Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Zombie Valentine's Lotto Ticket


    Here's a slightly different take on the Valentine's lotto tickets I've seen floating around online.  Instead of having prizes underneath each scratch off heart so that your loved one is guaranteed to be a winner, add zombie images under some of them.  You can still think up a prize to correspond to the zombies if you would like, but don't tell your valentine about that beforehand.  Keep them in suspense as they play the zombie Valentine's lottery.

Materials:
*Zombie lotto ticket printout (either my template or your own design)
*Pink cardstock
*All purpose adhesive
*Acrylic paint
*Liquid soap
*Pencil
*Paintbrush
*Scissors

Directions:
*Print out zombie lotto ticket, either my design (pictured below) or make your own design.


*Glue template onto pink cardstock.
*Write/draw/paste in your zombies and prizes.  I used photos of my sister Katie, Brian, and me dressed up as zombies (as well as a photo of zombie gingerbread) for the zombie hearts.  You can use whatever ratio of zombies to hearts you would like.  Since I'm rather cruel, I stacked the odds against Brian, adding five zombies and four prizes:


*Take a strip of contact paper and trace nine hearts onto the back.
*Mix one part liquid soap with two parts acrylic paint.
*Paint the soap/paint mixture across the contact paper.  Set aside to dry,  Add a second coat if necessary.  (Full disclosure: I didn't have any contact paper, so I used packing tape instead.  I stuck each end of the tape to the bottom of a drinking glass and then painted it.  Once the paint was dry, I traced hearts onto the paint using a black permanent marker, ending up with the situation pictured below.  It worked, but it was a lot more challenging than I imagine using contact paper would be.)


*Once dry, cut out the hearts and stick them over the text/image hearts.  Now you're ready to pass it off to a loved one to play.

Unfortunately for Brian, he ended up with a zombie.  Somehow he survived the encounter and I told him he could scratch off until he won a prize.  After a second close encounter with the zombie kind, he finally won a kiss.


Thursday, January 30, 2014

(Zombie) Valentine's Tic Tac Toe Board


     Have an empty sour cream (or similarly shaped) container kicking around?  Use it to make a portable Valentine's Day tic tac toe board.  The lid becomes the board and you can use the container to store the pieces when not in use.  Looking for more (zombie) Valentine's crafts?  Check out my pom pom creatures and my stone "conversation" hearts from last year.

Materials:
*Wide sour cream container (mine had a diameter just over 4" at its widest point)
*5 red and 5 pink plastic heart gems (you can find them at Dollar Tree)
*Cardstock
*Mounting tape
*Scissors
*Black permanent marker
*Marker or printer
*Optional: stickers, patterned paper, or other supplies you can use to decorate the outside of the container.

Directions:
*Draw or digitally design a tic tac toe board to fit the lid of your container and tape it to the lid.
*Draw faces onto the heart pieces, either zombie faces (see above) or happy faces (see below), depending on what you prefer.


*Decorate the outside of the container however you wish.  I used self-adhesive holographic laminate to decorate mine.


Another idea:
*For a slight modification of this craft, you could use zombie pom pom creatures (or non-zombie critters) for game pieces.


Thursday, January 9, 2014

Scrap Wrapping Paper Memory Game


     Here's a great way to recycle some cereal boxes as well as wrapping paper.  Note that these instructions will make 48 memory tiles, but you can easily modify them to make more or fewer.  With this version of the game, you have to match up both the pattern and the color, and game play works the same as with any other memory game.  (If you aren't familiar with the game, you can find instructions here.)  Also, I'd like to give a shout out to Brian for his assistance with this project.  It is a rather time consuming endeavor and I'm grateful that I had another set of hands to help me with tracing, gluing, and cutting out circles.

Materials:
*Six different patterns of wrapping paper or distinct characters on wrapping paper
*Solid colored or holographic wrapping paper
*4 cereal boxes
*8 sheets of paper, each sheet a different color
*Small (about 2.5" in diameter) and medium (about 3" in diameter) circle templates
*Pen
*Scissors
*All purpose adhesive

Directions:
*Trace the small circle onto the patterned or character wrapping paper such that you end up with 48 circles, 8 of each pattern or character, then cut out the circles.
*Trace the medium circle template onto the cardstock, making 6 circles of each color, and cut out the circles.
*Trace the medium circle template onto the cereal boxes, making 48 circles in total, and cut out the circles.
*Trace the medium circle template onto the solid colored (or holographic) paper to make 48 circles and cut them out.
*Glue a piece of solid colored (or holographic) wrapping paper to one side of each cardboard circle and a piece of cardstock to the other side of the circle until you have covered both faces of each circle.
*Glue on your patterned or character paper such that you end up with two or zero tiles of a particular pattern matched up with a given color.  Here's what all of my tiles looked like when I finished:


Thursday, April 11, 2013

Butterfly Checkers Game


Materials:
*12" x 12" piece of wood
*24 circular wooden pieces about 1" in diameter
*Butterfly patterned paper
*Other paper in two distinct colors
*Glue
*White paint
*Paintbrush
*Scissors

Directions:
*Paint one side of the 12" x 12" piece of wood white, then set aside to dry.
*Cut out 32 butterflies.  Make sure that your chosen butterflies are not much more than an inch at their widest.
*Once the piece of wood has dried, arrange butterflies on the board in a checkered pattern, then glue down the butterfly.
*Trace around one of your wooden circular pieces to create 12 circles of each of the two colors you have chosen and glue these circles to the circular wooden pieces to make your game tokens.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Design Your Own Board Game


     A couple of years ago, Brian and I made a Halloween board game.  While it would be impossible to give exact directions on how to make a board game since there are so many different things you can do with games, here are some tips to help you get started, using Brian's and my board game as an example.

Materials I used:
*Photo paper
*Camera
*Paint (computer program)
*Microsoft Publisher
*Mounting squares
*Grocery store pizza box
*Printer paper
*Cardstock

Directions:
*Choose a theme.  Brian and I decided that we wanted a spooky Halloween game.
*Determine the object of the game.  What is it that a player will have to do to win the game?  For our game, we decided that the winning player would have to escape from a ghoul infested cemetery.

*Start thinking about the layout of your game board.  What will the path look like?  Will you have any special squares?  Brian and I have squares that require players to draw a card, that instruct players to take a particular shortcut, that turn players into monsters, and that turn players human again, among others.  We had special "open grave" squares that if a player landed on one, she or he would lose a turn.

*Many board games involve cards.  If you would like to include a deck of cards in your game, ask yourself what type of tools your cards will afford players.  What can they do to aid a player and what can they do to thwart a player?  In our game, we have cards that require players to move forward or backward and to move to special squares, we have cards that will turn a player into a monster, and we have cards that will turn a monster player human again.

*Once you have outlined a basic concept for your game, it's time to start thinking about the mechanics and the graphics of your game.  Will players roll dice to determine their movement, or is there some other mechanism you would like to use to determine the distance players travel?  What kind of images will you use on your game board and on your deck of cards (if you are including a deck of cards)?  What will you make your tokens out of?  What are the maximum and minimum numbers of people who can play your game?  Brian and I used a die in our game and we used images of tombstones and other cemetery related imagery.  We used paper tokens; the human ones Brian drew and the monster ones we printed from this site.  Our game is designed for 2-4 players.

*Now it's time to start designing your game.  How you go about it is really up to you.  Brian and I designed all of our graphics in Paint, with the exception of the grass and the rocks.  We photographed the rocks and the grass that we used as our board game.  After creating all of our images, we put the game board together in Microsoft Publisher and we used Microsoft Publisher to put together the images on the cards as well.  We then printed the game board onto a couple of sheets of photo paper and adhered it to cardboard obtained from a grocery store frozen pizza box.

*Write up a set of rules for your game so that others can understand how your game works.  This may also help you tie up some loose ends that you may not have thought about before.  For example, you may want to write down a note about whether two players can occupy the same space at once and if not, what happens when two players land on the same square?

If you would like to see Brian's and my game in action, check it out here or on YouTube