Sorry Board Game
Sorry Board Game, Game Night, Ages 6 and up
Product Description
Feeling nostalgic for classic gameplay? Get ready for classic Parker Brothers gameplay with this Sorry! game. Who knows what will happen next as players chase their opponents around the board, trying to get their 4 pieces from start to home first? Will a player draw a card that tells them to move ahead 2 spaces or back 6? Will someone land on a slide or will an opponent land on a player's space, sending them back to the start? This fun, family game is for 2 to 4 players, ages 6 to adult. Hasbro Gaming and all related terms are trademarks of Hasbro.
This classic game of luck, strategy, and determination is easy to grasp for children as young as 6 years old, yet it's fun for adults and older siblings too. By drawing cards, players move their game pieces around the board, hoping to eventually accumulate all their pieces at the final destination--home sweet home. Sorry is known as the game of "sweet revenge," since players can send each other's pawns back to the starting line, thus forcing one another to lose ground and begin all over again. This kind of frustration may be hard for children under age 8 to handle. In fact, young ones typically crumble into tears of outrage when their pawns are cavalierly sent back. The only recourse is to teach children how to plot their own revenge, which makes them feel as powerful as superheroes.
From the Manufacturer
This classic game of luck, strategy, and determination is easy to grasp for children as young as 6 years old, yet it's fun for adults and older siblings too. By drawing cards, players move their game pieces around the board, hoping to eventually accumulate all their pieces at the final destination--home sweet home. Sorry is known as the game of "sweet revenge," since players can send each other's pawns back to the starting line, thus forcing one another to lose ground and begin all over again. This kind of frustration may be hard for children under age 8 to handle. In fact, young ones typically crumble into tears of outrage when their pawns are cavalierly sent back. The only recourse is to teach children how to plot their own revenge, which makes them feel as powerful as superheroes.