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Friday, 14 July 2023

1998: Cranium

1974 is an important year for the gaming hobby. It is the year that Dungeons & Dragons was introduced, the original RPG from which all other RPGs would ultimately be derived and the original RPG from which so many computer games would draw for their inspiration. It is fitting that the current owner of the game, Wizards of the Coast, released the new version, Dungeons & Dragons, Fifth Edition, in the year of the game’s fortieth anniversary. To celebrate this, Reviews from R’lyeh will be running a series of reviews from the hobby’s anniversary years, thus there will be reviews from 1974, from 1984, from 1994, and from 2004—the thirtieth, twentieth, and tenth anniversaries of the titles. These will be retrospectives, in each case an opportunity to re-appraise interesting titles and true classics decades on from the year of their original release.

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It is surprising to realise that Cranium is twenty-five years old. Originally published by Cranium, Inc. via Amazon and Starbucks—of all places!—‘The Game for Your Whole Brain’ was subsequently published by Hasbro, Inc. and sold everywhere. To celebrate its silver anniversary, its current publisher, Funko Games has released the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition, which combines its sketching, acting, humming, sculpting, picture-puzzling, and word unscrambling game into a very attractive and sturdy package. Designed for four players aged twelve and up, it still is what it always was—a party package of games, which asks the players to guess answers based on an image drawn on a card, or from a sound or a song, answer trivia questions, solve word or picture puzzles, and infamously, sculpt an object which hopefully will be the clue to what is on the card. So, one part Pictionary, one-part Trivial Pursuit, one-part Scrabble, one-part Charades. The challenges in
Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition can be divided into four categories—red Fact & Picture Challenges, yellow Word & Letter Puzzles, red Drawing & Sculpting, and green Acting & Sound Effects—and with a grand total of eighteen specific challenges divided between the four, there is always something new and interesting for the players to do. And given the silliness of some of the tasks, laugh at them as well.

What strikes you first about the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is how it is packaged. It comes as a fat disc or case. The top half is purple, the lower half white, and with an undulating edge to the top and bottom of the case, what the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition actually looks like is a cake. In fact, a celebratory cake with purple icing on the top! What strikes you second about the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is the fact that everything is contained within the case. This includes challenge cards, the mini-white boards and their dry-erase pens, the timer, the team pawns, the counters, the movement die, and of course, the pot of ‘Cranium Clay’ used for the sculpture challenge. What strikes you third about the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is the movement die. It is a ten-sided die, but marked with five colours—twice. If you are an experienced gamer, then you will have seen this in the last twenty-five years, but for the casual gamer, it could be a first.

At the start of the game, the players divide into two teams. The blue team and the orange team. Each team has a mover in a corresponding colour. Everything is removed from the case in readiness for play and one of the game’s two decks is shuffled and placed in the slot in the middle of the case. This is where the cards are drawn from, turn to turn. Each team receives a reference sheet, which explains all eighteen categories, and a set of four Bonus Coins. There are two ‘Reroll’ coins, a ‘Move +1’ coin, and a ‘Move +2’ coin. The first two allow the die to be rerolled, whereas the other two grant a bonus to movement if a challenge is successful. All four can only be used once per game and are dropped into the slot atop the case when used. On a turn, each team will roll the die. This determines the category or colour of challenge they will perform. The opposing team will draw a card and set the challenge for the team based on the colour on the die. If the current team rolled purple, it can choose any colour. The team can also choose whether or not to use a ‘Bonus Coin’. Once the challenge is set and the timer readied, the player doing the challenge has two minutes to complete it and for the rest of the team to get it right from the clues provided by the player. Some challenges given are marked as ‘ALL PLAY’ in which case a player on both teams attempts it and the first team to get it right wins. When a team gets a challenge right, its Mover is moved round the track on the case to the next space matching the colour of the challenge it just completed. The game is won by the team which gets its Lover back round the track to the starting space.

In terms of game play then, the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is all about the challenges. Each card has one challenge from each category—Fact & Picture Challenges, Word & Letter Puzzles, Drawing & Sculpting, and Acting & Sound Effects—with corresponding answers on the back. For example, a card could have the ‘Soundstage’ challenge of the player having to perform ‘Glassblowing’ using sounds and gestures the rest of the team identify it correctly; identity the ‘Odd Couple’ or two items which do not belong on a list from ‘Chupacabra/Seattle Kraken/Jersey Devil/Beast of Exmoor/Cleveland Monsters’; ‘Jargonaut’ or choose the word which matches the definition for ‘The vapour line behind a high-flying plane’ from ‘Contrail, Delta wave, Phytoplasma, or Gasconade’; and in ‘Sensosketch’, the player must draw a ‘Katana’ with his eyes closed and the rest of the team identify it correctly from the drawing.

The fun of the game is in these challenges. And the fun in the challenges is in getting them wrong as much as you do right. Especially the more physical challenges, whether that is drawing or sculpting or performing. This is what will make everyone laugh as much as groan with frustration. The range of challenges provides lots of variety and that variety will appeal to a wider age group, young and old. Unfortunately, there is a problem with the Fact & Picture Challenges category in that the trivia questions are based on American knowledge rather than general knowledge. So, anyone outside of the USA is going to have a harder time with the category.

Physically, the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is very sturdily and attractively presented. Everything packs into the solid, very cake-like case, which looks good on the table. The cards are on thick stock, the Cranium Clay is malleable, and both the case and the Mover pieces are solid plastic.

All right, so the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is not a gamer’s game. It is too random, too simple, no real game play, no real rules or tactics or strategy. Which is true. In fact, the only tactic might be to use the purple result on the die to choose a colour and thus a category of challenge the team thinks it has a chance of succeeding at and move further than a random roll might have allowed. Yet despite these issues, every gamer needs a party game, a game that he can bring out and play with friends or family who do not ordinarily play games, especially at certain times of the year. Cranium is challenging in ways that friends and family will understand and silly and fun that they can enjoy playing it. Even a gamer can enjoy it for those reasons. Think of it as a palette cleanser, played very, very occasionally between more complex and demanding games.

The Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is a great version of the classic party game. It looks good on the table, its team play encourages co-operation, and it plays well with family and friends, offering them a wide variety of tasks and challenges that are often fun and silly. Every gaming collection needs a party game and if that party game is Cranium, then the Cranium 25th Anniversary Edition is the version to have.

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