Employees and owners of some local stores selling games geared toward helping kids learn have a hard time picking favorites.
"There are so many good games," said Gini Wingard-Phillips, owner of Math 'n' Stuff in Maple Leaf. "I love games."
In a store full of board games, card sets, colorful dice, books, and other fun-looking so-called educational toys, one can't help but match Wingard-Phillips's enthusiasm for the product.
Parents of children heading back to school are eager to encourage learning at home in addition to teachers and textbooks. They might want materials that help kids with difficult subjects like math, or they might want to push a gifted student to take greater pleasure in her studies. Whatever the goal, local stores have the goods to help them do just that.
Math Games
The beautiful Blokus is one Wingard-Phillips touts. It's one of her favorite new games, she said. A non-verbal game, the visual-spatial reasoning puzzle is good for all ages.
At Gary's Games and Hobbies in Greenwood, employee Todd Weaver suggests the ever-popular Yahtzee for math. Math 'n' Things sells several games for math students of all ages. Bump focuses on adding, subtracting and mental math, while Blink is a card-matching game for ages four and older. Both Math 'n' Things and Science Art and More in Roosevelt sell Set, another card-matching game for all ages.
"None of these games sound fun," said Mary Takle, a math tutor who helps out at Math 'n' Things. "But they are."
Walter Lounsbury at Science Art and More insisted games like Set are essential, saying he plays it with his adult friends as much as with his nieces and newphews.
Dice are another common learning tool that have taken on a new role in schools as "random-number generators." Multiple-sided and multi-colored dice are popular at Gary's Games for their place in role-playing games, but At Math 'n' Stuff they sell them as math learning aids.
Moreover, Wingard-Phillips declared: "As soon as kids hear dice roll, they think fun."
Language and Knowledge
Apples to Apples is a critical and crowd favorite. The card game has players creatively match people, places, things or ideas to an adjective. Players take turns as "judge," who pulls the adjective card and decides which noun best suits it. The nouns are sometimes obscure concepts that provide a geography, history or vocabulary lesson, as well as how to play to one person's biases.
Gary's Games, Math 'n' Stuff, and Science Art and More all sold the basic set, but Math 'n' Stuff also carries multiple expansion sets and printable cards so players can add their own nouns to the game.
History-focused games from the Civil War to World War II are found at Gary's Games. Weaver was particularly fond of History of the World, which takes players through seven epochs, from Egyptian civilization to the British Empire, learning historical facts all the while.
A series of games from Germany including the popular Settlers of Catan teach players about resources, building and trading.
Weaver, who admitted he's played the game with friends, said it sounds simple but "it takes some thinking."
Bioviva takes an environmental slant to Trivial Pursuit. Players aged 8 and older make moves on a world map. Science Art and More carries Bioviva.
Not Your Father's Chemistry Set
Science Art and More caters to the niche market of science learning sets. Even TV's Bill Nye (the Science Guy) has borrowed items from the store for his new series, said Lounsbury.
Lounsbury called the Microchem XM 5000 the "best classic chemistry set on the market," but noted that it's not as dangerous as sets used to be. None of its 1,500 experiments involve open flame or poisonous mercury, and the kit includes safety equipment.
Several Wizard kits--ElectroWiz, Chemistry Wizard, Newton's Wizard, and others--include a book describing and explaining several activities. They start simple and get more advanced. The kits include equipment to do projects like building a hovercraft or water-powered rocket.
Smaller toys can still contain great scientific lessons, however. Lounsbury pointed out the Putt-Putt toys that allow children to build a steam engine-powered boat, Insta-Sno that teaches about polymers and the ever-popular ant farms and butterfly gardens.
Bugs appeared to be a favorite subject of Lounsbury's. He recommended the "Eat-A-Bug Cookbook," by David George Gordon, stating that 70 percent of the world's population eats insects willingly. The store also sells such creepy treats as chocolate-covered ants, grasshopper lollipops, and the crunchy, baked, and flavored Larvets.
"Bugs are only gross to us because we say they're gross," he said. Perhaps insect-eating counts as a lesson in cultural acceptance, he agreed as he chomped on a cheddar cheese-flavored Larvet.
Strategy, Competition and Teamwork
Some of the classic games of strategy have taken new forms and, say some game experts, become better. Risk 2210 is an update of the original Risk board game that features a post-apocalyptic world with moon bases and underwater cities, available at Gary's Games. Diplomacy is similar to Risk.
"It's a cutthroat, kill-or-be-killed game," Weaver enthused. "Half cooperation, half stab your friend in the back."
Lord of the Rings is one of Gary's Games most popular board games. It's one of the few Weaver said truly enforces the value of teamwork.
"If you don't play together, you all lose," he explained.
Kuba is a bestseller for Math 'n' Things. It's a dynamic two-player game that game enthusiast Takle described as different every time it's played.
Takle said Checkers 2000 adds "chess strategy to regular checkers." It uses numbers and helps with math, too. Gobblet is another two-player game that is similar to tic-tac-toe, only "bigger pieces can gobble up smaller pieces," she explained.
Wingard-Phillips travels to New York every year for Toy Fair, where she discovers prototypes of new games. Twice she went to Nuremberg, Germany to find the latest great European games.
"I can see a game in New York," she said, "and hanker for a year before it's out."
Gary's Games and Hobbies is located at 8539 Greenwood Ave. North. Math 'n' Stuff is located at 8926 Roosevelt Way Northeast. Science Art and More is located at 6417 Roosevelt Way Northeast.
(for News Lab/The North Seattle Herald-Outlook [registration required])