How long does trivial pursuit take




















This continues until someone wins. WINNING Answer One Final Question Once a player has collected one wedge piece of each color completing their circle , they then must keep going until they can land perfectly on the center spot on the board.

When they do, they answer a final question. When they get this right, they win the game. If they get it wrong they have to keep landing on the same space until they get it right. The actual how to play Trivial Pursuit is easy, it is knowing the trivia that is hard. Determine before you begin that you will collect just four or five wedges instead of getting the full six before moving to the hub for the final, game-winning question.

Players will collectively decide how long a person has to answer a question, and how specific the answer must be. For example, is a last name enough, or must the player give both the first and last name. You are not required to give the explanatory information that appears in parentheses after some answers.

Players should remember that making a guess is always better than not answering at all. Players often amaze themselves with what they know! The Trivial Pursuit game lends itself well to team play for as many as 24 players.

Dispense those considered strong in various categories amongst teams. Teammates decide how a question should be answered; to avoid confusion, the team captain should give each answer. All Trivial Pursuit games may be played with cards from other editions. The colored ovals on the question-and-answer cards are always arranged in the same order to accommodate interchangeable play. You can move in any legal direction, including the opposite direction from your previous roll.

Move again if you give the correct answer. In Trivial Pursuit, you get to move again if you give the right answer. You can keep rolling, moving, and answering questions until you get one wrong. Just keep in mind that the questions you answer must correspond with the color space you land on. For example, if you land on a blue space, then you must answer a blue question. In the 25th Anniversary Edition, the question you must answer is also determined by the roll of the die, as each box contains questions for a single category.

The higher you roll, the more difficult the question you receive. Earn pie pieces if you land on a wedge space and give the right answer. You can earn pie pieces by correctly answering questions, but you can only earn a pie piece when you are on a pie space. These spaces look different from the others on the board because they show an image of the pie token with a wedge in it.

Keep playing until someone has all six wedges. When a player gets all six pie pieces, that player may begin moving to the center or the board. You must keep rolling and moving each turn as usual until you get to the center space on the board. You need to roll the exact number of spaces to get to the center space. Answer a question in a category chosen by the other players. When you get to the center space, your fellow players may choose any category and ask you a question from that category.

If you answer this question correctly, you win the game. If you miss it, your turn ends, and play passes to the next player or team. They must select the category without looking at the card and then read the question.

If you miss the question, you will have to roll again during your next turn and try to answer a different question when you get into the center space again. Due to the way the board is laid out and how the flow of the game works, it's possible for multiple players to be on one spot and within the rules too. Not Helpful 1 Helpful It is a fun part of the game to learn the answers, so it is recommended but not required.

Plus, if the question comes back some other time, you'll know the answer! Not Helpful 5 Helpful 8. You don't take a wedge that turn. You only take a wedge when you get a question right and don't have that wedge. Not Helpful 12 Helpful They will be on the back of the question card, organized by which color and category question you asked. Make sure not to let the other person see the answers. Not Helpful 7 Helpful 5. The symbols on the board refer to the 6 different categories.

You can get 6 pie shapes if you answer the questions correctly in each category. Not Helpful 6 Helpful 8. What happens if you answer a question wrong once in the middle with all wedges, do you have to roll again next time? Yes, you do. This stops players from immediately being able to try again next turn. Not Helpful 21 Helpful If you roll and get that, you go to whatever space you want. Not Helpful 16 Helpful Any other player in the game can read the question to you, as long as it is not you.

It might be smart to rotate the person reading the question. Not Helpful 2 Helpful 6. The blue category represents geography. Generally, these will be questions about water bodies, land masses, and even outer space. Not Helpful 3 Helpful 7. It depends what version of the game you're playing. I suggest you just skip your next turn. Another option you might like is to play without the board.

One suggestion in the book is called Going Out. Each player takes a stack of cards, maybe 24 high. On your turn, choose a category to start with, read the question aloud and answer it. Flip the card to check and discard it. If you were correct, answer the next category of the next card. If you were incorrect, it's the next player's turn. First player to discard their last card wins. If you want to be extra fair, give remaining players one more turn until you get back to the first player.

You may need to have some kind of trivia shoot out to break ties. There are a bunch more options in the book, including Trivia Tic-Tac-Toe. It looks like it's out of print, but the Amazon page includes the "look inside" feature, and I just searched for "Trivial Pursuit" to find all these rules. I had to sign in first, your mileage may vary. My family started with the house rule of allowing kids to earn pie pieces anytime they answered a question.

There was no need to be on the special category spaces. Later on, that turned into a general use house rule if a shorter game was needed. Or, most commonly, after playing for a while we'd declare "everything counts" just to finish up the game quicker. Each player can move up to the number of empty spots 6 at game start in any direction. Each time you got a piece this reduces the movement. If the movement is 0 you have won. Another set of rules I have seen is to count three correct answers with no more than one wrong in the sequence on the same color as counting for a pie piece.

So, you could answer correctly blue, pink, green, blue; incorrectly blue; correctly orange, blue and get the blue piece. Another alternative is to set a number of total correct and total per category correct - perhaps 30 total, and at least 4 in each category. Another idea is to get rid of the board altogether and just try to answer a question of every category correctly. One variant I've considered several times but never had the opportunity to try is letting someone roll again when they land on a space that matches the color of a wedge they've already won.

It would definitely speed up the game but I've been worried about two downsides: first, there would be a lot of rolling near the end of the game, which could get boring to watch; second, it would give a big advantage to anyone who was in the lead. I have a Trivial Pursuit set that comes with a set of special dice, instead of just one with pips. One die has the colors on it, and the other has a pie symbol on half the faces.

Instead of moving around the board, you just roll the dice to get a question color and whether it's worth a pie piece or not.



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