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Talk:List of Trivial Pursuit editions

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Why are their 'Genus' additions? What about kingdom, phylum or species?-— Preceding unsigned comment added by 38.117.67.5 (talk) 20:40, 2 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Presumably because it sounds like "genius"? DS (talk) 19:46, 2 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I would say because there are six "genus" of questions. Shikamoo (talk) 04:17, 8 February 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Genus refers to the type of question TP aimed for -- not so specialized ("species") that only an expert in the field would know it, but not so broad that anyone might guess. Something reasonably detailed. Also, since this was a general-knowledge set (unlike the specialized sets that Horn Abbott contemplated from the very beginning), using a word from the same root gave that impression. --Apascover (talk) 02:33, 31 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

American Trivia Federation

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The main source for the edit I'm preparing on this article's main list is the American Trivia Federation's editions guide. That guide categorizes editions differently from this article's list, but it includes the title (some of which are different), the year, and the categories in the set. It doesn't, however, clearly indicate whether an edition is a stand-alone game, a supplement, or atypical edition. It also leaves out all multimedia versions. The reason for copying their list here is that if they update or expand theirs, this list will show how it was when I did this edit.

Since the ATF page is a collection of facts, I doubt they'll object to copying some of their material, but I'll e-mail them just in case, and blank this section if they don't like it. —Steve98052 (talk) 09:18, 21 June 2012 (UTC)[reply]

US editions

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1981 Genus I 1982 Silver Screen 1983 All-Star Sports 1983 Baby Boomer 1984 Genus II
1984 Young Players 1985 RPM 1985 Welcome to America   1985 Disney Family 1986 Disney
1986 1960s 1987 Volume II 1987 People 1987 Boob Tube 1987 Sports
1989 Vintage 1989 1980s 1989 Pocket TV 1989 Flicks 1989 Rock & Pop
1989 Wild Card 1989 War & Victory 1989 The Good Life 1991 TV 1992 Family
1993 1992 Year-In-Review 1993 All American 1993 Game Show 1993 Country Music 1994 1993 Year-In-Review
1994 Genus III 1994 Picture Pursuit 1996 Genus IV 1998 Star Wars 1999 Millennium
1999 Warner Brothers 2000 Know-It-All 2000 Biographies 2001 Genus V 2001 In Pursuit
2002 20th Anniversary 2002 Disney Animated   2003 Volume VI 2003 Pop Culture I 2003 Lord of the Rings
2004 Lord of the Rings DVD   2004 1990s 2004 Book Lovers 2004 Saturday Night Live   2005 Pop Culture II
2005 Disney II 2005 Star Wars Saga 2006 Totally '80s 2008 25th Anniversary 2008 Family '08

International

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1987 Entertainment 1987 Sports UK 1989 RPM II 1991 Travel UK 1992 Family Mini '92
1993 National UK 1993 Games & Leisure   1993 Food & Drink   1994 1995 UK 1994 Sunday Express
1997 World Cup 1998 Family Mini '98 1999 Episode I 2000 1980s UK 2000 Manchester United
2001 Genus UK '01 2002 Enjoyment 2003 Globetrotter 2003 Genus UK Mini   2003 Family Mini '03
2003 World Football   2003 Quality Street 2004 Celebrity 2004 Martell Cognac 2005 Genus UK '05
2005 The '90s 2005 Star Wars Mini 2006 Music 2007 Girls v Guys

Huh?

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Why are US editions not "international editions" ? The game was invented in Canada and the first Genus edition is basically Canadian -- 65.92.180.225 (talk) 10:42, 27 December 2012 (UTC)[reply]

    You are spot on, eh!  "Give credit where credit is due ..." as the ages-old expression goes. Canada is the country where the game was invented, published and first played.  It is a Canadian game, and the U.S. is a separate nation which should always be included in any subsequent national listings.  To show the difference between the Canadian and the U.S. standard edition, I made an offer on eBay for a Canadian edition card set for "Trivial 80's" as a tip of my hat to the Canadian inventor of the game.  I found that as opposed to the standard U.S. edition, more than a quarter of the cards in the Canadian card set are about factoids known only to Canadians, eh?  I also have a German Language edition of Trivial Pursuit, which like the standard American editions using standard North American English have many questions that are, like the German language edition, unique to the language.  If for OK one then OK for all, I say. QED: all three editions are indeed "international" editions, and this Wiki's author should insure that the U.S. edition is included in every "international" listing. K. Kellogg-Smith (talk) 17:14, 27 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]
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Should this include the video games?

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e.g. there was an official version of the game for the ZX Spectrum and other home computers in the 1980s. Equinox 16:29, 8 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]