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Anagrams

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The Embossing Company Anagrams Set
The Embossing Company Anagrams Set

Anagrams is a board game composed of Scrabble-like letter tiles. Players form words and "steal" them by creating anagrams. It has never truly been standardized and there exist a great many varieties of sets and rules. Anagrams sets are no longer published and now often played with tiles from another word game, such as Scrabble.

History

Reputed to have originated as a Victorian word game, Anagrams has appeared in many published versions in the last century. The first modern version seems to have been the game "Anagrams" published in 1934 by Selchow & Righter, the manufacturer which would publish Scrabble in 1953. In 1975, Selchow published the "Scrabble Scoring Anagrams" version which featured tiles with point values similar to the familiar Scrabble system. Another version was published in the 1960s by the now defunct Transogram. The Embossing Company also produced a yellow-on-black "Eye-Rest" set. Many other versions have been produced and, although the game has been out of print for quite some time, used sets can still be found on internet auction and specialty sites. Many players use several Scrabble or Upwords sets.

A version of the game seems to be popular among tournament Scrabble players. Writers John Ciardi, James Merrill, John Malcolm Brinnin, and Richard Wilbur reputedly played together regularly, with novelist John Hersey also sometimes sitting in (see the article "Wordplay" by Rust Hills from the March 1996 issue of Esquire; Vol. 125, Issue 3).

Rules and Variations

There has never been a standardized set of rules and since the game is out of print, players now often play by house rules. A basic set of rules can be approximated and most variations may be found below.

Setup

Before play all tiles are turned face-down.

Turns

During the game, players take turns flipping tiles face up on the table into the pool. (There are many variations of this, for some see the Variations section.)

Creating Words

When a player sees a word of four or more letters (alternatively, some players allow words of three or more letters) among the tiles face-up in the middle, this player says the word and puts the tiles for this word in front of them. Some versions only allow players to make or steal words on their turn (this slows down play).

Stealing Words

A player may steal a word from another player by mixing all the tiles of one opponent's word with one or more in the middle, forming another word. Mere pluralization is never permitted, however, and sometimes players stipulate that the new word has to change the root of the old one. (example: APPEAR to PARAPET is fine, while APPEAR to APPEARED or REAPPEAR is not.) A player may modify his own words, subject to the same rule.

End of Game and Scoring

The game ends when all tiles are face-up and no one can create or steal any more words.

There are several distinct variants of scoring:

Variations

A host of variations come from both different versions and players' house rules. (There does not seem to be anything close to a comprehensive (or even representative) list of these on the internet.)

The \"Fanagrams\" Variation
The rules from The Embossing Company set refer to variations by players who "have developed an interesting test of mental alerness and a highly exciting form of competition" by eliminating turns. Instead of taking turns, a dealer deals letters in and any player may call out a word. (Players may also choose to form teams.) The result, as the game's official rules note, is that it "very often happens that a quick witted player alone may defeat several others."
Miscellaneous Variations

Letter Distribution

Though there are many variants, one standard letter distribution of 188 letters (given in the Rust Hills article) is as follows:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
13 5 6 7 24 6 7 6 12 2 2 8 8 11 15 4 2 12 10 10 6 2 4 2 2 2

The distribution of 180 letters for Scrabble Scoring Anagrams (according to a review on www.funagain.com):

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
16 4 4 8 22 4 6 6 14 2 2 8 4 10 14 4 2 12 8 10 8 2 2 2 4 2

External links

 


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