Boston Herald Staff
November 2004
USA |
 |
Throw away the Rand McNally atlas, ditch the AAA TripTik
printouts because planning a tour of the United States
just go a whole lot easier, and more fun.
10 Days in the USA is an easy-to-learn board game
that involves two-thirds of a tank of strategy and
some added luck as 2 to 4 players try to become the
first to complete their journey.
The game comes with 50 color-coded state tiles (made
out of thick cardboard), 16 transportation tiles and
four wooden tile holders. There's a map of the country
that serves more as a reference point than a game board.
The actual playing takes place on the tile holders.
Part of the game is to hide the trip plans from the
other players.
Travel between adjacent states is a breeze, however
a car tile must be used when traveling to a state that
is two states away -- say between Florida and South
Carolina. Large gaps are covered by airplane tiles.
There are special rules for flights to Alaska and Hawaii.
The strategy revolves around which day to place the
tiles on. If New York is on Day 1 and Pennsylvania
on Day 3, then a car tile will have to go down on Day
2. If no car tile comes up, the player will have to
ditch one of those states into the discard pile, leaving
it available to the next player.
Children will not realize their picking up geography
knowledge as they play. While not part of the play,
each state tile includes a map of the state, the state's
capitol city, population and size.
Once players think they have United States geometry
down, try a game without the map. Better yet, move
on to '10 Days in Africa'.
Back to 10
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