It's a funny thing but - in sympathy with
the corporate 'web' we saw with the Buzzbee
stuff yesterday - you don't know who to credit
these to, indeed; if I posted them as three posts they would end-up with
different tag-lists, by dint of one being Waddington's,
one Parker and one; Hasbro-Parker.
I will find the old posts and tag them
'Cludo' (if I haven't already) as the more examples that appear, of the more
popular games with figures, the more complicated the picture will be with all
of them.
Technically they are all Hasbro now, but in the past, the two
'big boys' (Waddington's and Parker) shared licenses of each other's
games, and bought-up all the smaller guys, one by one, leaving everything in
the Hasbro stable!
This was going to be three images, but I
didn't think I'd have enough blurb to justify them, in fact I could have
dropped them into the above waffle, but hay-ho! Three games purchased for a
grand total of less than a fiver, three charity shops in three towns, but to be
honest, car boot sales give-up this kind of thing for similar small beer!
Top is a late 1970's or early 1980's
version of the standard game, the cards still have the original artwork, and
when I was a kid the 'player' looked the same. Obviously; without the little
faces perched on top - jut a small blob finial.
Middle left is the box for a set the
setting for which is a sort of febrile Hollywood/Bel Air type community. The
other set is an electronic one which introduces four new playing figures (we'll
look at in a mo') but doesn't have the six traditional characters, who remain
only cards, with two additional ner-do-wells; Rusty the gardener and Mrs.
Meadow-Brook. Character artwork for the later conforms to the Hasbro era.
The Players of the 'Discover The Secrets' version are lightly coloured clear plastic,
on full-coloured bases, very boring, but there are nine murder weapons instead
of the common six, one of which is a celeb' award . . . some divine justice in
there I feel!
Below is the set I remember with its little
piece of yellow 'rope' and 'Habitat' design 'mini-figs', not that
I'm suggesting Habitat actually had a
hand in designing them, just that they are part of the whole post-modernist, melamine,
Perspex, 2001 A Space Odyssey
furniture, geometric wallpaper era of 'form & function'al design.
Similar playing pieces were found in most
games of the era; Go!, Ludo, Hama . . . and with the Campaign ones
having little Napoleonic headdresses instead of a ball! Hopefully with this new
move away from plastics we will go back to turned wooden tops or upside down
golf-tees? I rather like wooden toys, they are very tactile and age with grace.
The electronic set has only four player figures
and they aren't the murders, they are to help find the one among eight who is
actually guilty, as I bought the set elsewhere and dumped the non-useful
contents in the bin after photographing the box, I can't even tell you how many
murder weapons there were as they were also only cards, and went to land-fill!
I will remove them from the
little-click-button bases at some point, but having investigated the task, it
will require a very sharp chisel and a clamp . . . and the right angle for a
swift, sure strike with a hammer!
Each of the four seems to equate vaguely to
one of the common characters, with Prince Azure being the Colonel Mustard, Lord
Gray - Professor Plum, and the two ladies Peach for Scarlett and Lavender for
Peacock, I don't think this is accidental, I suspect the game started life
quite differently to the final published version,
A lot of these spin-offs are pale, often
gimmicky, shadows of the tried and tested originals, and I think this was
tweaked until it worked, in the course of which two players were lost as
pieces, four renamed and the rest added-tp as a card set?
Ah, the 'meat & two veg' of Cludo . . .
the guns and knives! Posed with the Roman Gladius and 'pepperpot' we looked at
last time are a silenced automatic (Walther PPK?!!) and vicious-looking kitchen
knife from Hollywood along with the more traditional 'representative' pistol
and letter-opener of the standard set.
As I mentioned lest time, there is still
the interim set of grey figures on coloured bases from the 1990's to come, and
I will look out others. There's a Junior
Cludo version (no murder, just cake theft - and 'grown-up's doing the
stealing at that!) which seems to have figural pieces and which I nearly got
the other day - but I already had the Buck
Rogers under me'arm!
2 comments:
Just a comment, The 'Roman sword' doesn't look like any actual Roman sword.
And the 'Letter Opener' looks to be an 1816 Artillery Sword or one of it's imitators. (It was copied for years, like the khaki infantry) That being said, it was probably also copied as a letter opener.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/36/French_artillery_short_sword.jpg/1200px-French_artillery_short_sword.jpg
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f5/Aems1832image1.JPG/1200px-Aems1832image1.JPG
Yes! It's probably a bit earlier than Rome, more biblical, although I think some of the more over-blown Nazi daggers had those flared stops and pommels? Sumer, Sherden?
H
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