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Upwords

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UpWords
A finished Upwords game
DesignersElliot Rudell
PublishersHasbro Games
Players2 to 4
Setup time< 2 min
Playing time45 to 90 minutes
ChanceMedium
Age range10 years and up
SkillsCounting, Strategy, Vocabulary

Upwords (also known as Scrabble Upwords in the United States and Canada) is a board game invented by Elliot Rudell and originally published by the Milton Bradley Company, now a division of Hasbro. The game remains under license to Hasbro by Rudell Design, LLC. Upwords is similar to Scrabble, or Words With Friends in that players build words using letter tiles on a gridded gameboard. The notable point of difference is that in Upwords letters can be stacked on top of other letters already on the gameboard to create new words. The higher the stack of letters, the more points are scored. This typically makes words built in later turns of the game more valuable than earlier words, increasing play intensity and adding a level of strategy unique to Upwords.

Unlike Scrabble, which is manufactured in the U.S. and Canada by Hasbro, and elsewhere in the world by Mattel, Upwords is solely controlled by Hasbro worldwide. The game is available in about twenty languages, and there have been national tournaments played in Hungary and Turkey.[1]

Gameplay

Players draw letter tiles until they each have seven tiles. The first player forms a word with the tiles that covers one or more of the central squares and then draws more tiles to replace those played. Play continues to the left.

Subsequent plays may put tiles on the board adjacent to and on top of the tiles already played, as long as all words formed are found in the dictionary being used. For example, if the word CATER is on the board, a player could put a B and E in front of CATER and then put an L on top of the C and a D on top of the R to build BELATED.

Players score one point for every tile in their word, and for each tile under their word. If the word is entirely on the first board layer, they instead score two points per letter. When a word is constructed that contains stacked tiles (up to a total of 5 high), point values will increase. This can lead to increased scoring towards the end of the game.

Players are not allowed to pluralize existing words by simply adding an "s" on the end of a word. If a word is pluralized by the addition of an "s", the "s" must also be part of another complete word that was placed on the board. This rule prevents players from capitalizing too much on other players' words without changing them.

Originally, Upwords was played on an 8 by 8 square board,[2]Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page). with 64 letter tiles. Hasbro Europe later expanded the gameboard to a 10 by 10 matrix and 100 tiles, to accommodate the longer words frequently used in foreign languages such as German and Dutch. The 10 by 10 matrix is currently employed in worldwide versions of the game. The board is purposely smaller (has fewer tile positions) than Scrabble to encourage and even force the stacking up of letters upon letters. It does not have special squares such as "triple word scores" and "double letter scores" that require additional scoring calculations.

Other versions

In the early 1990's, Hasbro licensed electronic marketing rights to Microsoft, briefly making the game available electronically Microsoft no longer has rights to Upwords.

In 2013, Upwords was developed by indie software developers Lonely Star Software, under license from Hasbro. The game was released as a mobile app for iOS devices.[3] On March 27, 2014, Lonely Star released the app for Android platform devices.

References

  1. ^ rudell, elliot. http://www.princeton.edu/~achaney/tmve/wiki100k/docs/Upwords.html. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ rudell, elliot. http://www.boredgourd.com/activity/287/upwords.html. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. ^ Casey Tschida (2013-01-11). "appadvice review". Appadvice.com. Retrieved 2013-02-25.