 | 1313 Dead End Drive - our price: $9.98 by Hasbro Toy
(16 reviews)  Editorial Review: Aunt Agatha has died and left you and 15 of her other relatives a fortune. Unfortunately, you have to go to her mansion to try to collect the money without getting "bumped off" by your greedy kin. Players move around the board (the mansion) trying to avoid pitfalls and trying to trap their opponents as they escape the house with the inheritance. |
 | Austin Powers- Pictionary - our price: $15.99 by USAopoly Toy
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 | Battle Ball Game - our price: $20.99 by Hasbro Toy
(6 reviews)  Customer Review: This Game Rocks: Battle Ball is a sweet game. I didnt even now there was such a thing tell i went to my friends house. We played Battle Ball for about 4 hours. |
 | Boggle Folio Game - our price: $19.99 by Hasbro Toy
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 | Boggle Junior Letters list: $11.99 - our price: $10.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(9 reviews)  Editorial Review: There's no need to be boggled by words. Boggle Jr. helps children learn letters, spelling, and reading while having loads of fun! This easy version of the terrifically popular adult Boggle uses pictures and matching games to allow children to make the connection between objects and their names. |
 | Boggle - our price: $13.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(39 reviews)  Editorial Review: You can't beat a classic like Boggle for sheer return of fun on one's investment in a simple game. A small container holds 16 cubes, each cube marked with a different letter on each of its six sides. Give the container a good shake, |
 | Bulls Eye Ball list: $19.99 by Hasbro Toy
(38 reviews)  Editorial Review: At first glance, Bullz-I-Ball seems like a miniature version of a popular arcade game, where players have to throw miniature basketballs into rings of three different levels to score points. But with another look at this handheld ball game, |
 | Clue Jr. The Case of the Hidden Toys list: $11.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(15 reviews)  Editorial Review: A neighborhood pet has taken a prized possession and is hiding it in the doghouse. Be the first to figure out which pet took what object. Each player assumes an identity--Johnny Green, Vivienne Scarlet, |
 | Clue list: $15.99 - our price: $12.95 by Parker Brothers Toy
(70 reviews)  Editorial Review: Poor Mr. Boddy has been shockingly murdered in his own mansion. To win this game, you must become a roving detective, sniffing out the answers to the classic mystery questions: Who among Mr. Boddy's guests committed the murder? |
 | Disney Monopoly Box Game - our price: $29.99 by Hasbro Toy
(12 reviews)  Editorial Review: All of your favorite Disney characters are featured in classic Monopolystyle for a family game that everyone can enjoy. You already know how to play,so nothing has changed--except a few things that actually make this versioncollectible. |
 | Electronic Catch Phrase Game list: $25.99 - our price: $24.99 by Hasbro Toy
(67 reviews)  Editorial Review: Ever play "Hot Potato" with a spud that ticks and talks? Welcome toElectronic Catch Phrase, the battery-powered (three AAA, not included) blend ofclue deduction and race against the clock. Two teams of two or more players eachalternate turns, |
 | Express Yourself Game list: $24.99 by Hasbro Toy
(4 reviews)  Editorial Review: Fans of Pictionary, Cranium, Rigamarole, and the like will love this hilarious and challenging variation on the classic Charades theme. Cluegivers "express" themselves by speaking, acting, or drawing clues to selected words, |
 | Groove It - our price: $21.99 by Hasbro Toy
Editorial Review: Groove It is evolved from earlier handheld games that annoyingly commanded players to push, twist or hit something, ever faster, to keep things going. Even CEOs lost their cool playing with those things. |
 | Guesstures - our price: $25.99 by Milton Bradley Toy
(41 reviews)  Editorial Review: Guesstures turns up the heat on the tired game of charades with a few modernizations. Good, quick pantomiming is still the thing, but now teams need to act out and guess four words in a matter of seconds. |
 | Jenga Extreme Game - our price: $17.99 by Hasbro Toy
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 | Jenga Truth or Dare - our price: $19.99 by Hasbro Toy
(14 reviews)  Editorial Review: Remember getting red-faced from those truths, or gigglingwith your friends over the dares while playing Truth or Dare? Thosedays are back with Jenga Truth or Dare. There are 18 red dare blocks,18 black truth blocks, |
 | Jenga list: $12.99 - our price: $11.99 by Milton Bradley Toy
(30 reviews)  Editorial Review: Show your steady hands and elementary structural knowledge in abattle against gravity when you play Jenga, a game of luck andprecision. First, assemble the 54 rectangular, hardwood blocks--smoothand shaped just right for stacking--into a three-piece-wide, |
 | Jeopardy - Remote list: $29.99 by Hasbro Toy
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 | Jeopardy Handheld Game by Hasbro Toy
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 | Life Collectors Edition list: $34.99 by Hasbro Toy
(9 reviews)  Editorial Review: Board games go through a few steps on the road to immortality:from idea to published game, maybe a decent review in Gamesmagazine, inclusion in their annual Top 100, perhaps evenretirement to its Hall of Fame. |
 | Lion King Simba Board Game list: $15.99 by Hasbro Toy
(3 reviews)  Customer Review: dont buy this toy: this is not a good toy It takes forever to set up and then is not much fun to play with. |
 | Lizzie Game Talk - our price: $19.99 by Hasbro Toy
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 | Mission Command Air Game list: $19.99 - our price: $9.98 by Hasbro Toy
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 | Mission Command Sea Game list: $19.99 - our price: $9.98 by Hasbro Toy
(1 reviews)  Customer Review: Mission Command Sea Game Best of the bunch!: This new version of the earlier issue of "Carrier Strike" is a slimmed down, less complicated issue that improves on re-play ability. |
 | Monopoly - The American Edition Game - our price: $9.97 by Hasbro Toy
(21 May, 2002)
(12 reviews)  Editorial Review: The most popular game in the world is showing some serious Americanpatriotism. With red, white, and blue as the signature colors, Monopoly playerscan buy, sell, and build up some favorite slices of America. |
 | Monopoly Deluxe Edition - our price: $20.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(46 reviews)  Editorial Review: Sure, this real estate trading game has been the world's most popular board game for more than six decades, but what makes this edition "deluxe"? For one thing, it brings back the sturdywooden (not plastic) houses and hotels of years gone by. |
 | Monopoly Junior list: $11.99 - our price: $10.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(31 reviews)  Editorial Review: Just like its big brother, Monopoly Jr. is big-time fun for everyone! Spend a day at the amusement park. Ride the roller coaster, bumper cars, or Ferris wheel. How about a game of miniature golf or a visit to the haunted house? |
 | Monopoly Toys 'R' Us Times Square Edition list: $34.99 - our price: $29.99 by Hasbro Toy
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 | Monopoly Train Tin by Hasbro Toy
(20 October, 2003)
(1 reviews)  Customer Review: Beautiful and Limited: I collect monopoly games and I must say that the Collector's Tin Series Collection are the classiest of all; |
 | Monopoly: Spanish Version - our price: $10.99 by Hasbro Toy
(3 reviews)  Customer Review: Spanish Monopoly Review: This is really a great game... it's perfect for any students taking Spanish and could be used during down time in a classroom. |
 | Monopoly - our price: $10.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(94 reviews)  Editorial Review: In 1934, in the midst of the Great Depression, an unemployed heating engineer from Pennsylvania created the game of Monopoly. Realizing that his get-rich theme might appeal to other Americans, he had the game printed and distributed in a Philadelphia department store. |
 | Pictionary - The Game of Quick Draw list: $25.99 - our price: $19.99 by Milton Bradley Toy
(29 reviews)  Editorial Review: Can you draw a cat? How about sketching something that conveys the word area or The English Patient? Can you do it in less than 60 seconds while your team yells the wrong answers at you and the other team is close to getting it right? |
 | Pokemon Sorry Game list: $16.99 by Hasbro Toy
(5 reviews)  Editorial Review: What do you get when you cross Parker Brothers with Pikachu? Theclassic game of Slides and Safety Zones with Squirtle and Staryu? Why,Pokémon Sorry!, naturally. Gently reworked to tie in to thecharacters featured in the animated series, |
 | Risk Tin - our price: $29.99 by Hasbro Toy
(06 October, 2003)
(3 reviews)  Customer Review: Risk Tin is weak: I was very disappointed with the Risk Tin. Risk itself is a great game, but the tin, board, and pieces in this set are very weak. |
 | Risk list: $23.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(99 reviews)  Editorial Review: Risk--the game of world conquest--features a tri-fold game board that is a map of six continents divided into 42 territories. It's a game of strategy as you battle to win by launching daring attacks, defending your territory, |
 | Scattergories list: $25.99 - our price: $19.99 by Milton Bradley Toy
(54 reviews)  Editorial Review: Scattergories is a fast-paced word game that's a real crowd pleaser. Each player takes a categorylist with 12 categories--such as vegetable, state, president, things you throw away--and must write down thename of one item that fits into each category. |
 | Scrabble - Deluxe Edition list: $31.99 - our price: $24.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(68 reviews)  Editorial Review: It's still hard to get a triple word score, the tiles are still made of wood, there's only one "X" in the whole box, and family feuds are increasing exponentially. But after 50 years, Scrabble has had a face-lift: a swivel base allows the board to turn so players don't have to work upside down, |
 | Scrabble Game folio - our price: $19.99 by Hasbro Toy
(15 reviews)  Customer Review: alternative: For those who like the idea of travel scrabble but have found this product lacking, I recommend the game UpWords. It does have slightly different rules, |
 | Scrabble Junior - our price: $10.99 by Hasbro Toy
(11 reviews)  Editorial Review: If there's any game out there that normally makes little kidsfeel left out, it's Scrabble, the word game that's usually played byadults and older kids. But Scrabble Junior is a great way to introduceyoung children to the game and get them interested in how words areformed. |
 | Scrabble list: $12.99 - our price: $11.99 by Milton Bradley Toy
(61 reviews)  Editorial Review: After all these years, it's still hard to get a triple word score, the tiles are still made of wood, and there's only one "X" in the whole box. The game of Scrabble has sparked feuds and a near-cult following. |
 | Simpsons Clue - our price: $19.99 by Hasbro Toy
(11 July, 2002)
(10 reviews)  Editorial Review: Okay, it's not the most complex toy that's ever been attempted. They didn't re-invent the rules of the classic murder mystery game Clue, they simply reproduced it with characters, locations, and weapons from the world of The Simpsons. |
 | Sorry! Card Revenge Game by Hasbro Toy
(01 October, 2004)
Editorial Review:   Sometimes it takes some radical re-engineering to breathe new life into a classic board game. In this, the latest incarnation of the old favorite "Sorry", the traditional board has been scrapped, |
 | Sorry! Disney - our price: $17.99 by Hasbro Toy
(7 reviews)  Editorial Review: This classic game of luck, strategy, and determination is easy to grasp forchildren as young as 6 years old, yet it's fun for adults and older siblings too. ThisDisney-themed version features such classic Disney characters as Cruella De Vil, |
 | Sorry list: $16.99 - our price: $12.99 by Parker Brothers Toy
(38 reviews)  Editorial Review: This classic game of luck, strategy, and determination is easy to grasp for children as young as 6 years old, yet it's fun for adults and older siblings too. By drawing cards, players move their game pieces around the board, |
 | Spanish Scrabble - our price: $14.99 by Hasbro Toy
(7 reviews)  Customer Review: Timeless and classic.: Scrabble is probably one of the games I remember playing first as an older kid; and the Spanish version was what I played at family gatherings - it's part of my heritage. |
 | Taboo - our price: $25.99 by Milton Bradley Toy
(82 reviews)  Editorial Review: It sounds so simple: get your team to name common words withoutvoicing a few choice descriptors. But could you describe a wristwatchwithout mentioning time, wrist, or clock? Taboo rewards those whothink--and speak--fast. |
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