CLUE®, one of America's favorite board games, was created in 1944 in England
by Anthony Ernest Pratt. Pratt received
a patent for the game, which he named CLUEDO.
He
sold the game to Waddington Games, but it was not launched until 1949 due to
post-war shortages of various materials.
Parker Brothers obtained the U.S. rights to CLUE® from Waddington's in
1949. Hasbro now owns Parker Brothers. CLUE® is sold in over 40 countries from
Brazil to Sweden, New Zealand to Abu Dhabi. The same successful murder-detection
formula seems to work well in any language.
Pratt described himself as "an introvert full of
ruminations, speculations and imaginative notions". Who knew that meant murder and mayhem?
The object of play is to discover who
murdered Mr. Boddy, where he was
murdered and with what. In the UK, Dr. Black is always dead.
One of the few pictures of Dr. Black |
Mr. Boddy |
Players strategically move around the nine rooms and secret passages of
a mansion as Miss Scarlett, Colonel Mustard, Mrs. White, Mr. Green, Mrs.
Peacock or Professor Plum.
I'm
not sure how modern kids view the game. After
60 years of Perry Mason, Columbo, Rockford Files, Magnum PI, Law and Order,
CSI, and Criminal Minds, everyone knows that the solution of every murder case requires
that the perp must have the Means, the Opportunity and the Motive to have murdered
the victim . . . M.O.M.
Weapons are
the wrench, rope, candlestick, revolver, dagger or lead pipe.
My
playmates and I used to play it for hours.
It was always the perfect thing for a rainy Saturday afternoon.
Will
21st Century kids immediately spot the lack of motive in Clue?
Why
Dr. Black or Mr. Boddy were murdered remains a
mystery.
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