Product Description
Introducing the most inclusive trivial Pursuit ever. With three different levels of difficulty -- easy, medium and hard -- everyone has a chance to succeed. Plus, the all-new game board has been redesigned to enhance game play and allow for more wedge questions. For two or more players.The questions in this version were clearly outsourced or written by helper monkeys with typewriters. After reviewing more than twenty "sports" questions, we found only one card related to either of the big three sports: NFL, MLB, or NBA- unfortunately, that question related to the color of a basketball. The entertainment value was only increased by the fact that we made so much fun of the terrible questions.
My family loves to play games and I received this one for Christmas. It is generally like the traditional Trivial Pursuit games but with a couple of interesting twists. With the 3 levels of questions it levels the playing field when playing with different age groups. We are all adults but I thing younger people would find this game fun as well. It's a keeper!
This version of Trivial Pursuit is not worth $1. The questions appear to have been assembled in a rush. The "easy" questions can be ridiculously hard and the "hard" questions can be easy. Some questions make no sense unless you read other questions on the card (each card's questions are on the same subject). Do not waste your money.
We bought this because it said it had easy questions and we thought our children would be able to play it with us, it is terrible the easy questions are harder than the questions on the original trivial pursuit. Also made very cheap, the cards are way thinner than the old cards. Plus all the questions on one card pertain to one thing so it is easy to memorize the cards after playing a few times.
MY FAMILY AND I HAVE PLAYED TRIVIAL PURSUIT SINCE THE INCEPTION OF THE GAME & WANTED THE NEWEST VERSION...WE PLAYED DURING CHRISTMAS & FULLY ENJOYED THE EXPERIENCE.
This is overall, a good version of Trivial Pursuit, but there are a few problems with it. The easy, medium, and hard questions aren't very consistant. While playing it with children all around the age of 12, they would get easy questions as simple as "what color is a basketball usually" to "What is the name of the ship on Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island?". I'd say either play with adults and older teens only or make sure you have some thick skinned 12 year olds.
This new version is an interesting twist on the original game, but not sure I like the game. Seems to take even longer than the original. Might be ok once I get used to it. The questions, while varied from easy to hard, all seem much harder than the original game. Not a bad game, and not sorry we got it.
This is fun for teenager and up. The added parts to the original game make it interesting.
We played this version of Trivial Pursuit over the holidays and got very frustrated with the questions seeming to be extremely heavy on British and British Empire questions---history, politics, art, culture etc. Is there a British version as opposed to an American version? The younger people in our group were so pleased to finally have an updated version of Trivial Pursuit (thinking they could have a bit of an advantage over us oldsters) but the game was just frustrating with the heavy emphasis on British knowledge. After playing, our only resolution was to find out if there is another version of the game.
The game tries to make a big bang out of its 25th anniversary and fails.
A new method of play is introduced, whereby an entire card might be dedicated to one subject, a particular movie or city for example. All the questions are then based around that subject.
Not a bad approach, but we have found that quite often a question under "History" most of us would consider "Geography" and so on. Even though the card might say "Science" the six questions on the card could easily be anything but science related, or only science if one considers questions about Star Wars for example, to be "scientific."
The second whiz bang idea was the creation of an outer ring on which the player advances a second token. Depending on where that token is, the player can impact another players position on the board, compete for a slice of the pie, etc. However this novelty suffers from 1) we tend to forget to move the darn token along and 2) the impact on other players is, well, trivial. The outer ring is more gimmick than anything, and the last two times we played, it was abandoned.
Others have pointed out errors in the cards, yes those exist too.
If you are looking for a new set of questions, its an awful lot to pay just for those.
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About Trivial Pursuit 25th Anniversary Ed detail
- Amazon Sales Rank: #768 in Toys & Games
- Brand: Trival Pursuit
- Model: 44951
- Dimensions: 10.60" h x 10.60" w x 3.50" l, 3.05 pounds
Features
- Celebrating 25 years, Trivial Pursuit presents Trivial Pursuit 25th Anniversary Edition; for the first time ever, Trivial Pursuit cards cover one topic with three question levels: easy, medium, and hard
- The more challenging the question you answer, the farther you will move along the bonus track
- The zones along the track let you steal wedges, move opponents' tokens, and more
- Includes game board, 432 question-and-answer cards, 6 card holders, 6 scoring tokens, 6 track pawns, 36 scoring wedges, die and instructions
- Perfect party game for 2 to 36 people or teams
Read more Trivial Pursuit 25th Anniversary Ed
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