Manufacturers | Parker Brothers |
---|---|
Designers | Wallie Dorr Co |
Publishers | Winning Moves Parker Brothers |
Publication | 1906 |
Years active | 1906–1976 |
Genres | Take That |
Languages | English |
Players | 2, 3, 4 and 6 |
Skills | Medium |
Media type | Cards |
Touring is a specialty card game originally designed by William Janson Roche[1] and patented by the Wallie Dorr Company and produced in 1906. It was acquired by Parker Brothers in 1925.[1][2] It is widely believed the popular French card game Mille Bornes was derived from Touring. After several revisions, Touring was discontinued shortly after Parker Brothers picked up the American license of Mille Bornes.[1][2] However, the game of Touring was reissued by Winning Moves in 2014.
Updates to editions
The original Wallie Dorr edition was a small red box with 100 cards. They updated the game to a side-by-side wider box which Parker Bros used for their first edition of the game after they purchased it.
Periodically the Parker Bros. Co. adjusted the card art and subsequently, the images became more modern, and increased the mileage cards. Until the final edition, game play remained unchanged, just the denominations of miles increased as the trip length and comfort of automobile travel increased. The final edition reversed the trend, using artwork closer to the original Model-T-era cars and adjusting the card totals with an addition of two new delays.
Original rules
The players run a race of 50 or 100 miles, as agreed before the game starts. A player cannot play the mileage cards (1, 3, 5, 10 Miles) unless they have a Go card in front of them. If both players are in City Limits (played by either), they can't play the 10 Mile card ("Speed Limit 5 Miles per Hour"); they can remove this card's effect by playing the Country! card (which affects both players). They lose 1 or 2 hours if an opponent plays a Collision ("Delay! 1 Hour"), Out of Gasoline ("Delay! 1 Hour"), or Puncture ("Delay! 2 Hours") card and must discard an "hour's" worth of cards for each hour (5 miles in the city, 10 miles in the country). To resume driving, they must also play a "Remedy" card (Hauled In for a collision and Gasoline for Out of Gasoline, nothing for Puncture) and a Go card. To win, the player must exactly match the total mileage (50 or 100 miles, as agreed).[3]
Play variant
In each copy of the directions were an option to play progressive touring, in which multiple tables of 4 would play simultaneously.
Cards of select editions
Edition (Card count) |
Mileage | Delay | Remedy | Movement | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Qty | Type | Qty | Type | Qty | Type | Qty | Type | ||
1906 (100) |
20 | 1 Mile | 3 | Collision | 8 | Hauled in | 15 | Go | |
10 | 3 Miles | 2 | Puncture | ||||||
10 | 5 Miles | 3 | Out of gasoline | 8 | Gasoline | ||||
12 | 10 Miles | 4 | City limits[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2] | 5 | Country[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 3] | ||||
1937 (99) |
19[lower-alpha 4] | 1 Mile | 3 | Collision | 8 | Hauled in | 15 | Go | |
10 | 3 Miles | 2 | Puncture | ||||||
10 | 15 Miles[lower-alpha 5] | 3 | Out of gasoline | 8 | Gasoline | ||||
12 | 30 Miles[lower-alpha 6] | 4 | City limits | 5 | Country | ||||
1957 (99) |
19 | 5 Miles[lower-alpha 7] | 3 | Collision | 8 | Hauled in | 15 | Go | |
10 | 15 Miles[lower-alpha 8] | 2 | Puncture | ||||||
10 | 25 Miles[lower-alpha 5] | 3 | Out of gasoline | 8 | Gasoline | ||||
12 | 45 Miles[lower-alpha 9] | 4 | City limits | 5 | Country | ||||
1965 (99) |
19 | 25 Miles[lower-alpha 6] | 3 | Missed the Curve[lower-alpha 10] | 7[lower-alpha 4] | Wrecker[lower-alpha 10] | 13[lower-alpha 11] | Go | |
10 | 35 Miles[lower-alpha 6] | 2 | Broken Spring[lower-alpha 10] | ||||||
10 | 50 Miles[lower-alpha 12] | 2 | Brake Adjustment[lower-alpha 13] | ||||||
12 | 75 Miles[lower-alpha 14] | 2 | Burning oil[lower-alpha 13] | ||||||
3 | Stop to Refuel[lower-alpha 10] | 7[lower-alpha 4] | Gasoline | ||||||
3[lower-alpha 4] | Populated Area[lower-alpha 10] | 6[lower-alpha 15] | Freeway[lower-alpha 10] |
- Notes
- 1 2 Also counted as a movement card.
- ↑ Restricts playable mileage cards to the lower two denominations.
- ↑ Lifts restriction on playable mileage cards.
- 1 2 3 4 Count reduced by 1 card compared to prior version
- 1 2 Distance increased by 10 miles compared to prior version
- 1 2 3 Distance increased by 20 miles compared to prior version
- ↑ Distance increased by 4 miles compared to prior version
- ↑ Distance increased by 12 miles compared to prior version
- ↑ Distance increased by 15 miles compared to prior version
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Several cards were retitled (Old → New):
- Collision → Missed the Curve
- Out of Gas → Stopped to Refuel
- Puncture → Broken Spring
- Hauled In → Wrecker
- City Limits → Populated Area
- Country → Freeway
- ↑ Count reduced by 2 cards compared to prior version
- ↑ Distance increased by 25 miles compared to prior version
- 1 2 New delay
- ↑ Distance increased by 30 miles compared to prior version
- ↑ Count increased by 1 card compared to prior version
In popular culture
- The members of They Might Be Giants can be seen playing Touring in the video for their song "Ana Ng".
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Heli, Rick. "History of the "Take That!" Card Game". A Spotlight on Games. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
- 1 2 Augustyn, Frederick J. (2004). Dictionary of Toys and Games in American Popular Culture. Haworth Reference Press. p. 69. ISBN 0-7890-1504-8.
Mille Bornes: Brought to the United States by Parker Brothers in 1962, ... Parker Brothers had a popular antecedent to this game called Touring
- ↑ "US Patent 836537 A". Google Patents. Retrieved 6 March 2016.