I started playing games young, there wasn’t much on TV (and to be fair,
you had to have a TV in the first place to watch it, which we didn’t), and when
you lived in Yorkshire, you didn’t have to be told life was Grim Up North (tm),
you knew it. But I had a few things I was grateful for, a
few people that brightened my life immensely.
One of these was my Nan...
My Nan was one of those fierce ladies, she was one of those ladies who
wouldn’t put up with things that were wrong, she liked a beer in the evening
(and sometimes one at dinnertime), she cooked meals that consisted of meat and
potatoes, with occasionally non essential (that’d be everything that’s not a
potato) vegetables and gravy that you could stick a knife in, and she believed
in doing what she wanted to do, rather than waiting for someone to tell her she
could do things.
One of these things was playing games.
Nan liked a game or two, and it was her that introduced me and my
brother to the game of Yahtzee. For
those who’ve (somehow) never seen it, it’s a game that involves the rolling of
five dice to try and get certain combinations to score the most points.
It’s not rocket science by any stretch of the imagination...
What it is, is a game that takes no time at all to learn and can be
played by almost people of any age, and the best thing of it is that every game
is completely different, you get good games and you get bad, and it’s what you
do with the dice that makes the game interesting. The set that we learned on was the basic
1978 version, that came with one set of dice, one bowl in which to throw them,
and bits on the bowl to rest the dice when you wanted to keep them.
So after your first roll, it might look like this
After your second, this
And so on.
The game had an element of chance in it, but if you played smart and
didn’t scrub out the possibilities that you could make when you had to rub
something off the score sheet, then you stood a good chance of making the right
scores to win the game. There wasn’t a
problem with this game as it stood, the problem was that the people making it
kept on seeing silly things to do with it to try and sell more copies of a game
that didn’t need to be changed or improved.
Bigger score sheets for example...
And then take Yahtzee Hold Em Poker (please) for example...
Shiny...
Very shiny
But I can hear my Nan talking back across the years, clear as if she
were standing next to me, she’d take one look at this and say “But it’s Poker,
why don’t we just use cards...?”
I have to agree, so I’ll be back here with the basic set having fun
rolling dice.