Troke is a strategy board game "cousin" of Scrabble!
In the 1940s, James Brunot, one of the early developers of Scrabble, collaborated with Arpad Rosti, a famous industrial designer, to invent the board game "Troke." When Selchow and Righter licensed Scrabble in 1952, they also acquired the rights to produce Troke. Troke was patented in 1959, and S&R produced the game into the late 1960s. The game features some unique pieces, and calls for some deep tactical insights to gain points without losing ground. And when the end game is triggered, the player who ends the game may not be the winner! It's history is interesting, and so is the game play. Rather a long video this time, but I had to tag on an epilog to tell you about my own game design from 40 years ago that bears an uncanny resemblance to Troke. Hope you enjoy! As always, thanks for watching! I hope you will subscribe and become a frequent visitor to the channel. And be sure to visit NewVenture Games elsewhere: https://www.newventuregames.com / newventuregames ...and be sure to play every day! See it at BGG: https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/1...

The 2025 World Scrabble Champion Is A Familiar Face

An introduction to Abstract Board Games.

Gluckshaus is a Medieval dice game from central Europe. Will the dice roll in your favor?

Watch this if everything feels too much (gentle comfort for tired women)

10 Greatest Abstract Strategy Board Games | Collection Starter

The Best Scrabble Endgame Of All Time

Brian Boru - How To Play

Onitama Expansions - Beyond The Base Game

How to Play Alchemists

The hidden logic behind #, @, & and §

🔴 Makkah Live | مكة مباشر | الحرم المكي مباشر | قناة القران الكريم السعودية مباشر | مكه المكرمه

My Top 5 Abstract Board Games

Carrom Review & The World of Wooden Board Games!

Trump’s Pricey Reflecting Pool Project Turns “Puke Green” from Algae; Weird G7 Summit: A Closer Look

Lots of Mancala history here, and TWO how-to-play segments: Oh-Wah-Ree, and Kalah.

This Record-Setting Scrabble Game Should Not Be Possible

A classic two-player abstract strategy game that deserves more attention: Lines of Action!

Prudh | abstract strategy game| build | rules

10 FUN Board Games that are EASY to Learn

