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Tic-Tac Dough (1957)

Min. Age: 8
Number of Players: 2 - 3
Publisher: Transogram, Ideal, Spear's Games, Upson, Chad Valley Co Ltd., (Unknown)
Designers: (Uncredited)
Artists: Unknown
Mechanics: Unknown
Show Description Show Comments Price Trend
Tic-Tac-Toe with trivia questions.
One player plays "X" and the other player plays "O". Each space on the board is assigned a category. In turn, a player wins the space by answering a trivia question in the category chosen correctly. Each correct answer adds money to the jackpot. The first player to get three of their own symbol in a row wins the jackpot. Stalemates are common, however, and the jackpot keeps building until a winner is declared.
The player with the most money after a set number of games is the winner.
Transogram also released a Junior Edition for pre-teens. Following the scandal concerning rigged quiz shows, which cast a pall over the television industry, the Tic-Tac-Dough games were rebranded as 3-In-a-Row Home Quiz.
The Ideal version, released in 1978, added a solitaire game for the first to get three-in-a-row: the player chooses from nine random cards (six money amounts plus one each of Tic, Tac, and Dragon) one at a time. The player wins additional money by accumulating $1,000 or finding Tic and Tac, but loses if the Dragon is found.
The games are faithful to the television series they are based on.
One player plays "X" and the other player plays "O". Each space on the board is assigned a category. In turn, a player wins the space by answering a trivia question in the category chosen correctly. Each correct answer adds money to the jackpot. The first player to get three of their own symbol in a row wins the jackpot. Stalemates are common, however, and the jackpot keeps building until a winner is declared.
The player with the most money after a set number of games is the winner.
Transogram also released a Junior Edition for pre-teens. Following the scandal concerning rigged quiz shows, which cast a pall over the television industry, the Tic-Tac-Dough games were rebranded as 3-In-a-Row Home Quiz.
The Ideal version, released in 1978, added a solitaire game for the first to get three-in-a-row: the player chooses from nine random cards (six money amounts plus one each of Tic, Tac, and Dragon) one at a time. The player wins additional money by accumulating $1,000 or finding Tic and Tac, but loses if the Dragon is found.
The games are faithful to the television series they are based on.
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ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-04-28 08:41:31.885