Hello,
I'd love to rediscover an image of this game that I played many times in the early seventies.
I'm thinking it was a free game, sent off for by cutting coupons perhaps. It came from Spaghetti Letters (or was it Alphabetti-Spaghetti?). Hence, it had no box.
It was a board game that was folded in two, but opened into a game set in a haunted house. Quite simple, players just threw a dice and moved along the ghostly-themed squares, up the board (right, up, left, up, right, up and so on), until you then came straight down the board along its right hand side (down a chimney, I think). As per usual...one square near the end sent you right back to near the very start. Grrr (I always seemed to land on that).
I remember the squares wound through a haunted house and I think many were decorated, or bordered by the bright orange reminiscent of the spaghetti itself.
As I said, I'm sure my parents sent of for it, free. But surely I wasn't the only kid in Britain that got it. It seemed like it at the time, as I know none of the local kids had it and I was quite in demand for my free, spaghetti-based haunted house board game.
I'd love to see a piccy of it again.
...Jamo
I'd love to rediscover an image of this game that I played many times in the early seventies.
I'm thinking it was a free game, sent off for by cutting coupons perhaps. It came from Spaghetti Letters (or was it Alphabetti-Spaghetti?). Hence, it had no box.
It was a board game that was folded in two, but opened into a game set in a haunted house. Quite simple, players just threw a dice and moved along the ghostly-themed squares, up the board (right, up, left, up, right, up and so on), until you then came straight down the board along its right hand side (down a chimney, I think). As per usual...one square near the end sent you right back to near the very start. Grrr (I always seemed to land on that).
I remember the squares wound through a haunted house and I think many were decorated, or bordered by the bright orange reminiscent of the spaghetti itself.
As I said, I'm sure my parents sent of for it, free. But surely I wasn't the only kid in Britain that got it. It seemed like it at the time, as I know none of the local kids had it and I was quite in demand for my free, spaghetti-based haunted house board game.
I'd love to see a piccy of it again.
...Jamo
Comment