 | Austin Powers- Pictionary - our price: $15.99 by USAopoly Toy
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 | 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 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, |
 | 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? |
 | Pictionary, Jr. - our price: $17.99 by Milton Bradley Toy
(5 reviews)  Editorial Review: Speed, not artistry, is the key to Pictionary Junior, a party game that stole the show from Charades in the '80s. The kids' version, which has been updated with hundreds of new words to draw, has hints and two levels of play. |
 | Scattergories Bible Edition Game list: $29.99 - our price: $26.99 by TaliCor Toy
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 | 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. |
 | 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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