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Saturday, May 14, 2011

HISTORICAL COMMENTS BY GEORGE CHEVALLIER

Board Games

Board games have been around almost as long as man. They found games in King Tut’s tomb that go back 3,000 years. Most of them had a pair of dice associated with them. Some of the most rudimentary games have no history and, therefore, we don’t know when they were invented. Games such as chess and checkers are still popular even though they haven’s changed in hundreds of years. Chess is a more sophisticated game due to the strategies involved. It is played on the highest levels of international competition with great notoriety being the reward for winning. Checkers is a much more mundane game. It is played by children and old men in country stores throughout the land.
         
When I was growing up, we didn’t have all the fancy video games that children have now. Board games were the norm. I can remember opening a new game and reading the rules thoroughly. It seems that if you mastered the rules it gave you a decided advantage over some opponent that hadn’t read the rules through and through. Most of the games were quite simple, which was acceptable to our young minds. And most of them involved dice.
         
One of the favorites in our house was Parcheesi. Long after I had moved out, my mother and father played every night after dinner. It was a matter of my father’s competitive spirit and the fact that my mother never seemed to care whether she won or lost. I think at one time the score was about 10,000 to 4, with my father winning almost all the time. But they were happy and that is all that mattered.
         
Most parents are familiar with the two most popular games for pre-schoolers – Candyland and Chutes & Ladders. Almost any four year old can handle these two and it teaches them many things that will prove beneficial in their later life. Following the rules in whatever we do is important and the sooner we learn that lesson, the better off we are.
         
Monopoly has become the most popular game since it was invented in the 1930’s. All the streets are named after streets in Atlantic City. This is a game that can be played by young and old alike.
         
Some of the newer games are very complicated and require much strategy. Just about the time they came out, the video games took over and you rarely hear of them anymore.
         
Board games were the only game in town back in the 1950’s and before. They had to be played with at least two people and for that reason, I think the social interaction was better than sitting in a room by yourself.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I like the last sentence. How true! I watch me grandchildren play video games for hours on end. I would think it is boring to have no interaction with their siblings and friends. I wonder what impact these modern games will have later in their lives. Thanks, George, for a great column. I always enjoy reading about "back in the day." You and I are about the same age.

Anonymous said...

The impact is that children are growing up with no social skills. You can see it everywhere you go. Take a look in the mall. Count how many people are text messaging within a five minute period.

Anonymous said...

My very first board game was Candy Land. The kids of today have no clue about board games - all they want to do is text rather than carry on a conversation with their friends and family.
Another great board game was Monopoly! It would last for hours but what fun. We also had Scrabble and Operation!