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HOURS
spent battling over family board games as a child could make you more
prosperous in later life, experts revealed yesterday.
Now think back on your childhood and remember those moments – you
and the family playing board games. But it probably was not as civil.
Screams, punches and the occasional obscenity from Mom were the norm.
It was a seemingly happy time, when games meant fake money, small
plastic houses and dice – not controllers, memory cards or an Internet
link-up with 5,000 of your closest friends.
I am here to say that in the era of video games, board games are
making a comeback and party games are on the rise. Sure, board games
never left; we have seen them evolve. But now as college students we
are rekindling the flame we had for Monopoly and discovering new crazes
like Apples to Apples.
Most people at WSU could say they have played their fair share of
board games during their time here. Maybe it’s the Palouse and we have
nothing to do, but game nights are going on at other campuses. There
are students at UW who wouldn’t miss Scrabble Night for anything.
Some people just play every once in a while for fun, but there are
people out there who take their games seriously. After all, the
purchase of a board game can ring up to more than $30.
There is one such die-hard clan of friends on campus. They scream, they fight, they punch and they play to win.
Every Sunday night, you can hear the commotion from the Sigma Phi
Epsilon house. A group of guys from the house and a few girls from a
neighboring sorority gather there for a game night where they will
shout their way through games until 2 a.m.
They started their game night during Homecoming week last semester
and decided they wanted to keep the bond by continuing game night. Now
they have anywhere from 10 to 20 people on any given Sunday evening.
Jared Meseroll, a junior human development major who lives at Sigma
Phi Epsilon, usually cooks dinner beforehand or some sort of dessert
for the group. Then the games begin.
When asked what their favorite thing about game night was, they unanimously shouted, “Competition!.
“I get hit, punched – it gets intense,” said Shawn Murphy, a junior accounting major.
They said it’s about winning, each team vying for bragging rights for the next week.
“We can’t help it if we’re the better house,” said Danielle LaBelle, a junior history major.
Their taste in games has evolved since playing Candyland as kids.
Now they play Scene-It, in which players watch clips from DVDs and
answer questions about films, actors and famous lines.
But there is also everyone’s favorite game, Catchphrase, which is an
excuse to see who can yell out an answer the loudest. Apples to Apples
is a party game in which players make outrageous comparisons, and the
group has taken a liking to it.
All of these “party games” that are not typical board games make
competition more important. Because most games involve teams, no one
gets left out and the increase in competition provides the rowdiness
that marks game night.
“Who’s the most intense?” Murphy asked Kris Owens, a junior majoring
in international business, and management and operations. Owens looked
for Susan, a regular competitor at game night.
“Susan’s not here,” he said. “Well, then Danielle..
After hours of deafening yells during Apples to Apples, the group
retires for the week. On campus it’s not just party games that are
becoming popular. Old favorites have started to redesign and revamp
their image.
Monopoly has a mega-edition, for those of you who want to build
resorts instead of hotels. America voted and Monopoly came out with a
Here and Now Edition. Instead of a thimble, players get to prance
around the board as McDonald’s fries, a Toyota Prius or even a Motorola
cell phone.
The Bookie even sells five versions of Monopoly – including Wazzuopoly, in which you can buy Glenn Terrell Mall if you want.
“[Monopoly] was a childhood game I always played,” said Alexis
Teachout, a senior pharmacy major, who usually plays games with her
family during breaks.
It does not matter what game you choose to play, as long as it’s
rowdy. That seemed to be the idea for senior English major Nikki Dunbar
and her friends one weekend in McCall, Idaho, during a game of
Catchphrase.
“The cops came we, were so loud,” she said.
With the snow and the cold weather, staying in for game night is a nice alternative to going out.
Christi Poteet, a senior movement studies major, said she likes to
play board games “when I’m wanting to stay inside and not go out, and
when there’s nothing on TV..
So whether you want to play for a relaxing night with a few friends
or a rowdy night with your 20 closest, board games are here to stay.
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