Krazy Maze

Krazy Maze was a board game. In Australia it was manufactured under licence by G. N. Raymond Pty Ltd.

Gameplay

Two separate paths wind through a densely illustrated picturesque landscape. When two players play each takes a separate path. The game came with a spinner, called a "spino", which displayed numbers from 1 to 8. Players take turns spinning and moving their counter the corresponding number of squares. Some squares on each track are marked with a letter of the alphabet. If a counter ends its move on one of these squares a table of instructions, printed on the inside of the lid, is consulted. For example, landing on the "A" square of the left track results in the instruction "Forgotten lunch. Back to start"; landing on the B square results in "Tiger snake on road. Extra spin to get past." The two tracks diverge at square one and rejoin at square 89. Square 90 is the last square. A player must spin the exact number to land on square 90; the first player to do this wins.


gollark: Even fizzbuzz, say.
gollark: Yep. Or just most things.
gollark: You could say that about MOST programmers.
gollark: You, maybe, but assembly is still really quite hard because it does not abstract much.
gollark: Anyway, point is, assembly is absolutely not easier to do nontrivial things in than high-level languages, because high-level languages provide many helpful shortcuts.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.