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Full Version: Hasbro ruining classic game of 'Clue'
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No More Colonel Mustard? Clue Gets Makeover

New Names, Weapons Added To Popular Board Game

POSTED: 6:24 am PDT August 15, 2008
UPDATED: 7:54 am PDT August 15, 2008

Goodbye, professor. Farewell, colonel.

Toy maker Hasbro Inc. has updated its classic Clue game for today's tabloid culture to include younger characters, more weapons and new rooms including a spa and guest house.

The six characters' last names remain the same, but their first names and bios have been updated. For example, Miss Scarlet is now Kasandra Scarlet, a famous actress often featured in tabloids. And Mr. Green is now Jacob Green, an African-American "with all the ins."

Colonel Mustard is now Jack Mustard, a former football player. The professor? Now Victor Plum, a billionaire video game designer.

Each character - rounded out by Eleanor Peacock and Diane White - also now has a special power that could help players discover clues more quickly. New "intrigue" and "clock" cards add clues and can eliminate players in the latest version of the game.

Hasbro has also lengthened the weapons list from six to nine. The candlestick, knife and rope remain, but now weapons choices include a dumbbell, trophy or poison. The lead pipe, revolver and wrench are no longer part of the game.

Meanwhile, new rooms include a theater, spa and guest house nearby.

Pawtucket, R.I.-based Hasbro has previously updated Clue - first created in 1949 - with an express version and a Simpsons version, but the new incarnation will be a replacement for the original version of Clue currently on store shelves.

It will be available nationwide beginning in the fall, for about $15.99.

Great...

First Monopoly, now Clue.

Lets see how we can change checkers, chess, Red Rover....

I'm surprised they haven't changed the rules of the game so that there can be no winner. After all we can't hurt any feelings...
Maybe they should change the title to "Clue - for Idiots".
Raise your hands if you've bought or played a video game in the last five years.

Now, do the same if you've bought or played a board game.

Yep, that's what I thought.

BlazerUnit Wrote:
Now, do the same if you've bought or played a board game.


Me too; my hand is up.

Smaug Wrote:

BlazerUnit Wrote:
Now, do the same if you've bought or played a board game.



+1

With four kids, how do you not play board games. They are going to ruin Clue!!!

What next, Risk with now war?

I buy and play board games. I don't buy or play video games.

My son plays video games, but he also plays board games. He and I have been playing the same game of Monopoly now for three weeks. It may never end.

We have a family game night every week. We play a board game. My son loves it. My family loves it. I'm went out yesterday and bought 10 copies of Clue at Wal-Mart, for $7.97 each. I'm going to save one or two, and sell the rest on eBay as Christmas approaches.
Well, color me corrected then. I'm genuinely surprised that anyone buys board games anymore. I've got Life, Scrabble, Monopoly, Jeopardy, and Wheel of Fortune on CD-ROM.

The last board game I ever played was Taboo...and technically, it doesn't have a board.
I have an older version of Monopoly and Risk for the computer; they are good but it just is not the same as picking up and rolling the dice for yourself. The last non-computer game I played was a brutal round of Uno with the whole Smaug brood; they clobbered me.
I still play board games with my kids. Just played Sorry! last week.

I don't have too much of a problem with them updating the games, but I doubt doing so will attract audience. And to be honest, when I was a kid, I had no idea what a Parlor or a Conservatory was anyway.

To be honest, the game of clue was ruined with that stupid movie a few years back.
My wife and I love board games... Scrabble, Rummikub, and Battleship mostly.
The worst game we ever bought was Clue DVD. We didn't know you could ruin Clue, but I guess Parker Bros found a way... then Hasbro got a hold of it and turned it into Mall Madness.
Scrabble is my all-time favorite board game, but no one in my family will play me in it. I wonder why?

Scrabulous was my favorite, and only, online game obsession. Then, Hasbro ruined that by suing for copyright infringment (even though Hasbro admitted in the court documents that it had no intention of creating an online version of the game until Scrabulous launched) and launched its own version that doesn't work half the time.
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