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Has Apple Created the Perfect Board Game Platform?

andylim writes "recombu.com is running an interesting piece about how Apple has created a 'Jumanji (board game) platform.' The 9.7-inch multi-touch screen is perfect for playing board games at home, and you could use Wi-Fi or 3G to play against other people when you're on your own. What would be really interesting is if you could pair the iPad with iPhones, 'Imagine a Scrabble iPad game that used iPhones as letter holders. You could hold up your iPhone so that no one else could see your letters and when you were ready to make a word on the Scrabble iPad board, you could slide them on to the board by flicking the word tiles off your iPhone.' Now that would be cool."

5 of 531 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Uh, no. They didn't. by farble1670 · · Score: 3, Informative

    i just bought stratego and monopoly from target. they came in a wood box. all quality parts. $19.99.

  2. Re:Uh, no. They didn't. by WaXHeLL · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most people who play board games really don't sit around and play Scrabble and Monopoly all the time.

    They play games like:
    Settlers of Catan
    Power Grid
    Runewars
    Puerto Rico
    Dominion

    etc

    All of those are not cheap at all.

    --
    The troll with karma.
  3. Re:Uh, no. They didn't. by alannon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ugg, I'm getting tired of hearing this misunderstanding. The iPhone OS is completely, 100% capable of full multitasking and uses multithreading extensively. Apple has chosen to restrict most of its own and all 3rd party applications to run only 1 at a time. Several built-in applications run in the background instead of exiting, such as Safari, Mail and the Phone applications. I do not agree with their decision to do this, however, but understand why they did. In a way, though, I should be thankful that so many people are complaining about this, even not entirely accurately, since I think the negative publicity might be enough to push Apple to change this. Apple isn't completely immune to consumer pressure.

  4. Re:Uh, no. They didn't. by mcvos · · Score: 3, Informative

    What you're saying is: you're not a board gamer, you're not familiar with modern board games, the only board games you do know are old and tired, and you only play those as a last resort.

    Maybe you should have a look at BoardGameGeek. Several of the games he mentioned are in the top-10, and deservedly so.

  5. Re:Uh, no. They didn't. by mcvos · · Score: 3, Informative

    What board games are you buying and where are you shopping? Last time I checked Scrabble and Monopoly were still in the sub-20 dollar range. Even Axis and Allies is 40-50 bucks.

    Those are some pretty old games. True, there are also many recent boardgames are also in the $20-$30 price bracket, but there are also a lot that cost $50+ even for just the basic game. With expansions, many games can easily cost more than $100. Even good old Settlers of Catan can get close to $200 if you buy all the expansions.

    The basic ASL rulebook costs $100, and that's without any boards. Get Beyond Valor as well, and you're close to $200. I'm sure there are people who've spent more than $1000 on that game. (Hm... porting VASL to the iPad could be a very good idea.)

    Speaking of games that people spend $1000s on, what about Magic the Gathering? Playing that on a couple of automated boards so you don't have to buy all the cards, could save you a fortune.