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Pizza Box Football
Tabletop sports games have been around in one form or another for
about a hundred years, though it's easy to overlook them in an age
where computer simulations can provide realtime, down-on-the-field
excitement enhanced by graphics that make the game look like the actual
sport. Understandably, computer sports games are wildly successful, and
get better all the time.
Yet, there's still something to be said for that face-to-face
challenge offered by tabletop games --- making decisions, rolling dice,
and reading charts for results --- and so there will probably always be
a market for tabletop sports games.
Whether you're an avid football junkie, or you're not even familiar
with the sport, Pizza Box Football, by On The Line Game Company, is the
tabletop football game to own. Why the name? Well, it's packaged in a
cardboard box that opens up like a pizza box. But inside that box with
the gimmicky name is a truly fun football game that places you in the
head coach's job.
Components:
The game equipment is simple but attractive, and
highly functional. The player aids list the 6 steps for calling and
resolving plays each down, and the charts are easy to read and
understand. The game board is merely used to mark the position of the
ball and the First Down marker, but also features peg tracks for
quarter, down, time, and timeouts. PBF also includes colored plastic
pegs and the all the dice needed to play.
Click on this link to the outstanding Pizza Box Football (PBF)
website: http://pizzaboxfootball.com,
where you can see the game equipment, and read the rules. The webpage
recommends the game for ages 12 to adult, but a child as young as 8 years
old could play if he/she knows how football is played.
Red Zone Shootout and Backyard Brawl are two abbreviated versions
of PBF that offer coaches some football thrills in a short amount of
time. They are also excellent tools for teaching the game. However,
almost every fan is going to grab for the full game versions: Smashmouth
Full Game, and Professional Full Game.
Smashmouth Full Game is played in four quarters like regulation
football, with 30 plays per quarter. Each coach has an equal 'generic'
team, so the outcome rests on the strategies, play calls, and die rolls
of the players. As the rules on the website explain, there are 3
offensive plays and 3 defensive plays, but the rules also cover QB
Pressure, Mishaps, kick-offs and field goals, onside kicks, punts, and
short-punts.
Professional Full Game is the Smashmouth Full Game with time
management introduced. Instead of a quarter comprising 30 plays, each
quarter consists of 90 time units, and each kind of play or field action
is assigned a cost of 0-4 time units. This challenges coaches to use
the clock to their best advantage, strategically calling plays and
timeouts to optimize their opportunities. It actually doesn't take
much any longer to play Professional Full Game than it does Smashmouth.
Additionally, there are free-download rules for Goal Line Defense, Long
Bomb Pass Play, Home Field Advantage, and playing Solitaire.
Game Play:
The flow of the game is very smooth, and as
coaches get familiar with the 6 steps for each down, they'll seldom
refer to the player aid. Each down can be resolved in 15-20 seconds,
and with no penalties (they're factored into the gain/loss results); no
time-outs between changes of possession and quarters, no half-time show,
and no 2-minute warning time outs, a game can be played in 75-90
minutes between experienced coaches. Your first few games may take a
little longer.
The Expansion
Click on this link for information regarding the
Pizza Box Football
Expansion Set. As you can see, the Expansion Rules add 3 offensive and 3
defensive play options to
the basic 3 offensive/3defensive options in PBF, creating more realism
in the coaching options by adding run blitzing, QB blitzing, route
jumps, screen passes, draw plays, and play action. There is a set of the
Expansion Rules included in the basic PBF game, so PBF fans can get
right into the richer game without buying the Expansion.
But you're going to buy the Expansion Set anyway!! Why? Because the
key feature of the expansion is the set of individual charts for each of
the 32 pro (NFL) teams, thus allowing coaches to simulate pro match-ups
with their favorite teams. These charts are based on the 2004 season
statistics, and On The Line intends to publish new team sets each year.
These teams are also rated on a scale of 1-3 in seven separate
categories:
- Offensive Run, Short Pass, Long Pass
- Defense against Run, Short Pass, Long Pass
- Mishaps
For example, a rating of 1 (weak) or 3 (strong) in a defensive category
increases the chances that a defensive die roll will be modified
downward or upward, respectively. This enables coaches to play to
their teams advantages, and work on the opponent's disadvantages.
Summary
Pizza Box Football is not a detailed football simulation with
complex rules. Thankfully, it is a wonderful table-top football game
that is ready to play almost right of the box, and provides hours of
entertainment. I've played five games, using 'generic' teams and pro
teams, Smashmouth and Professional Full Game rules, and I have to say
that it gets more fun each time I play. If you're into football and
tabletop gaming, I strongly recommend this game.
- Bill Eldard
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What's Your Game?
Remember the first time?
For some it was on the kitchen table, or on
the living room floor in front of the television. For others, it was
in
that summer vacation cabin on a rainy day, or in a friend's
basement.
What are we talking about? Why, the first time you
played Monopoly, of course.
Ask people to name a boardgame, and most will probably name this
old classic. Baby-boomers
may have started early in life with Candyland, or Shoots
&
Ladders, then 'graduated' to other classics published by Parker
Brothers and Milton Bradley, such as Clue, Sorry, The Game of
Life,
Careers, Easy Money, and Mouse Trap. And don't forget
Operation, Lie Detector, and Mystery Date. By
playing games, and regardless of age, we learned about playing by
rules,
interacting with friends, and thinking through challenges.
Whatever happened to those games, anyway? Well, if you've shopped
around a Toys 'R' Us or Target, you'll still find many of them; many
survived (with occasional facelifts) to remain on store shelves over
the
years. Your family may even own a few. But you're probably not aware
of some of the really challenging and fun games available today.
"Gaming isn't about rolling dice and moving your
piece around a track. Gaming is about interaction, decisions, and
skills."
- Alan Moon, award-winning
game designer
Today, the best new board and card game
designs are coming from European publishers, and particularly German
companies. While Parker Brothers, Milton Bradley, and Mattel-now
all owned by toy mega-giant Hasbro - continue to publish the classics,
they rarely publish a new title that isn't tied to a movie,
television,
or pop music subject. And variations - not only can you buy
Monopoly, but you can find Star Wars Monopoly, NASCAR
Monopoly, I Love Lucy Monopoly, Simpsons Monopoly, Barbie Monopoly,
Pokemon Monopoly... well, you get the picture.
One particular
German design is widely credited with not only rejuvenating
boardgaming
in Europe, but sparking an awareness and growing interest in the US.
Klaus Teuber's The Settlers of Catan (Die Siedler von Catan)
first appeared in the mid-'90s, and has sold tens of thousands of
copies
in Europe and North America. Settlers is a highly interactive
game, as players gain and trade construction resources to develop
roads,
settlements, and cities in order to acquire victory points. The game
board consists of randomly aligned hexagonal tiles, thus assuring that
each game is different. It is considered an outstanding game to
introduce novice gamers to the hobby, and can its strategies and
excitement can be enhanced by the addition of expansion kits that
introduce more rules (Seafarers of Catan, Cities & Knights of
Catan.
)
The explosion of game titles cover a number of gaming
genres, and at varying levels of complexity, assuring that there is
something for everyone. Would you like to run a railroad company
laying
rails and moving freight across the US, or Europe, or India, or even
the
Moon? Would you like to race Formula 1 cars on any one of two dozen
Grand Prix tracks around the world, or pilot a riverboat in a race on
the mighty Mississippi? How would you like to be a Machiavellian
prince
during the Renaissance, or the builder of an ancient civilization?
You
can hunt for Dracula through the streets of London, or solve a mystery
in a medieval abbey, or make the best deals buying and selling
expensive
paintings to be the top art dealer at the auction? Or maybe you're
just
looking for a simple, new boardgame or cardgame that can be played in
15
or 30 minutes.
There are hundreds of great games are out there
waiting for you now.
Usually, the best of the European/German
designs are produced by American companies with the same high quality
components of the German originals, with rules and game text published
in English. These companies include Mayfair Games, Rio Grande Games,
and Fantasy Flight, and most recently, new companies like Days of
Wonder
and berplay. And when games are unavailable in English, there are
online resources providing downloadable translations of rules and
text.
We carry the very best in contemporary German games, and if
you don't see a particular title on our shelves, just ask and we can
probably order it for you. Additionally, our in-house gaming group
meets every Saturday from 3:00 - 8:00pm, and welcomes newcomers to
discover the fun of German games.
So, if you remember playing
boardgames and cardgames with family and friends, and want to bring
that
fun and social interaction back, visit us, or contact us by phone or
Email, and let us help you select the games best suited to your tastes
and skills.
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