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Looking for family fun? Try a new game
Published: 1/8/2013 10:11 AM
Last Modified: 1/8/2013 10:34 AM

We are a game-playing family. Both my husband and I grew up with family game time and continue it with our children.

Board games, dice games and even Wii -- "Mario Party 8" or "Just Dance," anyone? -- can provide hours of family fun. My mom says my brothers and I practically learned to count by playing a variety of card games as children.

Family game time can be a great bonding experience, where laughing, joking and cheering each other on is part of the fun. The games allow you to learn about one another and learn new skills.

Here are a few of our favorite games that can be played with families of young children:


Tenzi. Our latest obsession is billed as "the world's fastest game," and it is incredibly easy. Each player has a set of 10 dice, and the object is to roll the dice as fast as you can until all 10 show the same number. Whoever gets there first yells "Tenzi!" and then the fun begins again. It's like Yatzee but much simpler, and everyone plays at once. We broke the game in Christmas night by playing with various family members who rotated in and out.


Qwirkle. Matching colors and shapes are the keys to this game. If you complete a row of six of the same shapes or six of same color, you get a qwirkle -- and six bonus points. It is simple and strategic at the same time, but the game can stretch on for a while.


Gather 'Round Dinner Game. This entertaining game is played during a family meal. (We enjoy it at weekend breakfasts.) Press a button and the light lands on sentence telling you what to do. The actions range from the easy -- "Wink, snap and clap five times fast" and "Everybody eat a bite of dinner" -- to the difficult -- "Go around the table naming a vegetable beginning with each letter of the alphabet" and "Think of an animal for everyone to guess using yes or no questions."

Our other favorites require a certain level of literacy to play:

Trivial Pursuit. We have various sets of questions, including boxes from Trivial Pursuit Jr. and a pack of Disney cards, that allow my 8- and 12-year-olds to play on almost equal footing.

Scattergories. My kids are getting really good at this game in which you roll a letter and then all of your answers must start with that letter. You can earn two points for a two-word answer that both start with the letter. (If the letter is "m" and the category is TV show, you get one point for "Modern Family" but two for "Mork and Mindy.") The timer makes this extra challenging.

Monopoly. We like to play one of the variations of this game where each player is dealt three properties to start and we set a timer for one hour. Whoever has the most capital -- that is money and property -- at the end of the hour wins.

Sorry. It's a classic draw-a-card-and-move-your-piece game, but I still love playing it with my 8-year-old.

Colleen Almeida Smith is a Tulsa World assistant editor and mother of a second-grader and a seventh-grader. Follow her on Twitter at twitter.com/colleenalmeida.

Written by
Colleen Almeida Smith
Staff Writer



Reader Comments 1 Total

ClanJoyWalkSig (last month)
Scattergories with my family is so much fun I take an Advil beforehand to ward off a laughing headache before it happens. My grandson loves UNO, so we play that, too. Good for remembering how to follow directions, counting, etc.
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Bill Sherman, grandfather of 12

He and his wife have six children and 12 grandchildren and he enjoys running around town on his dorky scooters and watching the Green Bay Packers. He moved to Tulsa in the 1980s to attend Bible school. Sherman is the Tulsa World’s religion writer.

Rod Walton, father of four

He and his wife Laura have been married since 1989. They have four children -- Rachel, 20; Rebecca, 18; Hayley, 15, and Will, 13. Walton is a business writer for the Tulsa World Business section and covers the energy industry.

Colleen Almeida Smith, mother of two

She and her husband have two daughters, ages 7 and 12. She loves reading and anything about food -- cooking it, eating it, and reading and writing about it. Almeida Smith is an assistant editor.

Michael Overall, father of a toddler

His 4-year-old son will introduce himself to people as “Gavin Jared Overall, My Daddy’s Buddy.” Gavin likes model trains, iPads and sleeping late, except on the weekends, when he likes to get up early. Overall is a general assignment reporter for the Tulsa World city desk.

Althea Peterson, mother of an infant

She recently returned to work at the Tulsa World after two months of maternity leave with her daughter. She followed her older brother from rural Wisconsin to the University of Oklahoma. Peterson is a staff writer who also contributes to the Weather World blog.

June Straight, mother of two

With seven years between their daughters, she and her husband split their time between dealing with dirty diapers from one kid and dirty looks from the other. Straight is a designer for the Tulsa World.


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