Tips for Hosting a Great Game Night with Friends
Tips for Hosting a Great Game Night with Friends
Time: 15+ minutes
Cost: $15.99
“Skull is the game that killed poker for me,” says Michael James Heron, editor of Meeple Like Us, a game review website. “It gets rid of the card play and replaces it with pure, raw bluffing.” The goal is pretty straightforward: reveal flower cards and avoid skull ones while goading other players to land on skulls. If that sounds confusing, know that it takes about two minutes to get the hang of it and even less time to fall in love with it. There’s faking and mental trickery — prepare to get your game face on — in this this quick, portable game with surprisingly pretty cards.
Time: 20+ minutes Cost: $34
Wits & Wagers has won dozens of awards and for good reason: As game researcher Joe Wasserman of West Virginia University says, it “provides a twist to the trivia game genre. Instead of one player trying to answer a trivia question correctly, all players answer each question and then place bets on whose answer is closest.” Think of it as similar to the bar game Quizzo with some carefree gambling thrown in.
Northstar Games
Time: 30+ minutes
Cost: $34
Using a seven-card hand, players take turns creating words while scoring “money” and rewards along the way. “Letter Tycoon is a true mashup of Scrabble and Monopoly,” explains Jon Freeman, a clinical psychologist who owns the board-game stores and cafes, the Brooklyn Strategist and Hex & Company. The game even has Mensa’s seal of approval, having won the “Mensa Select” award in 2015.
Breaking Games
Time: 15+ minutes
Cost: $17.67
Seated across from each other, two players (or two teams) give each other hints to help reveal who the “assassins” (bad guys) are and who the “agents” (good guys) are in this fun game of word play and sleuthing. It’s a cooperative game — everyone wins or everyone loses. As Wasserman says, it forces you to “open yourself to creativity in your thinking both as the clue-giver and as the deducer.”
Czech Games
Cost: $35.04
A visually arresting pick, Azul just won the Spiel des Jahres award, which is like the Oscar of gaming. Pretty light on rules, the game is as much about creating a pretty design with Moorish tiles as it is about racking up points, depending on where you place them. Best of all, it’s social, making it a great choice if your guests want to play and chat around the table.
Cancel You are leaving AARP.org and going to the website of our trusted provider. The provider’s terms, conditions and policies apply. Please return to AARP.org to learn more about other benefits. Your email address is now confirmed. You'll start receiving the latest news, benefits, events, and programs related to AARP's mission to empower people to choose how they live as they age. You can also by updating your account at anytime. You will be asked to register or log in. Cancel Offer Details Disclosures
Host a Game Night With Friends
All you need are a few friends snacks and the board game of your choice we' ve got ideas on that score
Getty Images If you're tired of the typical dinner-and-a-, why not rally a group for a game night? As a host, the responsibilities are delightfully minimal — drinks, can suffice — though you will need to choose a board game or two and to be able to clearly explain the directions to your guests. As for the game itself, while you might want a standby like Scrabble or Pictionary on hand, an unfamiliar option may provide a little more diversion for the gathering as a whole. Because there are so many choices on the market now, we played nearly a dozen and asked a few experts to offer you a handful of new standouts (all available at Amazon.com) that may remind you of some of your favorite classics. From left: Czech Games, Breaking Games, Northstar GamesIf you like Cheat or B S you ll love Skull
Players: 4+Time: 15+ minutes
Cost: $15.99
“Skull is the game that killed poker for me,” says Michael James Heron, editor of Meeple Like Us, a game review website. “It gets rid of the card play and replaces it with pure, raw bluffing.” The goal is pretty straightforward: reveal flower cards and avoid skull ones while goading other players to land on skulls. If that sounds confusing, know that it takes about two minutes to get the hang of it and even less time to fall in love with it. There’s faking and mental trickery — prepare to get your game face on — in this this quick, portable game with surprisingly pretty cards.
If you like Trivial Pursuit you ll love Wits & Wagers br
Players: 4+Time: 20+ minutes Cost: $34
Wits & Wagers has won dozens of awards and for good reason: As game researcher Joe Wasserman of West Virginia University says, it “provides a twist to the trivia game genre. Instead of one player trying to answer a trivia question correctly, all players answer each question and then place bets on whose answer is closest.” Think of it as similar to the bar game Quizzo with some carefree gambling thrown in.
Northstar Games
If you like Scrabble you ll love Letter Tycoon br
Players:Time: 30+ minutes
Cost: $34
Using a seven-card hand, players take turns creating words while scoring “money” and rewards along the way. “Letter Tycoon is a true mashup of Scrabble and Monopoly,” explains Jon Freeman, a clinical psychologist who owns the board-game stores and cafes, the Brooklyn Strategist and Hex & Company. The game even has Mensa’s seal of approval, having won the “Mensa Select” award in 2015.
Breaking Games
If you like Taboo you ll love Codenames Duet br
Players: 2 (or 2 teams)Time: 15+ minutes
Cost: $17.67
Seated across from each other, two players (or two teams) give each other hints to help reveal who the “assassins” (bad guys) are and who the “agents” (good guys) are in this fun game of word play and sleuthing. It’s a cooperative game — everyone wins or everyone loses. As Wasserman says, it forces you to “open yourself to creativity in your thinking both as the clue-giver and as the deducer.”
Czech Games
If you like Mah-jongg you ll love Azul
Players: 2-4 Time: 30+ minutesCost: $35.04
A visually arresting pick, Azul just won the Spiel des Jahres award, which is like the Oscar of gaming. Pretty light on rules, the game is as much about creating a pretty design with Moorish tiles as it is about racking up points, depending on where you place them. Best of all, it’s social, making it a great choice if your guests want to play and chat around the table.
Also of Interest
Cancel You are leaving AARP.org and going to the website of our trusted provider. The provider’s terms, conditions and policies apply. Please return to AARP.org to learn more about other benefits. Your email address is now confirmed. You'll start receiving the latest news, benefits, events, and programs related to AARP's mission to empower people to choose how they live as they age. You can also by updating your account at anytime. You will be asked to register or log in. Cancel Offer Details Disclosures