Bananagrams game

look!- Bananagrams game - Bananagrams game, don't buy the game untill you read this! we check the price for Bananagrams every day to give you the best price today

 

The Bananagrams game is a portable word game that can be enjoyed  on your own or with friends and family. It is fast paced and great fun, making you think quickly and stay on your toes as you try to use all your tiles as quickly as possible. All you need is a table. One  Bananagrams game can last as little as five minutes; no additional items means less hassle.
In 2007 ‘Creative Child Magazine’ awarded the Bananagrams game the ‘Toy of the year award’. Parenthood.com awarded the Bananagrams game with the NAPPA Honors Award.
The Bananagrams game is perfect for children as the fast paced nature of the game will keep them interested while the spelling aspect of the game will keep them thinking and mentally active. The Bananagrams game even comes with a banana shaped flexible carry case which means that it is incredibly portable and therefore perfect for travelling.  The Bananagrams game can be used on a bus, plane, train, in the car as well as while stationary with minimum effort, just grab the pouch and go.  There are many different ways you to the game to keep you interested for example ‘banana smoothie’ for a less hectic game or ‘banana challenge’ where you can only use long words to keep you thinking.  Beginning as a family innovation, The Bananagrams game was made available to the public in January 2006 at the London Toy Fair.

The Bananagrams game has won many very prestigious awards during its first production.  The game consists of 144  tiles with letters on them. They are put face down on the playing surface. Every player draws the same amount of tiles from the centre, and when a player shouts “split” all players turn  their tiles over. This reveals their lettered sides. Every player then starts to  arrange the letters to form words. When a player has used up all over the tiles, he/she calls out “Peel“. The players must then draw a single tile from tiles left on the table, this pile is called the ’bunch’. If during the game, at any time, a player has a letter that he/she cannot spell a word with in his/her current arrangement, he/she can announce "Dump".  The player can then exchange any single tile for three tiles from the ‘bunch‘.  All players then announce peel and play resumes. Players carry on fitting all of their tiles into a crossword-style arrangement until there are not enough remaining tiles in the "bunch" for all players to take one. When this happens, the winner is the player who has used all of there tiles to create words. This player and is declared the winner if all of the words are valid upon inspection.

Gift - Bananagrams

Bananagrams game

In Stock only 1New

Bananagrams Game- This product has extreamly limited stocks! order now to avoid disapointment


Bananagrams game where to buy

Bananagrams where to buy

After sending a free copy to my friend Sue and after she had played a game she commented,  ‘I really love scrabble so I was a little hesitant when you handed me this game but I love it. It is particularly good with more than two players e.g. when playing with my husband and two children and we all franticly race against each other to win’. She informs me that she has gone on and bought it for her brother for them to take on their camping holiday after she took it abroad with her family and found it perfect for playing when they wanted to relax at night as a family. She even spoke of a strange thing about the game she noticed  ‘One other thing’ she added at the end of the conversation about it ‘ When playing this game you can find your brain makes associations and you normally end up with many words linked from the same topic. So watch what you put down, it is very strange! Maybe psychologists should look into this!’ Bananagrams game From the brief conversation I had with her I really think she loves it!

 

Rss | Bananagrams online Bananagrams uk Bananagrams cheap Bananagrams game Bananagrams game where to buy

 

 

 

no additional items means less hassle.
In 2007 ‘Creative Child Magazine’ awarded the Bananagrams game the ‘Toy of the year award’. Parenthood.com awarded the Bananagrams game with the NAPPA Honors Award.
The Bananagrams game is perfect for children as the fast paced nature of the game will keep them interested while the spelling aspect of the game will keep them thinking and mentally active. The Bananagrams game even comes with a banana shaped flexible carry case which means that it is incredibly portable and therefore perfect for travelling.  The Bananagrams game can be used on a bus, plane, train, in the car as well as while stationary with minimum effort, just grab the pouch and go.  There are many different ways you to the game to keep you interested for example ‘banana smoothie’ for a less hectic game or ‘banana challenge’ where you can only use long words to keep you thinking.  Beginning as a family innovation, The Bananagrams game was made available to the public in January 2006 at the London Toy Fair.

The Bananagrams game has won many very prestigious awards during its first production.  The game consists of 144  tiles with letters on them. They are put face down on the playing surface. Every player draws the same amount of tiles from the centre, and when a player shouts “split” all players turn  their tiles over. This reveals their lettered sides. Every player then starts to  arrange the letters to form words. When a player has used up all over the tiles, he/she calls out “Peel“. The players must then draw a single tile from tiles left on the table, this pile is called the ’bunch’. If during the game, at any time, a player has a letter that he/she cannot spell a word with in his/her current arrangement, he/she can announce "Dump".  The player can then exchange any single tile for three tiles from the ‘bunch‘.  All players then announce peel and play resumes. Players carry on fitting all of their tiles into a crossword-style arrangement until there are not enough remaining tiles in the "bunch" for all players to take one. When this happens, the winner is the player who has used all of there tiles to create words. This player and is declared the winner if all of the words are valid upon inspection.

After sending a free copy to my friend Sue and after she had played a game she commented,  ‘I really love scrabble so I was a little hesitant when you handed me this game but I love it. It is particularly good with more than two players e.g. when playing with my husband and two children and we all franticly race against each other to win’. She informs me that she has gone on and bought it for her brother for them to take on their camping holiday after she took it abroad with her family and found it perfect for playing when they wanted to relax at night as a family. She even spoke of a strange thing about the game she noticed  ‘One other thing’ she added at the end of the conversation about it ‘ When playing this game you can find your brain makes associations and you normally end up with many words linked from the same topic. So watch what you put down, it is very strange! Maybe psychologists

 

 

!