
Another old familiar favorite, if maybe not quite as old or as familiar or as favorite as Clue. I guess if you have been living under a rock since 1988, you might not know that this is a game with 16 lists of 12 categories each, and a 20-sided die with one letter of the alphabet on each side (mercifully excluding Q, U, V, X, Y and Z). You play by selecting a list (we typically start with List 1), rolling the die to determine what letter to focus on for that round, starting the timer (which has three settings: short, medium and long . . . I totally recommend the long setting!), and then trying to come up with an example for each of the 12 categories on the list before time runs out. This might be easy, except for the fact that your examples must all start with the letter that was rolled on the die. And you're better off if you can come up with original answers (because you only get a point if no one else writes the same thing down), although most of the time if you manage to fill in the blank with anything at all, it's a relief.
Finn found this game difficult, but he still managed to have fun. Actually the adults found it a bit difficult too. Sam said it was a little like being back in school. I'm not sure I ever managed to fill in all 12 blanks. But we all enjoyed it, played 6 rounds (and had more fun with G and W than with O, E L and J) and would definitely play again. My favorites are always the two-pointers (where your answer has two words that start with the correct letter) like Greta Gerwig (category: TV star), William Wallace (category: historical figure), or Where the Wild Things Are (my example for Book) or World War Z (Sam's book). And how did the 12-year-old come up with Water (something in the sky) when the adults came up blank??