Boxes (1889)

Playtime: 15
Min. Age: 7
Number of Players:
2
Publisher:
MB Jeux,
The Shanin Group, Inc.,
MB Spellen,
VEB Berlinplast,
Cavalcade Games,
Service Kits, Inc.,
John Sands Pty Ltd,
(Public Domain),
Hilco Corporation,
Montour Novelty Co.,
Waddingtons,
MB Spiele,
Milton Bradley,
MIKA
Designers:
Edouard Lucas
Artists:
Unknown
Mechanics:
Enclosure,
Paper-and-Pencil
This game is currently not traded on the marketplace:
This game is currently not listed on the marketplace. If you want to sell yours, please add it to the marketplace.
Marketplace
Show Description Show Comments Price Trend
The game, which is known by many names and has been released in many versions, was invented in 1889 by the French mathematician François Edouard Anatole Lucas and first named La Pipopipette.
Boxes is a plasticised version of a game we used to call Dots and Dashes. In the paper and pencil version, you draw a grid of dots and then each player must alternately draw dashes joining adjacent vertical or horizontal dots. If you are able to complete a square, you mark it as your own and you must draw another dash. At the end of the game, players achieve long runs of squares. When all squares are claimed, the game ends, and the winner is the player with the most squares.
The grid of boxes is 8x9 in size for 72 positions to be captured.
Similar to:
Squares - but on a larger rectangular board.
Honeycomb (which uses a hex board)
Squaresville (with double scoring squares and premarked edges)
Boxes is a plasticised version of a game we used to call Dots and Dashes. In the paper and pencil version, you draw a grid of dots and then each player must alternately draw dashes joining adjacent vertical or horizontal dots. If you are able to complete a square, you mark it as your own and you must draw another dash. At the end of the game, players achieve long runs of squares. When all squares are claimed, the game ends, and the winner is the player with the most squares.
The grid of boxes is 8x9 in size for 72 positions to be captured.
Similar to:
Squares - but on a larger rectangular board.
Honeycomb (which uses a hex board)
Squaresville (with double scoring squares and premarked edges)
We currently have no price data for this game.
Related Games
ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-04-25 11:14:44.368