Children's Game

LineUp

The Memory Crime Game with a Sneaky Selection of Suspects

This comical crime game is perfect for showing off your memory skills. Travel the game board and stop at each of six crime scenes to take a five-second eyewitness look at the suspect. Study the picture, because when you head back to the police station for a lineup, you’ll face a challenging string of look-alike suspects. Kids who can analyze, differentiate and remember the smallest details will come out ahead. But there’s a glitch in the system: a Lucky Break could trip up even the most solid ID.

Cartoona

Cartoona is a creature-building, tile-laying game featuring the pop art of Robert Burke. The goal is to be the first player, or team to reach 50 points by building colorful and odd cartoon creatures. This is accomplished by placing tiles of different creature parts together and by playing cards that speed the process, or hinder your opponents. The game box includes 94 creature part tiles, 70 action cards, 8 player screens, and a rules booklet.

Smart Cookies

To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the now acclaimed game Logix (and its successor Meta-Forms), we returned to our secret kitchen and baked Smart Cookies! 64 fresh, brain-boosting logic puzzles offered in an enticing cookie format. We’ve tweaked our recipe to further challenge developing young minds that will eagerly snack on these delicious puzzles.

Players use logic clues to place 9 cookies on the playing tray. As players progress through the puzzles, they develop and strengthen their reasoning skills and verbal expression. A great calorie-free treat for the mind!

Catan: Kids

A simplified building game for kids, based on the immensely popular The Settlers of Catan, wherein all players take part in the game at all times. The high quality wooden pieces are suitable not only for the game, but also for "free play."

Each player in turn rolls the die, and rotates the village plan clockwise that number of spaces. Resources are collected by each player depending on where their piece lands, and if one of each resource type has been collected by any player, that player may place one of their buildings on the village plan. If a player has built all of their buildings, they may build the Town Hall. The first player to build the Town Hall wins.

Belongs to the Catan Series.

Cootie

Players race to construct a plastic bug, rolling a die to see which piece they get to add.

The Hennepin History Museum states that the first Cootie game was designed by William H. Schaper in 1949. However, Schaper's game was not the first based upon the insect known as the "cootie". The creature was the subject of several tabletop games, mostly pencil and paper games, in the decades of the twentieth century following World War I.

In 1927, the J. H. Warder Company of Chicago released Tu-Tee, and the Charles Bowlby Company released Cootie; though based on a "build a bug" concept similar to Schaper's, both were paper and pencil games.
Schaper's game was the first to employ a fully three dimensional, free-standing plastic cootie.

Known in Australia as Creepy Critters and in the UK as Beetle Drive.