I did searching on the subject matter and found most persons will go together with your blog. JWm5VF You could certainly see your expertise in the work you write. The world hopes for more passionate writers like you who aren at afraid to say how they believe. Always go after your heart. UxsGyG Thanks for sharing this good piece. Very inspiring! You are an expert in this topic! Did you develop this web site yourself?
JPiuW0 Its hard to find good help I am regularly saying that its hard to get quality help, but here is. DTmo2x I appreciate you sharing this blog. Much thanks again. Really Great. The original edition of the game came with 6, Trivial Pursuit questions on 1, Trivial Pursuit cards.
Different editions have different numbers of questions. This is the first edition of Trivial Pursuit. It is considered the second-toughest edition of Trivial Pursuit. The cards for this edition set the standard for all future editions of the game--vaguely rectangular in shape with a dark blue border.
The answer side had the word "Genus" in script on the left side of the card with answers on the right, next to the color code and symbol for each category. The front had just the thin blue border and the six color and category code markers along with the questions on the right side.
Not the easiest and not the hardest edition of the basic Trivial Pursuit game, Genus II also came with 6, questions on 1, Trivial Pursuit cards. The biggest difference with this edition's Trivial Pursuit cards is the look of the card. These cards had a yellow or cornsilk border instead of dark blue, though all the original categories and colors were intact.
Genus II has the distinction of having the hardest "Entertainment" category of all editions of the game, probably thanks to a wider scope of Entertainment questions from earlier in the last few centuries. It took Parker Brothers, who then owned the Trivial Pursuit license, a decade to come up with a new set of Genus questions. This led to a big debate about whether or not Trivial Pursuit was getting "dumbed down" or not. Parker Brothers has put out many editions, trying to market to specific niches of the gaming public.
In an attempt to market to a wider audience, some later editions have not been as difficult as the earliest offerings. It was named Genus because the questions are general in nature, over a wide range of broad topics. As with all Trivial Pursuit games, the original had six categories. This section is a quick recap of the Trival Pursuit instructions. Each game box comes with thousands of different trivia cards.
Each card has one question from each category listed above. Whenever a player lands on a color, the next card is drawn and the color-coded question is asked. Certain genus edition categories seem a combination of two seemingly unrelated topics. This was done to balance the game. Certain people may have vast knowledge of sports, so the category also includes questions about subjects such as cigars or wine.
This also gives a person with little knowledge of sports a chance to answer these questions. That player or team moves the respective playing piece a number of spaces equal to the number rolled. When a playing piece lands on a colored space, that player must answer a question from that category.
The more questions are answered on a turn, the greater the odds the player eventually will land on a pie space. Order of play passes in a clockwise rotation. The Trivial Pursuit board has a circular shape to it, like a piece of pie.
Players begin in the middle of the board. These players can take one of six different paths out of the center of the board, which spread out like spokes on a wheel. Each of these paths lead to a space marked with a color coded pie piece. When a player lands on this space, that player answers a question as if having landed on any other space.
If the question is answered correctly, though, that player gets a piece of the pie corresponding with that color.
0コメント