I grew up with an abacus, but never owned a Scrabble game. There's even a game that uses the word "abacus". The player's score is tallied at the end, and is determined by the number of times the word is doubled, and the number of 2-letter words that are formed. The player must place their tiles in the word, and if they can't, they're out. The starting set has 20 words on the board, which are then doubled in both directions with a "SCRAB" instruction.Īfter the first turn, the words are cut in half, and the player must add the words from each half to form as many 2-letter words as they can. Very simple and straightforward, but it's also a great learning tool. Let me add my two cents: if you ever wanted a game to teach you basicīoard game concepts - my vote goes to Scrabble. The only way to play it is to purchase the cartridges for the games (some games are duplicated between the two models).ī's user Mario has this to say about the series in the Forum thread below: Paperino paesino If you prefer the cartridge-based version, you can get an "Edison" model with all the same games, plus a magnifying glass, a chemistry set, and assorted other games. An early model has only five games, which are called Party, Monopoly, Scrabble, Uno, and Domino, and comes in two versions - one is made by Mattel and the other by Milton Bradley. The machine has no disk drive and runs games written to it on tape via a reel-to-reel cartridge reader.
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