13 Things Boredom-busting Facts About Board Games
Reader's Digest US|December 2021 - January 2022
We have been playing board games—in some cases, the same board games—for millennia.
By Emily Goodman
13 Things Boredom-busting Facts About Board Games

1 WE HAVE been playing board games—in some cases, the same board games—for millennia. Chess, checkers, backgammon, and Go all have origins in the ancient world. King Tut was buried with multiple sets of an Egyptian game called senet. Ajax and Achilles still appear hunched over a board in the midst of play on hundreds of pieces of Greek pottery. And the Ashanti people of Ghana are believed to have created a board game called wari, which you may know as mancala.

2 IT WASN'T until the 19th century that board games began to be sold commercially. The first, Mansion of Happiness, came out in England in 1800. The “mansion was heaven, and players raced to get there. Decades later, Milton Bradley reworkedand rebranded-it as The Checkered Game of Life. It was the only board game Bradley personally worked on.

3 ANOTHER POPULAR racing game, Parcheesi, has roots in ancient India, where it was called pachisi, from the Hindi word for “twenty-five,” the highest possible outcome of a single throw. But whereas Americans only tweaked the name, the Brits decided to call it Ludo ('lew-doh), Latin for “I play.” So when Englishman Anthony E. Pratt developed his murder-mystery board game in 1943, he called it Cluedo, playing on Ludo. (Of course, we just call it Clue.)

This story is from the December 2021 - January 2022 edition of Reader's Digest US.

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This story is from the December 2021 - January 2022 edition of Reader's Digest US.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.