Cluedo

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Cluedo
(Clue in North America)

The newest edition of Cluedo.
Publisher Waddingtons
Parker Brothers
Players 2 to 6
3 to 6
(editions vary)
Age range 8 and up
Setup time 5 minutes
Playing time 45 minutes
Random chance Low
Skills required Deduction
Dice Rolling

Cluedo (Clue in North America) is a crime fiction board game originally published by Waddingtons in the United Kingdom in 1949. It was devised by Anthony E. Pratt, a solicitor's clerk and part-time clown from Birmingham, England. It is now published by the United States game and toy company Hasbro, which acquired its U.S. publisher Parker Brothers as well as Waddingtons.

The game is set in a mansion, with the board divided into different rooms. The players each represent a character who is a guest staying at this house, whose owner, Dr. Black (Mr. Boddy in the North American version), has been found murdered. Players attempt to solve the murder. The solution to the murder requires the three components of Suspect, Weapon, and Room.

More games, books, and a film have been released as part of the Cluedo franchise. The board games form an overall story whose complete chronology can be found at Cluedo chronology.

Contents

[edit] Gameplay

The miniature weapons, U.S. edition
The miniature weapons, U.S. edition

At the beginning of play, three cards — one Suspect, one Weapon, and one Room card — are chosen at random and put into a special envelope, so that no one can see them. These cards represent the true facts of the case. The remainder of the cards are distributed among the players.

First North American edition of the game
First North American edition of the game

The aim is to deduce the details of the murder; that is, the cards in the envelope. There are six different characters, six possible murder weapons and nine different rooms (typically Hall, Lounge, Dining Room, Kitchen, Ballroom, Conservatory, Billiard Room, Library, and Study), giving 324 possible solutions. In the course of determining the details of the murder, players announce suggestions to the other players, for example, "I suggest it was Mrs. White, in the Library, with the Rope." All elements contained in the suggestion are moved into the room in the suggestion.

The other players must then disprove the suggestion, if they can. This is done in clockwise order around the board. A suggestion is disproved by showing a card containing one of the suggestion components to the player making the suggestion (for example, the Rope), as this proves that the card cannot be in the envelope. Showing the card to the suggesting player is done in secret so the other players may not see which card is being used to disprove the suggestion. Once a suggestion has been disproved, the player's turn ends and moves onto the next player.

The player's suggestion only gets disproved once. So, though several players may hold cards disproving the suggestion, only the first one will show the suggesting player his or her card. A player may only make a suggestion when his or her piece is in a room and the suggestion can only be for that room.

Once a player has sufficiently narrowed the solution, that player can make an accusation. According to the rules, "When you think you have worked out which three cards are in the envelope, you may, on your turn, make an Accusation and name any three elements you want." You may name any room (unlike a Suggestion, where your character pawn must be in the room you suggest).[1]

The accusing player checks the validity of the accusation by checking the cards, keeping them concealed from other players. If he has made an incorrect accusation, he plays no further part in the game except to reveal cards secretly to one of the remaining players when required to do so in order to disprove suggestions. Also, according to the rules, "If, after making a false Accusation, your character pawn is blocking a door, [you must] move it into that Room so that other players may enter." Since a character pawn can only block a door by being outside of a Room, this clearly demonstrates that the character pawn need not be in any Room to make an Accusation. If the player made a correct accusation, the solution cards are shown to the other players and the game ends.

It is possible for a player to be using the piece representing the murderer. This doesn't affect the game play; the object of the game is still to be the first to make the correct accusation. If the game is played with two people, the process of elimination diffuses the same information to both players. Such a game tends to pass quickly. The Hasbro version of the game is not advertised as a two-player game.

[edit] Tips

[2][3][4][5]

  • If the current player draws another player's piece into the room (by involving that piece in a suggestion), this might in fact help the owner of the piece by eliminating his need to throw dice to move his own piece there.
  • Conversely, if one player apparently wants to go to a certain room, other players can thwart him by pulling his piece to other rooms.
  • If no one gives a card on a suggestion, that means either that particular player guessed one card correctly, guessed two cards correctly, guessed three cards correctly or wants to confuse his opponents by suggesting three of his own cards.
  • If some player is doing elimination too transparently (by, say, suggesting the same room and killer over and over, only replacing the weapon each time), other players can easily notice that player is doing something, perhaps by the component he changes with each suggestion, and thus deduce the cards this player has seen.
  • Conversely, the continually-suggesting player can use this to trick the other players by suggesting weapons and killers that he already knows have been ruled out.
  • A common trick is to suggest cards held in your own hand in order to prove or disprove specifics. This can fool players into believing certain combinations are the correct answer.
  • If evidence is requested for which you have two of the cards in your hand, and someone displays a card, by deduction you are given free evidence. For example, if a player suggests "Miss Scarlet in the Study with the Rope", you hold the Miss Scarlet and Study cards, and a player before you shows a card, then the card in question must be the Rope.

[edit] Legacy

[edit] Movie

Main article: Clue (film)

A comedic film named Clue, based on the American version of the game (as well as several interactive video versions), was released in 1985. In this version, the person murdered was Mr. Boddy. The film, which featured different endings released to different theatres, failed at the box office but has attracted a cult following. All three endings released to theatres are available on the VHS and DVD versions of the film, to watch one after the other (VHS), or to select playing one or all three endings (DVD).

In 2008, Universal Pictures reported that Hasbro, the makers of Cluedo, had licensed several of its board games to the film company for feature film adaptations; among these was Clue.

[edit] Television

Main article: Cluedo (television)

There have been several television game shows based upon this game. There have been, to date, four seasons of the British version of Cluedo (and a Christmas version that in fact shows some similarity to the North American movie), and there have been other versions in Germany, France, Australia and Scandinavia. The format for each pits two teams (each usually containing one celebrity and one person with law enforcement/research experience) against six in-character actors as the famed colour-coded suspects. There is a new murder victim every episode, who usually has it coming to them for one reason or another.

[edit] Spin-off games

Waddingtons, Parker Brothers and Hasbro have created many spin-off versions of the game. Spin-off games fall under two categories, alternative rule variations such as Clue Master Detective, and themed versions such as Simpsons Clue. These include:

[edit] Rule variants

  • Clue VCR Mystery Game (1985)[6] released as Cluedo: The Great Video Detective Game in the UK. It uses an hour-long VHS tape containing humorous scenes of the suspects interacting at Boddy Mansion shortly after Mr. Boddy's death instead of a board. Players uncover details of several murders per game by matching clues given on cards to the action on the video. Only five weapons (Candlestick, Knife, Gun, Rope, and Poison) and five rooms (Dining Room, Kitchen, Hall, Conservatory, and Library) are featured but there are a total of ten suspects (the original six plus M. Brunette, Madam Rose, Sgt. Gray, and Miss Peach).
  • Super Cluedo Challenge (1986)[7] is an advanced version of the Cluedo rules, introducing three new characters (Captain Brown, Miss Peach and Mr. Slate-Grey) and three more weapons (the blunderbuss, poison and axe). The rules are greatly expanded, with each card having coloured and numbered squares in each corner, which are uncovered by special card holders. These allowed 'clues' to be given by uncovering a small segment of the card, showing only a colour/number. Rather than the remaining cards being dealt out at the start of the game, they had to be 'discovered' by reaching one of the many blue counters scattered on the board.
  • Clue VCR II: Murder in Disguise (1987)[8] more scenarios to add to the first VCR game.
  • Clue Master Detective (1988,[9] released as Super Cluedo in France) is an expanded version of the original game. In addition to the original characters, weapons and rooms, the game adds four characters (Madam Rose, Sgt. Grey, M. Brunette and Miss Peach), two weapons (poison and horseshoe), and seven rooms (courtyard, gazebo, drawing room, carriage house, trophy room, studio and fountain) to the mansion. This version was also made into a computer game.
  • Clue Jr.: Case of the Missing Pet (1989)[10] This game was a clue variant aimed for kids. The player played as one of the old six suspects, who are kids, and try to find out who took the missing pet and where they hid it.
  • Clue: The Great Museum Caper (1991)[11] is rather different from the original. One player is a thief moving in a museum stealing paintings, while the other players cooperate to catch the thief. The thief keeps track of his position secretly on paper and is thus not seen by the detectives, until the thief is spotted by a detective or the museum's security system. Ideally, multiple rounds are played, with each player getting to be the thief once. The winner of the match is then the thief who stole the most paintings without getting caught.
  • Cluedo Card Game (1992)[12] is a shedding-type card game, where players attempt to match cards featuring the locations, weapons, and characters from the original game with a central pile of cards.
  • Clue Little Detective (1992)[13]
  • Junior Cluedo (1993) [14][15]is the first Junior game for Cluedo. Instead of finding the murder, the players need to find the ghost of their ancestors and remember where they are.
  • Cluedo Super Sleuth (1995)[16] is another advanced version of the Cluedo rules, though in a different manner. There is no set board to this game, instead the board is made up of twelve tiles which are laid out randomly as players enter new rooms, to create a 4x3 grid. The murder cards remain unchanged to the basic edition, but are not dealt to each player, instead there are 'clue' squares on the board marked by small plastic magnifying glasses, which players collect to get clues. In addition to the "clue" counters there are also item counters, which allow the player to pick a card from an item deck. These item cards allow such things as making more than one suggestion per turn, or moving an incidental character. There are three incidental characters in the game (Inspector Grey, Hogarth the Butler, and the Black Dog) who can serve as help or hindrance, and are controlled through the item and event cards. Event cards are drawn from a deck upon a certain roll of the die and can have varying impact on a game.
  • Clue Jr.: The Case of the Hidden Toys (1998)[17] is themed for children. Instead of solving a murder, the children search for clues for the whereabouts of some lost toys. The rules are significantly different from those for the regular board game. The characters, which look like the original game's suspects as children, are named Mortimer Mustard, Georgie Green, Peter Plum, Wendy White, Polly Peacock and Samantha Scarlet.
  • Cluedo: 50th Anniversary (1999)[18], also released as Clue: 50th Anniversary this edition came in a deluxe format with an extra murder weapon, a bottle of poison.
  • Cluedo: Passport to Murder (2000)[19] was an update of Super Cluedo Challenge with the setting changed to an Orient Express style train in Istanbul station. There is very little change to the mechanics of the game (except you can only play the six original characters), with mainly cosmetic changes and updates to the characters.
  • Cluedo Card Game (2002)[20] is a different card game from the previous game, this time the user has to deduct the Dr. Black's killer, their escape vehicle and their destination.
  • Clue FX (2003)[21] released as Cluedo SFX in the UK, (2004), and Super Cluedo Interactif in France, (2004) is another departure from the original rules. You play as one of four new characters (Lord Grey, Lady Lavender, Miss Peach and Prince Azure, adding a non-Caucasian character since the early Asian Miss Scarlet, none of whom are suspected in the crime. The murder is not of Dr. Black (Mr. Boddy) but of his attorney Miles Meadow-Brook. The usual suspects are in place, this time bolstered by two new people Mrs. Meadow-Brook and Rusty the Gardener. The game play is completely different though, with the introduction of the electronic section announcing moves and clues and no die rolling. Instead players move from location to location to track down each of the suspects to gain their clues, before finding Inspector Brown to make an accusation.
  • Cluedo Junior: The Case of the Missing Cake (2003)[22] is another children's variation where the players have to find out who ate a cake.
  • Clue Mysteries (2005)[23], released in the UK as Cluedo Mysteries (2006) This is another change of rules, and this time the game play is based heavily on another board game called "Mysteries of Old Peking".
  • Cluedo DVD Game (2005)[24] This is the most recent edition of the game, with different rules based around DVD interaction. Instead of a murder, Dr. Black has had an item stolen and, in addition to guessing the criminal, location (room) and stolen object, the time of day when the crime took place also has to be discovered. In each turn players guess three of these four unknowns; and from time to time Inspector Brown and the butler, Ashe, show up via the DVD with helpful information.

[edit] Theme versions

The following games are licensed thematic variations of the original Clue game.

  • The Simpsons Clue[26] (2000) is themed after the TV series, The Simpsons, with the players trying to find out who killed Mr. Burns. It features Homer as Mr. Green, Bart as Prof. Plum, Krusty as Col. Mustard, Marge as Mrs. Peacock, Lisa as Miss Scarlet, and Mr. Smithers as Mrs. White. The weapons are a Plutonium Rod, Necklace, Saxophone, Poisoned Doughnut, Slingshot and the Extend-O-Glove.
  • Clue Dungeons & Dragons[27] (2001) was produced by Hasbro shortly after their purchase of Wizards of the Coast, owners of the Dungeons & Dragons license. The characters are D&D character types (such as Monk, Rogue, Wizard, etc.). The rooms depicted on the board are fantasy-themed (Dungeon, Dragon's Lair, Lost Crypt, etc.), and the weapons also draw inspiration from the popular role-playing game (Mace of Disruption, Flaming Axe, etc.). Game play is identical to standard Clue unless you use the optional Wandering Monsters deck. Using this deck, players must battle monsters when landing on special spaces on the board. The players must battle monsters via dice rolls and are rewarded with magic items that confer special powers.
  • Clue - The Haunted Mansion[28] (2002) The Disney Theme Park Edition features the Haunted Mansion attraction from the Disney theme parks as the board game, relying heavily on the Walt Disney World version of the attraction as far as design. One of the six guests in the house (Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Daisy, Goofy, and Pluto) was scared by one of the six ghosts (The Traveller, The Skeleton, The Prisoner, The Bride, The Opera Singer, and the Mariner) in one of the nine rooms (Foyer, Portrait Gallery, Library, Conservatory, Seance Room, Ballroom, Attic, Graveyard, and Crypt.) The detail on the board draws from the scenes depicted in the Haunted Mansion attraction and contains Hidden Mickeys.
  • Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! Clue[29] (2002) is themed after the TV series, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!. Like the episodes, the gang has to figure out whodunit. It features Fred as Mr. Green, Shaggy as Prof. Plum, Scooby as Col. Mustard, Velma as Mrs. Peacock, Daphne as Miss Scarlet, and Mrs. White as their host. This edition takes place in a run-down version of the mansion where the Study has been replaced by the Kitchen and the original Kitchen has been turned into a cemetery after its walls started crumbling.
  • Clue - The Twilight Zone: Tower of Terror[30] (2007) The Disney Theme Park Edition features The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror attraction from the Disney's Hollywood Studios theme park as the board game. Rather than a murder, the players are trying to discover who disappeared, where, and with which prop. The details, of the characters, props, and rooms draw from the scenes depicted in the Tower of Terror attraction. This version also contains Hidden Mickeys much like the Haunted Mansion version.

[edit] Unlicensed variants

  • Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone: Mystery at Hogwarts Game (2000).[32] This variant of Cluedo has the players trying to find out which student cast which forbidden spell in which room in Hogwarts School. One of the small rules changes is that players must go to an extra room to make their final accusations. The suspects are Harry Potter, Ron Weasley, Hermione Granger, Draco Malfoy, Vincent Crabbe and Gregory Goyle, though, for unknown reasons, Malfoy and Crabbe are depicted in silhouette on their cards.
  • Mystery Museum: The Biblical Artifacts Detective Game (2000).[33] A version of Cluedo but with Evangelical Christian elements to it. In the game, six people of different professions visit a Bible-history museum and steal one of the artifacts. It must be determined who is the thief, which artifact they stole, and where they hid it. Throughout the game, players learn about the Bible.

[edit] In popular culture

  • In the 1995 comedy Jumanji, Robin Williams' character, Alan Parrish, says later in the movie while playing the game, "I've got it, Colonel Mustard in the library with a wrench!" Later he chuckles to himself and says, "Clue."
  • In an episode of the sitcom Father Ted, Fr. Dougal, Fr. Ted and a Hispanic priest (Fr. Hernandez) are playing Cluedo. When the scene begins, it is revealed they have been playing for four hours. However, whilst in conversation, Fr. Dougal notices that no cards have been put into the envelope (making the game unwinnable).
  • A scene from the series finale of Freakazoid has a parody of a mystery game in which each characters and the scene were based on the plot Clue.
  • An episode of Lizzie McGuire features Lizzie, her friends and family playing a role-playing version of Clue.
  • In a short video called 'Murder Unscripted', made in support of the Writer's Guild of America strike, the cast of several shows in the Law & Order franchise are shown standing in a library, over a corpse dressed and coiffed like the North American Miss Scarlet. At times a lead pipe, a candlestick, and a rope tied like the miniature prop are suggested as possible weapons.[34]
  • In the movie Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey, the boys must challenge Death (The Grim Reaper) to a contest to return to life. They play several board games, including Clue where Death loses with the incorrect accusation of "Col. Mustard in the Study with the Candlestick." It turned out to be Prof. Plum.[35]
  • In an episode of the American sitcom Women of the House titled Bad Girl, annoyed by her co-worker's indecisive storytelling, Natty (Patricia Heaton) shouts, "I don't care if it was Colonel Mustard in the library with the candlestick!"
  • In an episode of New Tricks the character Brian Lane (Alun Armstrong) responds, "If this isn't a conspiracy to close us once and for all, JFK was killed in the conservatory by Colonel Mustard with a length of bloody lead pipe."
  • The Doctor Who episode The Unicorn and the Wasp played out like a version of Cluedo, and indeed had various characters in it that are based on their Cluedo counterparts.
  • In the Animaniacs episode "Guardin' the Garden", when the snake gets hit on the head by a cannonball he says,"it was Colonel Mustard in the kitchen", shortly afterwards, he gets blown up by a cannon and says,"or was it Miss Scarlet".
  • The Golden Girls episode The Case of the Libertine Belle features the four girls as participants in a murder-mystery weekend at a hotel. During a scene in which several possible murder suspects are named, Sophia suddenly shouts, "It was Colonel Mustard in the library with the candlestick!" She then turns to the (slightly embarrassed) others and rants, "Oh, she [referencing Rose] says 'The butler did it' and I'm the idiot?!"

[edit] Books

Main article: Clue (book series)

A series of 18 humorous children's books were published in the United States by Scholastic Press between 1992 and 1997 based on the Clue concept and created by A.E. Parker (possibly of Parker Brothers). The books featured the US Clue characters in short, comedic vignettes and asked the reader to follow along and solve a crime at the end of each. The crime would usually be the murder of another guest besides Mr. Boddy, a robbery of some sort, or a simple contest, in which case they must figure out who won. The tenth and final vignette would always be the murder of Mr. Boddy. Somehow, Mr. Boddy would always manage to cheat death, such as fainting before the shot was fired or being shot with trick bullets. However, at the end of the 18th book, Mrs. Peacock kills Mr. Boddy out of starvation and Mr. Boddy stays dead. A similar series of books featuring the Clue Jr. characters was also published. The first book, unlike the others, features thirteen mysteries, not ten, and is titled simply enough Who Killed Mr Boddy?. The name of the book is usually the name of the tenth mystery in which Boddy is killed.

The books notably depart from the film. Mr Boddy is a trillionaire, and the guests are his friends. But since Boddy has his will made out to his friends, they each try to kill him at one point with the intent on cashing in on his will. The guests are all given some sort of defining characteristic for comic effect, as well as to help the reader discern the culprit. Colonel Mustard constantly challenges other guests to duels, Professor Plum often forgets things, even what he is doing or his own name, and Mr. Green is notoriously greedy. Mrs. Peacock is highly proper and will not stand for lack of manners, the maid Mrs. White hates her employer and all the guests, and Miss Scarlet is beautiful and seductive. The traits all help the reader identify the guests. For example, if a mystery thief suddenly forgets what he is doing, and another guest scolds him for his bad manners, the reader can safely assume the two guests are Plum and Peacock. Mr. Boddy himself is ludicrously naive, to the point where he accepts any attempt to kill him as an accident or a misunderstanding (such as a dropped Wrench flying all the way across the Mansion and hitting him in the head), and invites the guests back to the mansion. This explains why he never seeks any legal action against his "friends," and invited them back despite repeated attempts to kill him. However, after a few books, he wises up enough to be suspicious of them, but continues to invite them over against better judgment.

The Clue Jr. series originally had all six characters, but suddenly, some of the characters were taken out, leaving only four. The mysteries usually only included cases similar to the theft of a toy, but sometimes the cases were more serious. They are usually solved when the culprit traps himself in his own lies.

[edit] Video games

Various versions of the game were developed for Commodore 64, PC, Game Boy Advance, Super Nintendo Entertainment System and Sega Genesis. The latest official version, Clue: Murder at Boddy Mansion was released in 1998 for Microsoft Windows and is still available from Hasbro. In 1999 Cluedo/Clue Chronicles: Fatal Illusion was released, which was not based directly upon the board game, but instead uses the familiar characters in a new mystery.

An arcade version of the game was released on an itbox terminal which involves answering questions with a chance to win money. It is available in many pubs throughout the UK.

[edit] Alternate rules

A variant of the game involves removing the dice rolling in the game. Instead each player has nine "moves" to use on a turn with each move onto another space counting as one move, and an accusation, use of a secret passage, or guess, costing three moves, adding more strategy into the game. This variant is offered in the 1998 version of the Clue computer game.

[edit] Worldwide differences

Besides some rule differences listed above, some versions contain different names, both of characters and of the actual game.

In Canada and the U.S., the game is known as Clue. It was retitled because the traditional British board game Ludo, on which the name is based, was less well known there than its American variant Parcheesi.[1] There are also localised versions for Japan and China.

The North American versions of Clue replace the character "Reverend Green" from the original Cluedo with "Mr. Green". This is the only region to continue to make such a change. However, modern editions of the games now call him Reverend Green.

In some international versions of the game (mostly the Spanish-language ones) the colours of some pieces are different, so as to correspond with the changes to each suspect's name.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Cluedo/Clue rules
  2. ^ Cluedo. Gamebits A site about board games.
  3. ^ Deduction Games. The Games Journal.
  4. ^ Cluedo - the game. BBC h2g2 (October 2002).
  5. ^ Cluedo/Clue review. Spelmagazijn (English).
  6. ^ Clue VCR Mystery Game at BoardGameGeek
  7. ^ Super Cluedo Challenge at BoardGameGeek
  8. ^ Clue VCR II: Murder in Disguise at BoardGameGeek
  9. ^ Clue Master Detective at BoardGameGeek
  10. ^ Clue Jr. - The Case of the Missing Pet at BoardGameGeek
  11. ^ Clue: The Great Museum Caper at BoardGameGeek
  12. ^ Cludeo Card Game at BoardGameGeek
  13. ^ Clue Little Detective at BoardGameGeek
  14. ^ Junior Cluedo from TheArtOfMurder.com
  15. ^ Junior Cluedo at BoardGameGeek
  16. ^ Cluedo Super Sleuth at BoardGameGeek
  17. ^ Clue Jr.: The Case of the Hidden Toys at BoardGameGeek
  18. ^ Cluedo: 50th Anniversary at BoardGameGeek
  19. ^ Cluedo Passport to Murder at BoardGameGeek
  20. ^ Cluedo Card Game at BoardGameGeek
  21. ^ Clue FX at BoardGameGeek
  22. ^ Cluedo Junior: The Case of the Missing Cake at BoardGameGeek
  23. ^ Clue Mysteries at BoardGameGeek
  24. ^ Cluedo DVD Game at BoardGameGeek
  25. ^ Alfred Hitchcock Edition Clue at BoardGameGeek
  26. ^ The Simpsons Clue at BoardGameGeek
  27. ^ Clue Dungeons & Dragons at BoardGameGeek
  28. ^ Clue - The Haunted Mansion at BoardGameGeek
  29. ^ Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! at BoardGameGeek
  30. ^ Clue - The Twilight Zone: Tower of Terror at BoardGameGeek
  31. ^ Kill Doctor Lucky at BoardGameGeek
  32. ^ Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone: Mystery at Hogwarts Game at BoardGameGeek
  33. ^ Mystery Museum at BoardGameGeek
  34. ^ Murder Unscripted (YouTube)
  35. ^ Bill and Ted Vs. Death (YouTube)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links