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Encyclopedia > Trouble (board game)

Trouble is a simple, Pachisi-like race game in which players compete to be the first to send four markers all the way around a board, using dice to determine how far they move each turn. It is made by Hasbro. another pachisi board a pachisi board Pachisi is a board game thought to originate in India; it is described as the national game of India. ... Rolling dice Dice (the plural of the word die, probably from the Latin dare: to give) are, in general, small polyhedral objects with the faces marked with numbers or other symbols, thrown in order to choose one of the faces randomly. ... Hasbro (NYSE: HAS) is an American toy and game company. ...


As with other games of this type, players can send opponents' pieces back to the start by landing on them, and are protected from capture after arriving in the final few slots. Unlike more complex race games, however, counters cannot be maneuvered to block opponents' moves.


The most notable feature of Trouble is the "Pop-o-matic" container: a clear plastic hemisphere over a flexible sheet, holding the die. Players "roll" the die by pressing down quickly on the bubble, which flexes the sheet and throws the die upward, inside the container. The main advantage of the Popomatic, aside from the oddly pleasing noise it makes, is that the die cannot be lost. This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...


Rules

In order to start playing, the player must get his pawns out of his jail (nest) with a 6. It is also useful to gain an extra turn.


Pawns can also be eaten in the home square if a player is in jail and he gets out while pawns are on the home square.


Other names

The game was once marketed in Canada by Irwin under the name "Frustration."


  Results from FactBites:
 
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Trouble (board game) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (199 words)
Trouble is a simple, Pachisi-like race game in which players compete to be the first to send four markers all the way around a board, using dice to determine how far they move each turn.
As with other games of this type, players can send opponents' pieces back to the start by landing on them, and are protected from capture after arriving in the final few slots.
The most notable feature of Trouble is the "Pop-o-matic" container: a clear plastic hemisphere over a flexible sheet, holding the die.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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