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Crokinole
Flick a wooden disc, chase the 20, fall in love by the third round.
Designed by Uncredited (public domain folk game, first patented 1876 in Ontario, Canada) · 1876
It's the rare game almost nobody dislikes, and the only real catch is the price of a good board. If you've got the table space and the budget, this earns its spot near the top of every list it lands on.
Best for: Families, couples, and anyone who wants laughter and a little skill without reading a rulebook.
What it is
Crokinole is a Canadian flicking game from the 1800s, and the pitch is simple. You snap a small wooden disc across a polished round board, trying to land in the high-scoring rings or sink the center 20 hole. The twist that makes it a game and not just target practice: if opponents have discs on the board, you have to hit one of theirs, or your shot gets pulled off. So every turn you're either attacking or threading a careful line. People call it shuffleboard in the round, and that's fair.
The catch
What real players keep saying is that the rules land in about a minute, but the skill quietly stacks for years. Kids and dexterity-challenged adults can sit down and have a good time, while strong players are calculating angles and ricochets. It's light on the brain, which is the point. Reviewers love that you can chat with friends and family through a whole match. The honest catch is the board. A nice hardwood one costs real money, and budget versions can ship with uneven ditches or rough edges.
Who it's for
Here's the thing. Crokinole sits near the top of the BoardGameGeek rankings, around #46 overall and top five in family games, and the popularity is climbing fast with tournaments reporting big jumps in attendance. That ranking isn't hype. Almost nobody who plays it dislikes it. If you want something a six-year-old and a grandparent can enjoy at the same table, and you can stomach the upfront cost of a good board, this one pays you back for decades.
What other players say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and player discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
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