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Encyclopedia > Candy Land game
Candy Land
Players: 2 to 4
Age range: 3 to 6
Setup time: < 5 minutes
Playing time: < 15 minutes
Rules complexity: Easy
Strategy depth: None
Random chance: Very high
Skills required: Color recognition

A simple race game that requires no ability to read or count, Candy Land has become something of a cultural icon in the U.S., where it is often the first board game played by children.


The game was designed in 1949 by Eleanor Abbot, while she was recovering from polio in San Diego, California. The board consists of a winding, linear track made of about 140 spaces, most of which are one of the six rainbow colors. The remaining few spaces are named locations such as Peppermint Stick Forest and Gum Drop Mountain, or characters like Queen Frostine and Lord Licorice.


Players take turns removing the top card from a randomized stack, most of which show one of the six colors, and then moving their marker ahead to the next space of that color. The last space of the track is rainbow-striped, so that one doesn't have to draw a specific color to reach the end. Some cards have two marks of a color, in which case the player moves his or her marker ahead to the second-next space of that color. Finally, the deck contains one card for each named space, and drawing such a card moves a player directly to that space, either forward or backward.


In general the race is straightforward, woven around a simple story line about finding a lost king of candy land. The game takes longer to complete than one would expect, because the location cards are forever sending back players who are about to win, and adults may find they are losing patience the second or third time through the deck. Young children, however, seem to have an endless fascination for the game, and a surprising endurance to play to the finish.


The game was bought by Milton Bradley Company (who is now owned by Hasbro), which still produces it today. Actually, Hasbro produces several versions of the game and treats it as a brand. For example, they market Candy Land puzzles, a travel version and a handheld electronic version of the game.


External link

  • Hasbro's Candy Land page (http://www.hasbro.com/pl/page.viewproduct/product_id.8629/dn/default.cfm)

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