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Space Hop

Space Hop is an educational board game about astronomy published by Teaching Concepts in 1973.

Box lid art, 1973

Description edit

Space Hop is a board game for 2–4 players that is designed to teach the players about the Solar System.

Components edit

The game has the following components:[1]

  • board (map of the Solar System)
  • three decks of cards: mission, hop and SNC
  • clue decoder wheel
  • two six-sided dice

Set-up edit

Each player rolls the dice and starts their token on the space port corresponding to their roll. Each player draws a mission card which gives a clue as to the player's destination.[1]

Gameplay edit

The active player draws a hop card. If the active player is sure about their destination, they can spend their turn moving towards it. If the player is not sure, they can use the decoder wheel to decode the name of their destination, but doing so will use up their entire turn.[1]

Movement edit

The player can choose to navigate towards their destination by using their accumulated hop cards to hop from portal to portal. Or they can roll the dice and move the indicated number of spaces, avoiding asteroids, comets, and other space ships. Once close to their destination, the player must roll the exact number needed in order to land.[1]

Getting credit edit

Once at the destination, the player draws an SNC card (or two cards if their mission card had a star). These cards award the player with credits. The player then draws a new mission card, and play continues.[1]

Victory conditions edit

The first player to amass 25 credits wins the game.

Publication history edit

Space Hop was designed by Helmut Wimmer, a resident artist at New York's Hayden Planetarium at the time of the game's publication. It was published by Teaching Concepts in 1973.[1]

Reception edit

In December 1973, Ellen Stock of New York Magazine recommended Space Hop and the other four games produced by Teaching Concepts as good educational Christmas gifts.[2]

In 1977, Pamela Riley and Patricia Powers named Space Hop as a potentially positive influence on non-sex-biased career options for 4th grade students.[3]

In the same year, Paul Hounshell and Ira Trollinger called Space Hop "An interesting and well-designed game for junior and senior high school students. It is fun for students to play and, in the process, they will learn many facts about the nature of the universe and space travel." They concluded "One class period is required to play the game but there should be time allotted to discuss various aspects of the universe and travel within it."[4]

In 1987, Ellen Lederman chose Space Hop for inclusion in her book Educational Toys and Games: A Practical Guide to Selection and Utilization, noting that the game "Increases knowledge about the planets."[5]

In a retrospective review almost 50 years after the game's publication, Scott Brady did think the game might have some educational merit but questioned its game value. He noted that the game was designed by a specialist in the field, not a game designer, saying "As with most other educational games, there is no revolutionary game play to be found." Brady thought the real value in buying a used copy would be to frame the attractive game board.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Brady, Scott (2021-02-21). "Thrift Treasure: Teaching Concepts Games". Sahm Reviews. Retrieved 2021-02-24.
  2. ^ Stock, Ellen (December 3, 1973). "Best Bets: Boards of Education". New York Magazine. p. 96.
  3. ^ Riley, Pamela J.; Powers, Patricia (November 1977), The Influence of Occupational Toys on Career Aspirations, Washington DC: Office of Education, Women's Educational Equity Program, pp. 86, 97
  4. ^ Hounshell, Paul; Hollinger, Ira (1977), Games for Science Classroom, Washington DC: National Science Teachers Association, p. 175
  5. ^ Lederman, Ellen (1987), Educational Toys and Games: A Practical Guide to Selection and Utilization, Springfield: Charles C. Thomas, p. 151, ISBN 0398052980

External links edit

space, topic, this, article, meet, wikipedia, notability, guidelines, products, services, please, help, demonstrate, notability, topic, citing, reliable, secondary, sources, that, independent, topic, provide, significant, coverage, beyond, mere, trivial, menti. The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia s notability guidelines for products and services Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention If notability cannot be shown the article is likely to be merged redirected or deleted Find sources Space Hop news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Space Hop is an educational board game about astronomy published by Teaching Concepts in 1973 Box lid art 1973 Contents 1 Description 1 1 Components 1 2 Set up 1 3 Gameplay 1 4 Movement 1 5 Getting credit 1 6 Victory conditions 2 Publication history 3 Reception 4 References 5 External linksDescription editSpace Hop is a board game for 2 4 players that is designed to teach the players about the Solar System Components edit The game has the following components 1 board map of the Solar System three decks of cards mission hop and SNC clue decoder wheel two six sided dice Set up edit Each player rolls the dice and starts their token on the space port corresponding to their roll Each player draws a mission card which gives a clue as to the player s destination 1 Gameplay edit The active player draws a hop card If the active player is sure about their destination they can spend their turn moving towards it If the player is not sure they can use the decoder wheel to decode the name of their destination but doing so will use up their entire turn 1 Movement edit The player can choose to navigate towards their destination by using their accumulated hop cards to hop from portal to portal Or they can roll the dice and move the indicated number of spaces avoiding asteroids comets and other space ships Once close to their destination the player must roll the exact number needed in order to land 1 Getting credit edit Once at the destination the player draws an SNC card or two cards if their mission card had a star These cards award the player with credits The player then draws a new mission card and play continues 1 Victory conditions edit The first player to amass 25 credits wins the game Publication history editSpace Hop was designed by Helmut Wimmer a resident artist at New York s Hayden Planetarium at the time of the game s publication It was published by Teaching Concepts in 1973 1 Reception editIn December 1973 Ellen Stock of New York Magazine recommended Space Hop and the other four games produced by Teaching Concepts as good educational Christmas gifts 2 In 1977 Pamela Riley and Patricia Powers named Space Hop as a potentially positive influence on non sex biased career options for 4th grade students 3 In the same year Paul Hounshell and Ira Trollinger called Space Hop An interesting and well designed game for junior and senior high school students It is fun for students to play and in the process they will learn many facts about the nature of the universe and space travel They concluded One class period is required to play the game but there should be time allotted to discuss various aspects of the universe and travel within it 4 In 1987 Ellen Lederman chose Space Hop for inclusion in her book Educational Toys and Games A Practical Guide to Selection and Utilization noting that the game Increases knowledge about the planets 5 In a retrospective review almost 50 years after the game s publication Scott Brady did think the game might have some educational merit but questioned its game value He noted that the game was designed by a specialist in the field not a game designer saying As with most other educational games there is no revolutionary game play to be found Brady thought the real value in buying a used copy would be to frame the attractive game board 1 References edit a b c d e f g Brady Scott 2021 02 21 Thrift Treasure Teaching Concepts Games Sahm Reviews Retrieved 2021 02 24 Stock Ellen December 3 1973 Best Bets Boards of Education New York Magazine p 96 Riley Pamela J Powers Patricia November 1977 The Influence of Occupational Toys on Career Aspirations Washington DC Office of Education Women s Educational Equity Program pp 86 97 Hounshell Paul Hollinger Ira 1977 Games for Science Classroom Washington DC National Science Teachers Association p 175 Lederman Ellen 1987 Educational Toys and Games A Practical Guide to Selection and Utilization Springfield Charles C Thomas p 151 ISBN 0398052980External links editSpace Hop at BoardGameGeek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Space Hop amp oldid 1199091103, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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