted to play the second Jack as well.

Also, technically play continues until only one person is left with cards. That person is the s#!t head and must deal the next round as well as buy drinks, get snacks, etc, though we aren’t always that mean.

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This picture was taken after I had to pick up a particularly large pile!

Day 91: Christmas Eve Cranium

On Christmas Eve, my family usually spends the day at my grandmother’s to exchange gifts and the evening at home playing games and watching movies. When we were younger (and unmarried) my sister and I would exchange our gifts to each other before heading to bed, in the same room, to wait for Santa. Now that we are older, we wait until Christmas morning to open all the gifts, and my sister sleeps at her own house. Even so, we continue to keep these traditions that we love. There were so many great fun things that happened today, the whole day felt like a guilty pleasure. Highlights include giving my grandmother the photo book we made for her, eating my dad’s homemade chicken pot and pie and playing Cranium.

Cranium was a new game for most of my family but they took to it pretty well. The best part of the game, though, was a drawing clue for both teams where the drawers had to keep their eyes closed. My dad drew for his team and my brother-in-law for mine. They drew and drew and drew while we guessed things like sleeping, snoring, lullaby, high jump, falling. Neither team could guess it, so after a few minutes of, “Draw something different! Sleeping, snoring, singing!” we let them open their eyes. Magician, magic, trick, elevator. We still couldn’t get it until finally my sister yelled out “LIMBO!” And we all couldn’t stop laughing about how long it took and how hard it was. It was a really great, funny moment in the midst of an already wonderful day. And I’m trying to appreciate those smaller moments during a holiday that could be all about how fun it is to get presents and eat. Though getting presents and eating is pretty awesome too.

Day 89: Hedbanz

When a nine year old boy, who is your new nephew, opens up one of his Christmas gifts, specifically the one you bought him by researching on Google what to buy for nine year old boys, and says, “That’s my favorite game!” it is probably one of the best things ever. When you then play that game with said nine year old boy and all of the adults for two hours, it becomes a really fun Christmas memory.

Hedbanz is a new family favorite at my sister-in-law’s house. It’s like that card game where you stick a card to your head, except you don’t have to lick anything. Instead you wear a headband and the cards have pictures of different things on them. You have to ask yes or no questions to figure out what is on your card while being timed. The actual rules had something to do with coins (included in the game) but we ignored that and just kept going around in a circle until we almost finished the whole deck. It was goofy, surprisingly hard at times and really fun!

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