Lexiko

Lexiko was a word game invented by Alfred Butts.[1] It was a precursor of Scrabble. The name comes from the Greek lexicos, meaning "of or for words".[2]

Lexiko
Designer(s)Alfred Mosher Butts
Illustrator(s)Alfred Mosher Butts
Publication date1931
Years active1931–1938
Genre(s)Word game
Language(s)English

Lexiko was played with a set of 100 square cardboard tiles, with the same letter distribution later used by Scrabble (see Scrabble letter distributions), but no board. Players drew nine tiles at random, and attempted to construct words from them.

History

In 1931, Butts wrote a paper entitled "Study of Games." In his paper, he described three categories of games: board, number games using playing cards or dice, and letter games (or games that fell into more than one). He noted that, although the most popular games were of the first two (e.g., chess and backgammon), the best letter game readily available was Anagrams. Around that time, he was reading The Gold-Bug by Edgar Allan Poe and noticed a line containing the English letter distribution. This gave him an epiphany: Anagrams would be more fun if the most common letters in English were more common in the game. He carefully analyzed letter frequencies in newspapers and other printed works to determine the ideal letter distribution for the game. With a few other changes, he named his project Lexiko. The game design was rejected by games manufacturers such as Parker Brothers and Milton Bradley, but Butts was able to sell copies on his own, though not enough to recoup his development expenses. In 1938, he began work on a board game based on Lexiko, which he called Criss-Cross Words, which was eventually renamed Scrabble.[3]

gollark: In any case, I also didn't say mind control.
gollark: So you have mental combat which *somehow* only allows read access but still has defenses and stuff? This seems unreasonable. I don't think you can cleanly separate read/write out for brains that way.
gollark: I did NOT say mind reading.
gollark: Perhaps.
gollark: It doesn't really make sense for the reader to be able to get things that somehow the combined intellect of every in-world character for several hundred years has missed.

References

  1. History of Scrabble letters, Retrieved November 7, 2013
  2. "Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, λεξικο^ς". www.perseus.tufts.edu.
  3. The history of Lexiko is discussed in Word Freak by Stefan Fatsis.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.