... There are spaces in the board for various buildings such as a church and a retirement home to be placed. There are larger spaces for a toll bridge and mountains to be added for crossing over certain routes. Near the centre is a space for the spinner. This is instead of using a dice and ... Read review
In DA GAME OF LIFE, Snoop Dogg plays Smooth, a man with the skills to make his dreams come ... more
true. The house, the cars, the beautiful wife, he lives in a world of excess where loyalty is tied to the mighty dollar and where trust is as unpredictable as a roll of the dice. If you're going to play the game, you better play to win.
Business In The Front Save the Castle Screw the Princess Mantipede Cuffed To Your Ankles ... more
Shoeshine for Nepute To Get Eaten By The Rats Tourtasia Claiming Middle Age A Decade Early Taiwanese Troft Trouble 13 Year Old Ruby Robando De Los Muertos So You Think You Know About The Game of Life (Party in the Rear)
Postage & Packaging:£0.00 Availability:3-5 working days
Advantages: Another old favourite that can provide hours of fun Disadvantages: setting up can take a while
...over and over again throughout the years - starting with myself and then with my own children as they have grown up.
Games like this seem to have taken a back seat these days since the arrival of the many dvd games available now but I feel that this type is great for getting the family together on a cold rainy day when there is nothing on telly except the usual repeats.
Game of Life is quite simply about living your ... ...remember but once you get the hang of it, there is a lot of fun to be had.
What's in the box?
When you open the box you come face to face with a large playboard covered with different roads and paths to take - each with instructions on the separate spaces. There are spaces in the board for various buildings such as a church and a retirement home to be placed. There are larger spaces for a toll bridge and mountains to ... more
I received this game as a xmas pressie about 20 something years ago but it is still all in working order and has been played over and over again throughout the years - starting with myself and then with my own children as they have grown up.
Games like this seem to have taken a back seat these days since the arrival of the many dvd games available now but I feel that this type is great for getting the family together on a cold rainy day when there is nothing on telly except the usual repeats.
Game of Life is quite simply about living your life and making choices along the way. It has an element of luck involved but there are important decisions that have to be made for each player as they make there way through life. Aged from 8 upwards this is a game that takes a little bit of learning and has quite a few rules to remember but once you get the hang of it, there is a lot of fun to be had.
What's in the box?
When you open the box you come face to face with a large playboard covered with different roads and paths to take - each with instructions on the separate spaces. There are spaces in the board for various buildings such as a church and a retirement home to be placed. There are larger spaces for a toll bridge and mountains to be added for crossing over certain routes. Near the centre is a space for the spinner. This is instead of using a dice and has the numbers 1 to 10 on it which enables you to move round the board or to win or lose money on lotteries or the stock exchange.
The mountain pieces and bridge all have stickers which need to be added and the spinner is easy to put together and can be left complete as the interior of the box is molded so that the individual pieces fit neatly into slots and compartments. This is really useful at the end so you can quickly see if a piece is missing.
There is a handy money rack for putting all the money into whilst playing although we've found using this to be a bit of a nuisance as the notes tend to slip to the side and fall out if the appointed banker has larger hands. It is easy to put the notes in separate piles at the side of the playing area so this doesn't spoil our enjoyment of the game.
There are six cars which take you round the board coloured red, yellow, orange, blue, green and white. These cars can be filled along the way by blue or pink pegs as you go through life getting a partner and children if you are blessed enough to land on the correct spaces. You may even get twins if you are lucky!!!
As well as denominations of 1,000, 5,000, 10,000, 50,000 and 100,000, there are promissary notes which are used when you run out of money and are the equivalent of a loan. Worth 20,000 each you pay back interest of 2,000 when you have enough money to pay them back to the bank. Other documentation in this game are insurance policies which may be needed throughout the game. Car, Life and Fire insurance and well as Share certificates can all be very useful but cost you as you go round the board and you have to decide whether you want to buy them or not.
Status symbol cards are available to buy if you land on the right square and these range from a luxury yacht to a race horse. They each cost different amounts from landing on the appropriate squares on the board and can be used to give you an income when you retire.
Share the Wealth cards are available if you land on one of the many pay day squares around the board and there are 3 types - collect, pay and exemption. More about these later.
The lucky number board has the numbers 1 - 10 and is for use when you land on a lucky day space on the playing board. You are given 2 x £5,000 and choose whether to keep them or gamble them on 2 separate numbers. If you win you get £150,000 but if you lose you get nothing.
The Rules.
At the start of the game you are given a car, a car insurance certificate and £3,000. This is to see you through either university or go straight into the business sector. Don't worry you just have to spin and move along - there are no tricky business decisions to make or exams to sit. We tend to follow the university route as there are jobs available with larger salaries than the £5,000 business one. You could end up being a doctor, lawyer, teacher, physicist or even a journalist which can earn you £20,000 every time you pass or land on a Pay Day square. Sometimes though, as happens in real life you can leave university with only your degree and no job to speak of. This gives you a salary of only £6,000.
After this initial choice you all follow the same journey although there are short cuts for those racing towards retirement. The aim of the game is to get to end of the game with the most amount of money and it is not necessarily the first to get round who will win the game. Sometimes slower players will land on more profitable squares such as discovering treasure whilst deep sea diving or inventing an automatic cocktail shaker. There is also a chance of course that they will land on more costly squares too including inheriting a skunk farm and having to pay to get rid of it or forking out to go to a health farm because you are overweight.
There are also choices of whether to speculate on the stock exchange but of course this can cost you if the market is down and if you buy a share certificate you may have to pay costs if you land on certain squares round the board too. The rewards are tempting though and we tend to go ahead and have a gamble.
Suing for damages is another way of earning some cash and stopping your winning opponent in their tracks and amounts range from £50,000 to £200,000 as you go through life. Money will also be given to you when you get married or have children - they are good for something.
The other way of getting money from your opponents is if you have a collect share the wealth card. This can be given to your opponent when they have a windfall of over £10,000 to claim half of it. To save money you can hand one of the pay cards over to an opponent when you are faced with a bill of over £6,000 to make them pay half too. If you are handed on of these cards and have an exemption card then you do not have to pay out.
When you reach retirement you can choose whether to go into a retirement home or head for the millionaire's mansion. If you are first to arrive or have some status symbols then it's beneficial to head for the mansion as you can receive £100,000 for being first there. The status symbols all have varying amounts from £1,000 to £4,000 on them and each time it is your turn you spin the wheel and receive money from the bank. If your symbols total £6,000 and you spin a 7 then you would receive £42,000 which is worked out by multiplying the 2 together. If you don't have status symbols then the retirement home is the best option as you are given your salary on each turn and you choose whether to keep it or split it over 2 numbers like on the lucky day squares. This time if you win you get 5 times your salary.
The game ends when all players have travelled through life and enter retirement. All that matters then is the money and the winner is the one who has earned and saved the most.
Although it sounds like quite a complicated game, the rules are quite easy to pick up as you play it and although you may have to have the instruction book handy to start with you'll soon be shooting round the board without the need of it. I hadn't played this game for quite some years but we aired it again at the weekend and found that I remembered most of it and what I didn't was easy to pick up again.
All my family enjoys playing this as it doesn't go on and on the way some games can yet it's not over before it starts either. A game of 4 players usually takes us around 45 minutes to play but obviously with 2 it will be slightly less or with 6 it will be slightly longer.
We love it not only for the competative nature of this game but for the fun comments on the squares around the board. My family thought it was hilarious that they had all got jobs with £20,000 salary and I had left without a job with just £6,000. They didn't think it was so funny though when I ended up landing on winning squares such as winning on the horses and getting £50,000 and selling my life story for £100,000 and they were landing on squares such as being left 50 stray cats by an aunt and having to pay for their upkeep or being made to finance an unsuccessful exhibition to the South Pole. My daughter still ended up winning but we had a lot of laughter on the way round as fortunes came and went.
This game can be bought for around £10 which I think is excellent value for money considering the playability of it. There are also Simpson and Star Wars versions available which you can buy for around £15. My bloke has the Star Wars version which I bought him for Christmas last year but it is a bit more complicated to set up and I am not a fan of Star Wars like him so I still find the original a lot more fun - but he gets very animated about it because it is Star Wars.
There is only one thing that does get a little bit annoying and that is the squeak from the spinner after a while. This can however be remedied by rubbing a little bit of butter on the centre piece that the spinner sits on. After that you should find that it not only spins more freely but more quietly too.
All in all this is a very good game for the price and if you are looking for a fun board game that has withstood the test of time then give this one a go. You never know where life will take you.
Advantages: Easy and quick to play Disadvantages: Some of the pieces are quite small and easy to lose
...child and I still enjoy the game today. The rules are very simple and easy to grasp making it a good game to open and play straight away without having to wade through a thick instruction booklet. However, shock of shocks, this game no longer appears to be available. How did this crime happen? I have searched on the Argos, WHSmiths and Toys R Us websites and not one of them seem to have it. As my title states, Life *is* unfair.
PACKAGING
The box ... ...and spinner, cars, people, Share the Wealth and Status Symbol cards and instructions. The front of the box shows the game itself and claims it is a game of “skill and chance for all the family – an exciting journey through life.” I beg to differ on the skill aspect. This game is mostly down to chance and you will not improve your chances of winning by practising the game, which you would in a game that involved skill. The recommended age of the 2 ...
AnitaM 27.07.2003
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of The Game of Life
Advantages: Good family fun Disadvantages: Rules are quite difficult to pick up at first
== THE GAM OF LIFE ==
Mention 'games' to children today and they automatically think of Wii, X Box, Play Station or DS games. But what is better than a good old-fashioned board game that the whole family can play together? I expect that many of you reading this review played it as a young person - but have you any idea how long it has been going? It may amaze you to know that it was originally created in 1860 by Milton Bradley, and was then known ... ...years later, in 1960) by the Milton Bradley Company (now a subsidiary of Hasbro). Game of Life is, just what it says on the box, a game about living your life and making choices along the way. Luck does play a major part in the game, but there are also so important decisions that have to be made for each player as they make there way through life. === WHAT DO YOU GET? ===
Some of you may still remember this game when the board came complete with ...
oldchem 04.11.2009
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of The Game of Life
Advantages: Easy to play Disadvantages: Very boring and deeply unoriginal
...huge mistake after I bought the Game of Life. Despite of all that advertising, it is nothing more than an ordinary board game. Spin the wheel. Get as much money as possible. And that's about it.
Unlike other more exciting games such as strategy games, no skills nor brain power is involved. In order to win you just require luck, and virtually no skill is needed to play this game. It is okay for a family gathering when you have nothing else to do, ... ...have to chuck it to the attic or throw it away.
Basically, in the game, you have to spin the wheel and like many other games the no indicated on the wheel determines your profession, how much money you are going to earn, if you are going to have children or not etc. etc. There is nothing original about this game - I am sure you could find something much better. It is better to spend money on other better games since such a wide variety is available. ...
WinsomeCh 02.03.2001
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Advantages: kills a bit of time Disadvantages: fiddly pieces ... short span of life
...when you cut through all the hype, is pretty naff. But I'm being unfair- if you are playing it with your 6 or 7 year old child it can be fun.
Gameplay hinges on pure luck and your life is determined by the throw of the dice and the draw of the card (or more accurately what it says on the square you've landed on). So, I guess, it does reflect real life in that respect. MB uses the familiar technique of incorporating plastic features like buildings ... ...and the use of a plastic spinner instead of a dice adds another dimension.
Players travel along the 'road of life' in a little car and at certain points on the board they can add a spouse to the vehicle and then some kids if they land on the right spaces. The more kids you acquire the more dosh you get at the end of your journey (unlike real life where the kids squeeze it out of you long before the end of the journey).
The pieces are very fiddly ...
w1ldrover 02.03.2001
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of The Game of Life
Advantages: fun the first few times Disadvantages: gets boring
...one of these "Game of the year" games - but that must have been at least ten years ago.
You go through your live (well, actually it is a very Americanized live - not that there is anything wrong with it) and certain situations will happen to you.
For example you can get married and have children and will receive money for these (after you paid for the wedding). But you can also have to pay for your children when they go to school etc. You can buy ... ...idea of the game reminded me a bit of monopoly in the beginning. But unlike monopoly I soon got bored with The game of Live.
After you have played it a few times, you know all the things that can and will happen and there is no real surprise nor skill envolved. ...
Katja101 16.01.2001
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Advantages: Interesting board game everyone seems to like Disadvantages: Takes a while to set up
Game Of Life one of the board games I remember from my childhood, when the whole family would sit down together on a Sunday, after Bullseye and Sunday Dinner, and play a game whether it be cards or one of the many board games we had.
History
The game was originally created in 1860 by Milton Bradley, and was called The Chequered Game Of Life, and it sold 45,000 copies in its first year of production. The game did not include a dice as these were considered by many to be wicked items and only for gamblers, and instead used a teetotum which is a six sided top, is where the spinner in the middle comes from. The original game was based around a chess board and the object was to land on good spaces and earn 100 points. You could earn another 50 points by reaching happy old age which was at the end of the game ...
johnny040676 14.06.2008
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Game of Life
Advantages: Its got that spinner thing Disadvantages: Dull game
This game is just not good enough. It seems alot like the type of board gamr that quite a few people could make with their eyes closed. There is a distinct lack of variety within the game, and after a few plays, the game becomes progressively duller. The game is supposedly depicted around the average life, get a job, get married, have kids. Plainly, this game is out of date, with the way in which it works, and should be revamped to bring it up to date with modern standards. ...
scaddingk 23.11.2000
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of Game of Life
Advantages: Your character is a little blue or pink pin! What else do I say Disadvantages: If you're looking for twists, turns and general laughter-this isnt for you
Its coming up to the end of the holiday. We're sunburnt. We're tired. We're still a little hung over from yet another spectacular alcohol-fuelled ance-a-thon and oh yesh thats right we're slap bang in the middle of the welsh countryside and a good 15 miles away from well...anything!
What do you do when the gorgeous welsh countryside just won't quench your satisfaction factor any more?-you play GAME OF LIFE!
Now I have to admit first putting the board game together to seemed to say that my next 30 or so minutes or play would be like any other family board game ive played. But no not this-this is in a whole other world of its own. Ok now fair enough its layout and aim is pretty similar to other games-move your piece (in this case your car-unless you find yourself in a similar situation and have too many players so one has to make do ...
starmisthaze 27.10.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of Game of Life