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The Very Best Board Games for Families—or Anyone!

published Nov 11, 2020
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Playing games is more than just—wait for it—fun and games. That’s part of why board games and puzzles are experiencing a renaissance. They invite creative and strategic thinking, teamwork and cooperation, and of course, an opportunity to sit down and connect with other people—a welcome break from the usual Netflix/Hulu circuit. The hard part is actually picking out a game among a seemingly endless sea of options. 

Whether you’re looking for something to do on a rainy day or holiday gift idea, look no further than these expert-picked favorites, curated by category to simplify the process. 

Editors’ note: We’ve listed these games in order of the manufacturer’s age recommendations, but you may find a younger child can play many of these games with a little grown-up help. We’ve also listed “junior” or “family” editions of classic games when they are available.

Board Games for Kids and Families

Jenga

Jenga is about as simple (and adrenaline-inducing!) as it gets: Remove a block from the tower without toppling the whole thing over. The plain blocks are great for writing messages, too: Schocker used hers as a “guest book” at her wedding for people to sign. “And when I find a marked-up set in a bar I always try to add a feminist message to the mix for the next person to find (like “Ask for a raise on Monday!”)” she says. 

Ages: 6 and up

Connect 4

Sure, it’s a great family game, but Connect 4 isn’t just for kids! Taking Tic Tac Toe to the next level, Connect 4 challenges players to be the first to get “four in a row” by dropping colored disks into the grid. Things heat up when you block your opponent if they get too close to a Connect 4! “This game is total mindless fun,” says Schocker. “Every time I think I nail a good strategy, the next round ends in a stalemate!”

Ages: 6 and up

Spot It!

The premise of Spot It is pretty basic: Each card features a number of symbols, and each card has exactly one symbol in common with every other card in the deck. If you spot the common symbol first, you win the round. The game lasts about 15 minutes, but each round can be different if you play one of the five mini-games within the set.

Dexterity card games like Spot It don’t just challenge your reflexes; May likes them because they’re also portable and inexpensive, making them great for travel or gifting. Plus, the game is based on visual perception, so no language skills are needed!

Ages: 6 and up

Sorry!

In this classic family game of strategy and chance, each player gets four pawns to move around the gameboard. Players need to pick a 1 or a 2 card to get a pawn out of the starting area, and then challenge opponents in this classic game of sweet revenge!  Be the first player to get all four pawns to home base to win. 

“I used to play Sorry! with my dad growing up, and sometimes I’ll still grab it from the stack out of nostalgia,” Schocker says. “We used to make up ridiculous song/sayings to go with all of the commands that I can still remember when I’m playing.”

Ages: 6 and up

Quoridor

Quoridor may look fancy, but the goal of the game — which May says he recommends frequently — is simple: try to reach your opponent’s side of the board with your pawn. On your turn, you either can move your pawn or place a wall to slow down your opponent. Quoridor is similar to chess since players move pawn-shaped pieces across the board, but the wooden fences spice things up, forcing players to think strategically.

Ages: 6 and up

Tenzi

The basic object of Tenzi is to roll your 10 dice as quickly as you can to get them all to land on the same number. If you’re looking for a new spin on the easy-to-learn game, try it with the “77 Ways to Play Tenzi” expansion pack, where you flip a card that adds a twist to each round, like making a funny sound after every roll. The game is recommended for ages seven and up, but if you’re over 21, Schocker says it’s even better with an over-21 beverage.

Ages: 7 and up

Celestia

In Celestia, 2-4 players board an aircraft with a team of adventurers to perform many trips through the cities of Celestia, attempting to be the richest adventurer by collecting the most precious treasures. At the beginning of each round, the trip captain rolls dice to discover challenges and must then play the appropriate cards to continue on the journey and reach the next city. As soon as a player earns treasure worth at least fifty points, the game ends and this player wins.

“A beautiful, light bit of fun with something for everyone: the push-your-luck elements can excite the casual gamer, the more strategically-minded can enjoy playing the odds, and the social gamers get to play games of trust and betrayal,” says Nelsen.

Ages: 8 and up

Hive

The object of Hive is to totally surround your opponent’s Queen Bee  with insect-themed pieces (which May says move differently, depending on the insect!) while at the same time trying to stop your opponent from doing the same to you. The first player to surround their opponent’s Queen Bee wins! Since Hive is an abstract game that doesn’t have a board, you can take it anywhere.

Ages: 8 and up

Dixit

An imaginative storytelling game, Dixit challenges players to use the images on their cards to bluff their opponents and guess which image matches the story. Every turn, the storyteller calls out a short phrase or word to match their card. Each player will choose the card that most closely matches that phrase, and then everyone must guess which card the storyteller saw when he invented his brief tale. Correctly guess the storyteller’s card, and you’ll move ahead. The greatest total wins the game!

“Each card a work of art, this game mixes beauty with casual competition in an amazing way,” says Nelsen. “Easy and accessible, but still a battle of wits, it’s the perfect mix of styles to fit the whole family.”

Ages: 8 and up

Ticket to Ride

Ticket To Ride challenges players to build railroad routes across a map (America or Europe traditionally, though others are available) as they collect train cards and routes. The player with the most points at the end of the game wins! While the object is to earn as many points as possible by completing the longest routes, additional points come to those who fulfill their Destination Tickets by connecting two distant cities and to the player who builds the longest continuous railroad.

“Ticket to Ride is also a great family game,” says May. “It takes less than an hour, and everyone will want to play again.

Ages: 8 and up

Carcassonne

Inspired by the French medieval fortress of the same name, Carcassonne is a tile-laying game where players fill in the countryside around the fortified city. Players choose from tiles that depict cities, roads, monasteries, and fields, and each new tile creates an ever-expanding board on which players can add their followers, scoring points by having followers on features as they’re completed. Make the most strategic placements of tiles and followers, and you’ll win the game!

“Carcassonne helped reinvigorate the “tile laying game,” taking some of the concepts of dominoes but allowing players to build a city,” says May. “Everyone is engaged at all times, and every game is quick (45 minutes or so) and different.

Ages: 8 and up

Azul

An award-winning tile-placement game in which players compete for the highest score by claiming and arranging tiles on their board, Azul is equal parts competitive and aesthetically pleasing. Take turns making your board beautiful and your opponents despair! “Surprisingly brutal for an abstract strategy game with no combat, this gem won awards for a reason,” says Jordan Nelsen, librarian at Kingmakers Board Game Parlour in Columbus, Ohio.

Ages: 8 and up

Ghost Blitz

In Ghost Blitz, players compete to grab items off the table: a white ghost, a green bottle, a gray mouse, a blue book, and a red chair. Each card in the deck shows pictures of two objects, with one or both objects colored the wrong way. With all players playing at the same time, someone reveals a card, then players try to grab the right object. If one object is colored correctly — say, a green bottle and a red mouse — then players need to grab that correctly colored object. If both objects are colored incorrectly, then players look for the object and color not represented. The first player to grab the correct object keeps the card, and whoever collects the most cards wins. “A speed puzzle game that can be learned in less than a minute, Ghost Blitz can be played as long as you want,” says Nelsen.

Ages: 8 and up

Monopoly

Another one of Schocker’s all-time favorites: Monopoly. To get “rich” and bankrupt your opponents, collect property colors sets to build houses and, if you’re lucky, even upgrade to a hotel. The more properties you own, the more rent you can charge other players who land there!

“People love to hate on Monopoly for being an endless game of chance, but I think it can have some real strategy, particularly if you throw some house rules in,” says Schocker. “I used to play to-be-continued games with my grandfather and my sister for days as a kid, and there’s nothing that stirs up nostalgia faster than grabbing the dog token.”

Ages: 8 and up

Sushi Go!

For a fast-paced, competitive game, try a “pick and pass” card game like Sushi Go, which May says can be played in around 15 minutes. The goal is to grab the best combination of sushi dishes as they pass by, scoring points for making the most maki rolls or for collecting a full set of sashimi — but be sure to leave room for dessert, or you’ll end up losing points! While the game is fun for anyone, May says the approachable, appealing artwork makes Sushi Go a great pick for beginners.

Ages: 8 and up

Patchwork

In this abstract strategy game, players use buttons as currency to purchase patches as they compete to create the best, most beautiful, and high-scoring patchwork quilt on a personal game board. More than 500 Amazon reviewers give Patchwork close to a five-star rating — and if you like puzzle games like Tetris or have a thing for quilting, Nelsen says you’ll probably enjoy this thoughtful and fun two-player game, too.

Ages: 8 and up

Santorini

The first player to build a 3-story structure wins Santorini, a strategy and building game ideal for both kids and adults. To start, players use their blocks and builder pieces to move into neighboring spaces on the board. But there’s a twist: Santorini requires increases in difficulty with the addition of extra powers via “god” cards. With thousands of possibilities and unlimited replay value, each round of Santorini brings a new challenge, which is one of the reasons Nelsen is a fan. “Santorini is a quick-to-learn strategy game that can be played over and over again,” says Nelsen. “Think tic-tac-toe, but actually interesting, fun, and deep, combined with Greek legends.”

Ages: 8 and up

Scrabble

Scrabble, the classic crossword game, challenges opponents to use their letters to form high-point words on the board. To load up on even more points, place letters on high-scoring premium squares. The key is to know the rules and a few tricks for gaining more points — and, of course, keep a dictionary on hand for disputed words. At the end of the game, the player with the highest score wins. “Of course, Scrabble is a classic, but it’s one of my favorite date nights: at home on a stormy weekend or even out at a bar (I’m so much fun!),” says Schocker. 

Ages: 8 and up

Jaipur

In Jaipur, players take on the roles of two of the city’s most powerful traders seeking to earn their invitation to the maharaja’s court. A blend of strategy and luck, Jaipur is a fast-paced card game that’s equally deep and easy to learn. May says he often recommends the brand new edition of Jaipur to couples on dates or pals looking for a friendly spar!

Ages: 10 and up

Catan

In a competition for Victory Points, players control their own civilization and try to spread across a modular hex board as they gain and trade natural resources like wheat, brick, sheep, ore, and lumber. But watch out: Another player might cut off your road, and you never know when the robber might steal some of your gains.

“Settlers of Catan, now simply called Catan, is a great family game, and it offers a wide range of expansions and spin-offs,” says Greg May, the owner and founder of The Uncommons, Manhattan’s first board game cafe. “Few games offer the same range of strategies and require the level of player-to-player trading.”

Note: Younger kids may enjoy Catan Junior, which is geared to kids ages 6 to 9.

Ages: 10 and up

Villainous

Become your favorite Disney villain and plan schemes methodically to rid the land of Disney protagonists before other players. Once you choose your villain, you’ll play within your own story, but you’ll also interact with other players (and thwart your opponents from reaching their own objectives!). “Villainous is a very thematic, mean, and fun game, though it’s more complex than most think when they first discover it,” says Nelsen.

Ages: 10 and up

Apples to Apples

In Apples to Apples, each player gets seven “Things” cards to pair up with the Judge’s “Description” card. In each round, the judge reads the description — say it’s “Evil” — and every player lays down the card from their hand that matches that description. The judge chooses their favorite “thing” card, and at the end, the player who won the most rounds wins! Apples to Apples can be silly, but Schocker says it’s especially fun because it’s a great test of how well you can read people. Will the judge choose something funny? Weird? On the nose? “Apples to Apples is one of my favorite family (as long as everyone is over the age of, say, 13) or party games,” she says.

Note: There’s a junior version of the game that is suitable for kids as young as 9.

Ages: 12 and up

Scattergories

If you can think fast under pressure, you’ll love Scattergories, where each player tries to complete a list of prompts (like “things found in the kitchen”) based on a specific letter rolled during the round (L is for “lettuce.”) “I’m not very good at Scattergories and yet I still love it,” says Schocker. “It’s great for a group because you don’t have to all fit around a table to play.”

Ages: 12 and up

Taboo

The object of Taboo, a fast-paced race against the timer, is simple: Get your team to say the “guess” word without using any of the Taboo words for clues. To add to the fun (and keep you honest), an opponent watches over your shoulder and will buzz you if you slip up. Laura Schocker, Apartment Therapy’s Editor-in-Chief and board game enthusiast, has loved this one since college. “Taboo is my jam — it’s a fun party game and ice breaker,” she says.

Note: Parents of younger children might want to check out Taboo Kids vs. Parents for ages 8 and up.

Ages: 13+

Skull

In this surprisingly gorgeous bluffing game, players hold three rose cards and one skull, then add a card to the pile in front of them and announce a challenge and declare how many cards they will flip. Cards that show a rose are safe, but if you expose your opponent’s hidden skull, you lose one of your own cards. Any player who wins two “bets” wins the game! Nelsen loves game for the high stakes: “Saturated with bluffing and bidding, you’ll test your tolerance for risk every round,” he says. “Win or lose, it’s such fun to watch the tension and drama play out in this quick-to-learn game.”

Ages: 13 and up

Trivial Pursuit

Players move around the game board as they answer questions from six categories: geography, history, art and literature, science and nature, and sports and leisure. When you land on a “category headquarters” space, your correct answer will earn you a colored wedge. The first one to collect 6 different wedges wins — only, of course, after correctly answering one final question!

Even if you’re not a huge fan of trivia, you’ll get a kick out of this timeless party favorite. “I’m not really a trivia buff, and yet I love playing Trivial Pursuit — it’s so classic and satisfying,” says Schocker. 

Note: There’s a family version of this classic game for ages 8 and up with a deck of cards split into questions for kids and for grown-ups.

Ages: 16+

This post originally ran on Apartment Therapy. See it there: Experts Pick the Very Best Board Games for Families, Adults, Couples, or Anyone!