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Voice of the Mummy, the Milton Bradley board game - a website dedicated to the record player repair and Seance board game; Milton Bradley game listings and information in the Association for Games & Puzzles International's Game Catalog; Milton Bradley game listings and information at BoardGameGeek
Milton Bradley Company or simply Milton Bradley (MB) was an American board game manufacturer established by Milton Bradley (1836-1911) in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1860. In 1920, it absorbed the game production of McLoughlin Brothers , formerly the largest game manufacturer in the United States.
Mystery Date game board, 1965. Mystery Date can be played with two, three, or four players. The object of the game is to acquire a desirable date, while avoiding the "dud". [1] [2] Players acquire cards to assemble outfits in four different colors by rolling a die to move around the board, then drawing, discarding, or trading cards as dictated by the spaces where they land.
Articles relating to the Milton Bradley Company, its products, and its subsidiaries. It was an American board game manufacturer established by Milton Bradley (1836-1911) in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1860. In 1920, it absorbed the game production of McLoughlin Brothers, formerly the
The Gamemaster Series of board games consists of five war simulation games released by the game company Milton Bradley beginning in 1984. The games were not developed "in-house" by Milton Bradley, with each game initially published in limited runs by smaller game publishers in the early 1980s before their rights were acquired by Milton Bradley ...
Scotland Yard (board game) Shenanigans (game show) Shogun (1986 board game) Simon (game) Snakes and ladders; Space Crusade; Square Mile (board game) Star Bird; Star Wars Epic Duels; Stay Alive (game) Stratego; Stuff Yer Face; Summit (game)
HeroQuest, is an adventure board game created by Milton Bradley in conjunction with the British company Games Workshop in 1989, and re-released in 2021. The game is loosely based around archetypes of fantasy role-playing games: the game itself was actually a game system, allowing the gamemaster (called "Morcar" and "Zargon" in the United Kingdom and North America respectively) to create ...
Shogun, designed by Michael Gray, [1] was first released in 1986 by Milton Bradley as part of their Gamemaster series. It was renamed to Samurai Swords in its first re-release (1995) to disambiguate it from other games with the same name (in particular, James Clavell's Shogun, a wargame with a similar theme, released in 1983), and renamed again to Ikusa in its 2011 re-release under Hasbro's ...