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Apples to Apples

colleeng August 18, 2004
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Read Time:1 Minute, 48 Second

Players: 3-10

players

Playing time: 30 minutes (average)




Being a

philosophical type of guy, my friend Ted is always looking for a game that will really

make you think past trying to remember what year the Treaty of Versailles was signed, á

la Trivial Pursuit. He found such a game and has subsequently gotten me hooked on it.




In Apples to Apples, there are two types of cards: red ones and green

ones. Green cards contain adjectives or adverbs on them (“dangerous,” for instance),

while red cards have nouns (names of famous people, places, things, or events). Each

player gets dealt seven red cards, and one person, acting as the “judge,” draws one green

card (the judge rotates clockwise, so it’s not the same person each time a red card is

drawn). The other players must look at their cards and decide which one describes

whatever is on the green card, and throw it down. The judge then decides which red card

fits best, and the person who threw that card is awarded the green card. The first person

with four green cards wins.



What makes this game so much fun are the

examples written on the cards—they can be almost anything, forcing you to be really

creative in how you find a match and forcing the judge to decide amid vastly different

options. For instance, the judge draws a green card reading “chunky,” and you hold cards

reading: “The Manhattan Project,” “Rosie O’Donnell,” “Baseball,” “Ants,” “Tobacco

Companies,” “Chicago,” and “My Personality.” Decide which fits best (in this instance I’d

choose Rosie O’Donnell, of course), and throw it into the pile. Among my friends, “Rosie

O’Donnell” would beat all choices, even if one were “Chunky Peanut

Butter.”



This is an extremely fun and creative game that can last any

amount of time, depending on how many people are playing. You’re guaranteed to laugh

while playing, and it’s interesting to see how people make their choices. Apples to

Apples can be found, among other places, in Barnes and Noble bookstores, and I recommend

it to anyone who’s looking to think outside the box.

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colleeng

snodgrass.colleen@yahoo.com
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