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Lexogon - Great Word Game
Description:
"What A Great Way To Have Fun With Words!" Says Richard Lederer,
Ph. D., Renowned Language Authority and Word Guy on Public Radio
Discover Lexogon™ and Lexogon One™ -- the word games where everyone
plays all the time and you think about words in a great new way.
The challenge – find a word that uses the clue letters in order – but
arranged in the special way required by your color category, (maybe all
clue letters together, maybe the first letter first and the last letter
last, or one of the other variations.)
Roll the die, move to your square, get a clue that matches the square’s
color, find a word that fits the color’s Category Rule in the time
allowed and you’re on your way. Be the first to find words for all the
categories and you’ve won.
You move around the board finding words. There’s risk, luck and strategy
involved: you can be challenged, you can lose a turn or credit for a
category,
you can send someone back to start, you can “zap” or be “zapped” by
another player – it all depends on the roll of the die, the cards and
your way with words.
Lexogon™ and Lexogon One™ stretch your brain, memory, and mettle. They
make you think, laugh and want to play again.
Lexogon One is the same, addicting,
word-finding game as Lexogon™, but designed especially for the
vocabulary and spelling levels expected of middle-schoolers. As with
Lexogon™, everyone plays all the time. It’s great for intergenerational
play, it’s an exciting game for family night play (or for occasions when
players want an easier challenge than Lexogon). And teachers see Lexogon
One as a great addition for their spelling and vocabulary sections. Kids
give it a great learning testimonial. A typical comment from a fourth
grader – “I can’t believe I’m learning something and having fun at the
same time.
People with differing vocabulary
skills can play together.
Players of differing vocabulary
skills can play together since there is the “intermediate” deck of clue
cards for a 3rd and 4th grade level vocabulary and the “standard” deck
for a 5th and 6th grade level vocabulary.
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