Paul Lamond 6745 Sony Entertainment Now That's What I
Paul Lamond 6745 Sony Entertainment Now That's What I Call Music Board Game, Multi
Now That’s What I Call Music
Now That’s What I Call Music is one of the most successful compilation album series of all time.
Question cards everyone will enjoy!
There’s Music Trivia and a whole lot more! From New Romantics and Britpop to House and Rap, the chart-topping NOW music series has become the soundtrack to our lives so relive the last three decades of great music in this fun-packed, fast-moving board game.
Contents:
1 Playing Board
125 Question Cards
25 Wild Cards
60 Second Timer
6 Play Pieces
1 Die
Play Rules
Dimensions: | 26.8 x 6.8 x 27 cm; 750 Grams |
Model: | 6745 |
Material: | Cardboard |
Colour: | Multicolor |
Batteries Required: | No |
Batteries Included: | No |
Age: | 8 – 18 years |
Assembly: | No |
Dimensions: | 26.8 x 6.8 x 27 cm; 750 Grams |
Material: | Cardboard |
This is a good game for all the family if you have older children as younger ones would struggle with a lot of the questions. It was bought for my husband for Christmas and was very well received.
Now a favourite in our game night rotation. Although, there will come a time when we know all the answers from playing so much so maybe make an additional pack or packs of new cards you can purchase to keep the questions interesting. Maybe even do like 60s music pack, 70s, 80s etc..
Bought this for my Husband for Christmas, and we played it that very night. Saw various previous reviews that complained that they didn’t have much knowledge for the questions, but we didn’t have much issue.
Game play was fun, and at times the bonus cards were downright brutal, but that’s half the fun.
Age range for play I think it’s suitable for those born late 70’s to early 90’s, as the trivia questions covered 80’s to 2000’s. So basically those who grew up with the early Now albums.
Great buy
Played it last night with the family and had a fun filled night
As well as normal music quiz questions. You have charades and hum the tune
Family loved i
I bought this as a present for my dad who is really into Music (especially the 80s). My family and I played and thoroughly enjoyed it. I myself am not the best when it comes to Music Trivia etc so thought I’d be useless at this game! However I was very surprised the questions had a nice mixture of difficulty and the tasks were fun to do!
Recommend!
Fun to play. Contains questions on 80’s, 90’s which some younger players may not know (we played with age ranges from 15-40’s) but everyone enjoyed it, especially the charades and hum/whistle cards.
This game is so much fun to play. It keeps the mechanics of a standard ‘roll the dice and move your piece’, but adds a twist. This game made me realise how poor my music general knowledge is. Enjoy!
My partner and I (both in our forties) have played this a number of time’s and really enjoyed it, we have been in stitches on many occasions miming and barking songs, can’t wait to play it with more people.
Found this game quite hard but got round that by answering the ones we wanted to, would be great with someone really hot on music. Have played it a couple of times and quite enjoyed it. Arrived quickly and well packaged.
This is a christmas gift for a music lover so its the perfect gift. Rather than buy a cd its a great way to test and see just how well they really know their music
Bought as a Christmas gift for my music mad 50-something partner to play with myself and two teenage children: aged 16 and 15. Well ok. It was for me too!
The game is obviously aimed more at those between 30-60 years old with music questions mainly from the 1980’s onward, but when played in ‘team’ mode as opposed to individuals, my teenage sons were able to answer some of the questions with a little help from us oldies.
Probably more appropriate to play with friends or much older children, however we have played it several times and have all enjoyed the variety of ways to ‘ask’ the questions, including humming the song or describing the song without using any words on the card. This proved slightly troublesome for my 15 year old who hasn’t shown any interest in any music pre-2000.
A typical game last between 1 – 1.5 hours depending on how knowledgeable you and/or your team are. For true music-lovers this game is a must!
Played this with 4 knowledgeable adults. The game is easy to play with some categories that made us all laugh ! Some of the questions were very difficult, even though we all consider ourselves to have a broad knowledge of music from the 60s to today. I don’t think many 16 -25 year old would know many of the answers though .
Thought this was going to give an advantage to those of us who have lived music through the ages, however the older music scores lower points and it evened things out very well.
We played this on Boxing Day when we had all the family around. We decided to play as two teams: boys vs girls.
Lots of the spaces on the board have CD pictures on them which mean you have to have a question and these were fun but there were other spaces that were blank where you don’t have to do anything and these were a bit dull especially if you and the other team kept landing on them so all it was was a game of who could roll a higher number to get round the board. Rolling a 6 meant someone on the team had to do a charade or bark out a song for the others to guess and we had a lot of laughs from this. We did enjoy the questions though the font on the question cards was a little small for our older players with poor eyesight so you may need a magnifying glass to hand!