Favorite board games!

cyhiphopp

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This is a good one. There's a family friendly version as well.

Like Pictionary, but when you are done you pass it to the person next to you. They guess, and the next person after them has to draw what they guessed, etc. When it gets back around to you you get to see how well everyone guessed and drew and if you're even close to the original word/phrase. Bonus points for when the word is particularly filthy.
 

NorthCyd

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Six board games WAY better than Monopoly, Sorry and Clue:

Ticket to Ride - connect cities and create train routes against other age of steam magnates

Forbidden Island - team of Indiana Jones type adventurers trying to get the artifacts before the islands sinks

King of Tokyo - take command of a giant monster and defeat others rolling dice

Sheriff of Nottingham - bluff your way past the sheriff to smuggle goods into town

Pandemic - you and your friends are a team of scientists trying save the world from diseases

Carcassonne - build the board as you play and try to control most cities and roads

Other great small games:

Codenames - teams compete to try to have a teammate guess from a number of words, using one-word clue

Bang the Dice Game - wild west dice rolling fast and fun shootout game

For Sale! - great, fun bidding and auction game of properties you buy and then try to sell

Fleet - take command of an Alaskan commercial fishing vessel and out-fish your rivals

Valley of the Kings - unearth ancients artifacts in 19th Century Egypt and secure them before your rivals do

Good list! I own all but 3 of these. Some others I would add for entry level board games are Splendor, Kingdomino, and Photosynthesis. Tokaido is solid too.
 

carvers4math

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Kingdomino is a nice little game.

Also Codenames but kids probably need to be a little older
 

ImJustKCClone

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In addition to Ticket to Ride, some other favorites in our house:

Trivia style:
Outwageous: Players advance around a board by answering questions in a half dozen categories correctly. However, everyone bets on the ability of the player answering to answer correctly (including the player answering). Winner is the one who obtains the highest chip count (there is a set winning total, but you can shorten the game by stopping play at any time and counting chips).

Wits & Wagers: 7 rounds...in each round, all of the players write an answer to the same question. The answer is always a number (date, amount, percentage). Answers are then laid out in order from lowest to highest and players bet on which answer is closest without going over. Our grandkids as young as 8 years old have enjoyed this game, because even if their guess is hopelessly wrong, they can still bet on the correct answer.

Chronology: Players take turns trying to guess where an event on a card will fall in the timeline they have established with previous answers (ie: between 1573 and 1989). Dates range across 2000 years. If a player misses, the next player has the opportunity to steal the card, and it progresses until someone gets it right or it goes all the way around.

Perfect 10: A little tougher. Two teams; ten multiple choice questions (different for each team). You use colored magnets to mark which answer you think is correct. After the magnets are all placed, you check the answers of the opposite team, and tell them how many they have correct (but not WHICH ones are correct). You then have the opportunity to correct your answers, and the other team again tells you how many you have correct (but again, not which). Strategy plays a big part in narrowing down the right/wrong answers. This continues until one team gets all 10 correct. One downside - the design of the playing board makes it tough to have more than 2-3 people on a team. I would say teenage or older for this one.


Non-trivia games:
Six Cubes: Plays much like Farkle but uses a board instead, making it easier to track scores. Has "jump ahead" spaces to add interest. Six dice: 4 white, 1 red, 1 green. Red & green dice change the way the six dice are counted.

Bananagrams: Best described as a Scrabble free-for-all. Players build their own crosswords, racing against other players to use up all of their tiles (and all of the tiles in the pool). Crosswords can be rearranged repeatedly. Same word rules as Scrabble - no proper names, abbreviations or foreign words (unless they are common usage in English - example, rendezvous). Requires a decent vocabulary. Our oldest grandkids like it; if we play with the younger ones, we play veeeeeerrrrrryyyyy slowly. ;)
 

CascadeClone

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Agree with KC on Wits & Wagers, from kids to adults, very playable.

My sister's husband is a board/card game designer so we have seen a lot of the really clever stuff over the years. A good rule of thumb is "don't buy anything that was available in the 70s and 80s" e.g. Monopoly, Risk, Life, etc.

Here is a good article with a lot of suggestions on good games, along with a total trashing of bad board games. It's very funny imho.
<http://www.cracked.com/blog/6-board-games-that-ruined-it-everyone/>

I suppose I should plug this, though it may not be what you are looking for.
<https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/103885/star-wars-x-wing-miniatures-game>
 
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SerenityNow

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I know you said no card games, but I recommend Five Crowns if you go that route. A bit like Phase 10, but more fun. Our 10 year old crushed us the last time we played.
 

Gonzo

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Six board games WAY better than Monopoly, Sorry and Clue:

Ticket to Ride - connect cities and create train routes against other age of steam magnates

Forbidden Island - team of Indiana Jones type adventurers trying to get the artifacts before the islands sinks

King of Tokyo - take command of a giant monster and defeat others rolling dice

Sheriff of Nottingham - bluff your way past the sheriff to smuggle goods into town

Pandemic - you and your friends are a team of scientists trying save the world from diseases

Carcassonne - build the board as you play and try to control most cities and roads

Other great small games:

Codenames - teams compete to try to have a teammate guess from a number of words, using one-word clue

Bang the Dice Game - wild west dice rolling fast and fun shootout game

For Sale! - great, fun bidding and auction game of properties you buy and then try to sell

Fleet - take command of an Alaskan commercial fishing vessel and out-fish your rivals

Valley of the Kings - unearth ancients artifacts in 19th Century Egypt and secure them before your rivals do

Totally agree on Codenames. Had a big family vacation in Colorado and we played that almost every night. Very fun.

Pandemic gets a bit deep in the weeds in my opinion.
 

Gonzo

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Not sure if the OP is a chess player, but four person chess is pretty fun.

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Set up four boards, each person sets up on a side, and it's every player for themselves.
 

ISU4Life

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We play a ton of Sorry and my 10 and 7 year old love it. There's luck involved but more strategy then you would think.
 
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MLawrence

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I know I'll get destroyed for this, but Settlers has to be one of the most overrated games ever IMO. Boring IMO.

I kind of agree. I think part of the reason why is because Settlers of Catan is such a known commodity where a lot of people have it, know it, and are willing to play it. Now don't get me wrong, playing a board game with friends is still better than not playing a board game, but to me playing a board game is getting to experience a new one, and discovering the strategies that will make you successful.
 
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