Showing posts with label Summary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summary. Show all posts

Monday, November 22, 2010

Colonial Gaming: In Review

Several months ago, I started writing this series about games played in Colonial America after a family trip to Williamsburg, Virginia. I picked up a number of games while I was there, but noticed that very little had actually been written about what our ancestors were playing on the eve of Revolution.

In doing research, I learned that some areas of the country (such as Virginia and the south in general) were utterly mad about their games, while others (much of New England) were less so. I probably could have added one more piece on Whist (and still may), since this was one of the few games to find a foothold in New England. Whist is the mother of Bridge, so if you know Bridge already, then you have a fair sense of Whist.

It was fascinating to see the way games migrated from the old world to the new, building variations along the way. It was also interesting to see the way game materials intersected with the Revolution itself, in the form of the hated tax stamps placed on every deck of playing cards.

I've gathered much of my material into a long article that will run as the lead feature for the March 2011 issue of Games Magazine. This was an interesting test of the blogging process for me, as I researched and posted things in real time over a period of months, allowing me to learn and write at the same time. It worked pretty well, and I intended to do it again. In the future, I will be doing separate series about boardgame-to-app conversions and games played with European decks, such as French, Italian, Swiss, Spanish, and Tarot cards. (Tarot decks were invented for playing games, not for dubious fortune-telling practices.) If you have any thoughts about how all this came together, good or bad, please feel free to share.

Here's the entire series at a glance:
A Card Game for the Lower Classes: Put
A Card Game for the Upper Classes: Loo and How to Play Loo
A Pair of Abstract Strategy Games: Fox & Geese and Nine Men's Morris
Early Playing Cards from I. Kirk and I. Hardy
The Game of Goose: An Early Board Game
Chess, Checkers, Backgammon, and Other Board Games
"I catch you without green!"
Hazard: Colonial Craps
Introductions are here and here

Sunday, October 3, 2010

This Week in Review



And this week started out so well....

I've spent the past few days on my keister with my leg propped up thanks to what the hospital discharge papers dryly call a "crush injury with lacerations." It's what happens when a really heavy stack of shelves falls on your foot from a height of about 6 feet. I haven't seen that much blood since Evil Dead II. I've managed to tear through a couple of stitches since then, so the fun never ends. This is what I get for trying to install a new closet system.

Also, Vicodin didn't do a thing for me. It didn't even cut through the pain. Useless. It always seems to work so well for Dr. House. TV lied to me again! (Watching War of the Gargantuas, however, had a wonderfully numbing effect.)

Anyway, I'll be a little slow getting back to work this week, so please bear with me.

Apps
Splode
Tafl
Undercroft
Froggy Launcher
Mr. Runner

Posts
COLONIAL GAMING: Fox &  Geese
REVIEW: Sorry Revenge
A CLOSER LOOK: Bee Club Special and KEM Playing Cards
GAMES WITHOUT PIECES: Ghosts and Superghosts
New contest sponsor: PopCap
Memoir 44: Winter Wars

Puzzles
Got a Problem?, Follow-Up, Answer
Sporting Chance
Big Cross-Out Swindle
The Blue-Eyed Sisters

Saturday, September 25, 2010

This Week in Review

Chinese checkers at the beach. (gettyimages.com)
Posts
A Closer Look: Hoyle Maverick
What's Been Coming to the Game Table?: A few early impressions.
Labyrinthe Aventure: The world's largest natural maze. (Frozen Jack Nicholson not included.)
Robert Abbott's Alice Mazes
Friday linkaround.

Apps
Trivial Pursuit
Reiner Knizia's Poison
Underworlds
Pocket Frogs
Aftermath
 
Puzzles
Race Results
Logogriphs: The original post and the answer

This was a pretty light week for State of Play. Writing the February issue of Games, completing a newspaper story, and dealing with a bad asthma flareup consumed too much time. More to follow next week, including, perhaps, an announcement about our next contests.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

This Week at a Glance

This image comes from Project Mah Jongg, an exhibit most awesome at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York. (Warning: automatic audio at site.)


Posts
Castle Ravenloft arrives: one big box o' D&D fun
Insensitive jerk makes offensive game. Also: water found to be wet. 
Games Magazine: November issue now on sale
A Closer Look: Aviator Cards
A Closer Look: Hoyle Playing Cards
Media incompetence and gaming: perfect together
Review: Scrabble Flash
Off-topic post: a look at the Arkangel Complete Shakespeare audioplays.
This week's contest
Friday linkaround: items of interest

Apps
Word Squares--word puzzle
Isaac Newton's Gravity--physics puzzle
iBlast Moki--physics puzzler
Mancala--abstract strategy
Spikey's Bounce Around--physics/arcade puzzler
A note on App coverage

Puzzles

Word Squares
Sir Edwyn de Tudor

Saturday, September 11, 2010

This Week in Review

the game is Nirtz (from Gettyimages.com)
Apps
Sword & Poker--RPG, poker
Puzzle Agent--Puzzle adventure
NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigation Services--mystery, crime
Monopoly--board game
Cross Fingers--puzzle, tangram

Colonial Gaming Series
Loo and the Upper Classes
How to Play Loo

Articles
Review: Singularity (PC, 360, PS3)
EvilVille: Zynga's Culture of Corruption
Card Design Series: Bicycle Prestige: A Closer Look
Friday Linkaround: Items of interest 
The Worst Day

Puzzle
Bathtub Boat
Labor Day Sale

About the game in the header picture: the game is Nirtz.

Friday, August 27, 2010

The Week At a Glance



App Reviews
Chain Link Pro: puzzle, dexterity
Netflix: utility
Reiner Knizia's Samurai: strategy, boardgame conversion
Spite & Malice: two-handed solitaire
Theseus: puzzle, maze

Articles
EA's Medal of Honor Courts Controversy
The Bible as an MMO?

Puzzles
Cheap Labor
Games Magazine puzzle contest (off-site)

Colonial Gaming
Introduction to the series
Put and the lower classes: How to play the Poker of Colonial America
I catch you without green: A medieval game survives in the Carolinas.
Cards of the Colonial period

Other
The Games 100
Dominion Prosperity Preview (off-site)
Friday Linkaround