Boggle is a word game designed by Bill Cooke, created by Allan Turoff and originally distributed by Parker Brothers. The game is played using a plastic lattice of a coiled dice, where players are trying to find words in a sequence of adjacent letters.
Video Boggle
Rules
The game begins by shaking the closed tray of 16 cubic dice, each with different letters printed on each side. The dice settles into 4 - 4 trays so that only the upper letter of each cube is visible. Once they enter the grid, a three-minute sand timer begins and all players simultaneously start the main phase of the game.
Each player looks for words that can be constructed from adjacent cube letters, where the "adjacent" cube is horizontally, vertically and diagonally. Words should be at least three letters, may include singular and plural (or other derivative forms) separately, but may not use the same cube letters more than once per word. Each player records all the words he finds by writing on a piece of personal paper. After three minutes, all players must immediately stop writing and the game enters the assessment phase.
In the assessment phase, each player reads a list of words he or she finds. If two or more players write the same word, it is removed from the list of all players. Each player can challenge the validity of a word, in which case the previously nominated dictionary is used to verify or deny it. For all words remaining after the duplicate is omitted, points are given based on the length of the word. The winner is the player with the highest total points, with any ties that are usually damaged by the count of long words.
One cube is printed with "Qu". This is because Q is almost always followed by U in English words (see exceptions), and if there is Q in Boggle, it will challenge to use if U does not, by chance, appear next to it. For the purposes of printing Qu is counted as two letters: squid will print two points (for five-letter words) although it is formed from a chain of only four cubes. Early versions of the game have "Q" without the accompanying "u".
The North American National Scrabble Association publishes the Official Scrabble Game Script , which is also suitable for Boggle. This dictionary covers all variations of words up to eight letters. A puzzle book titled 100 Boggle Puzzles (Improve Your Game) offering 100 game positions was published in the UK in 2003 but no longer printed.
Different versions of Boggle have different mail distributions. For example, more modern versions in the UK have easier letters, such as just one K , but older versions (with yellow boxes, from 1986) have two Ks and generally fancier letter distributions..
Using sixteen cubes in the Boggle standard set, the longest list of words that can be formed includes unimportant quadricentennials , and sesquicentennials , all seventeen - empty words are made possible by q and u appear on the same face of a cube.
Words in words are also allowed, for example: master , two separate words being mast and aster . Both the cube and the board can not be touched while the timer is running.
Maps Boggle
Game variant
Parker Brothers has introduced several licensed variations on the game. In 2006, only Boggle Junior and Travel Boggle (also marketed as Boggle Folio), continue to be produced and marketed in North America with standard Boggle games, regardless of the miniature version of licensed keychain. Boggle Junior is a much simpler version devoted to children. Boggle Travel is a standard car-friendly version of 4ÃÆ' â ⬠"4 sets. Compact cylinders and zippers include pencil and small paper pads, as well as electronic timers, and especially, soft plastic covers that produce less noise when the boards are shuffled.
Big Boggle, which was then marketed as Boggle Master and Boggle Deluxe, featured a 5ÃÆ'â ⬠"5 tray, and 3 unauthorized letters. Some editions of the Big Boggle set include an adapter that can convert a larger grid into a standard 4ÃÆ'â ⬠"4 Boggle grid. In the United Kingdom, Hasbro UK is currently marketing the Super Boggle, which features grids 4ÃÆ' â ⬠"4 and 5ÃÆ' â â¬" 5 and flashing electronic timers to show start and end. Despite the popularity of games in North America, there is no Boggle version that offers a 5ÃÆ'â ⬠"5 grid marketed outside Europe for an extended period until 2011, when Winning Moves revives Big Boggle's name for the new version. Their variants have two dead letters with a combination of popular letters such as Qu, Th, and In.
In 2008, Parker Brothers released an independent game version with dice sealed inside a plastic unit, and featured an integrated timer. Although older versions have been discontinued, some retailers refer to the newer "Reinvention Boggle" to avoid confusion.
In 2012, Winning Moves released version 6 Ã-6 from a game called Super Big Boggle. In addition to the two-letter dice with a combination of popular letters, there is also a dice that contains three faces that are solid boxes. These solid boxes represent the word stop, which is just a space that can not be used in any word. Another change is that the time limit increases from 3 minutes to 4 minutes, 3-letter words are no longer allowed, and there is a modified scoring scheme, described below.
Other Boggle variants include:
- The version of the 4ÃÆ' â ⬠"4 standard set includes a special" Boggle red challenge "lab, featuring a relatively unusual six letters. Bonus points are awarded for all words that use red cube.
- The Boggle CD-ROM, a version for Windows, is produced and marketed by Hasbro Interactive, including 4ÃÆ' â ⬠"4 and 5ÃÆ' â â¬" 5 versions, some 3-D versions, and facilities that allow up to four players to compete instantly Through the internet.
- Body Boggle, which is more like Twister than the Boggle standard. Two players work together as a team, using their hands and feet to spell words on a large floor mat that contains pre-printed Boggle letters.
- Boggle Bowl, where players throw their own dice and compete to build longer words to move their tokens toward their destination in the play area (bowl-shaped). Similar to Scrabble, the play area has a special space, but here they change the game for the next round.
- Boggle has been an interactive TV show hosted by veteran Wink Martindale, aired on The Family Channel (now the ABC Family) replacing the interactive version of Trivial Pursuit.
- Coggle, which works in a similar way to Boggle but involves making words to match a specific theme. Mainly intended for the French and Canadian markets.
- Boggle Flash. Boggle's electronic version, but consists of 5 tiles where 1-10 players make words by swapping tiles. This product is sold in the United States under the name Scrabble Flash .
- Foggle, in which 16 dice must be used to form a valid mathematical equation.
Many unofficial computer versions and game variants are available. In 1989, users of the MIT Athena Project competed in the online game "mboggle". In 2013, Ruzzle, a Boggle-based mobile game game, topped the list of most downloaded iPhone apps. Other games similar to or influenced by Boggle include Bananagrams , Bookworm , Dropwords , Letterpress , Puzzlage , SpellTower , Word Factory , Wordquest , WordSpot , Word Streak with Friends i>, WordTwist , and Zip-It .
Clubs and tournaments play
Although not widely instituted as Scrabble, several clubs have been set up for the purpose of organizing a Boggle game. The Boggle Club is officially present at a number of educational institutions, including the Dartmouth Union of Bogglers at Dartmouth College, the Western Oregon University Boggle Club, the University of Michigan Boggle Club, the Berkeley Boggle Club at the University of California, Berkeley, the CCA Boggle Club at Canyon Crest Academy, and Grinnell College Boggle Club.
Unlike Scrabble, there is no national or international regulatory or regulatory body for the Boggle competition and no official tournament rules.
See also
- Boggle (gameplay)
- Perquackey
References
External links
- DeepSearch Solutions For The Top Ten 5ÃÆ' â ⬠"5 Boggle Board Search - By JohnPaul Adamovsky
- Fun and Games with English 4ÃÆ' â ⬠"4 Boggle Board Drivers and Boosters - By Dr. Phillip M. Feldman
- Boggle Solver Fast multiple languages ââBoggle word solver - By M. van Moorselaar
- Online Serpentine boggle multiplayer game
Source of the article : Wikipedia