'Being a kid of the ’90s, there were a lot of fantastic and fun games for all ages and skill levels, plus some deeper experiences that defined the modern board game hobby we know today'
Photo: TriStar Pictures If you’ve already broken out your old Monopoly board and can’t stand to look at another Scrabble tile, consider adding a shiny new board game or two to your collection. And while there are plenty of recent releases you could while away the afternoons with, it’s also fun — and welcomingly comforting — to revisit old childhood classics.
$27 at Amazon Buy $27 at Amazon Buy Best ’90s party game 6 nimmt! $14 now 7% off $13 Up to ten players can take on this “fun, easy to learn, and absolutely merciless” game released in 1994, says Amdisen-Cooke. Each card is printed with a number and between one and seven bull’s heads symbols, which represent penalty points. The game progresses until a player reaches 66 points, and then everyone’s cards are tallied.
$42 at Target Buy Best ’90s board game for intermediate players Robo Rally $32 $40 now 20% off $32 Another Richard Garfield-designed board game is Robo Rally, “a chaotic, simultaneous movement game,” which May says “still holds up as a classic.” Speaks agrees, calling it “a bit of a hidden gem.” The players move their robots around using cards, but the catch is that everyone reveals their moves at the same time, and you can’t adjust course once everyone’s strategy is revealed.
$25 at Target Buy $26 at Amazon Buy Best ’90s card-based games Bohnanza $17 $20 now 15% off $17 Board game blogger Matt Montgomery describes Bohnanza as “a bean-trading card game with great staying power.” The main objective of the game is to earn gold by planting large fields of beans and then harvesting them by trading and making deals with other players. The interesting catch is that players must play their cards in the order that they are drawn: You cannot rearrange your hand.
$19 at Target Buy Operation $13 Similar to Mousetrap, Operation was initially designed in the ’60s, but we’re including it here because it was beloved by ’90s kids. Walsh told us that while he loved this game when he was young, he also enjoyed playing it when he was older with his friends after a night out. The whole family can sit down and operate on Cavity Sam to remove his various ailments — including his wishbone, charley horse, and Adam’s apple — without setting off the buzzer.
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