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be updated soon
Stuff Magazine wrote in January 2001:
Get balddered! It's official, chess is the new football. First
you have to fight your rival for control of the bladder from
the centre-square. Then you must keep possession, pass it
around the field and ultimately score that illusive goal.
While you're planning tactical manoeuvres and positioning
players, your opponent will no doubt be tackling and laming
your pieces like mad, forcing them off the pitch and turning
the battle into a five-a-side match. And for less than a match
at Chelsea.
To see the review page
please click here.
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PS
Magazine wrote in December 2000:
Playtime is here! Do you know someone fascinated by football?
This could be the ideal game for soccer-holics. Hours of family
fun are guaranteed with this challenging strategy board game,
Bladder. Based on the historical root of all football the
object of this absorbing game is to capture the football-like
bladder and force it into your opponent's goal while taking
and tackling his pieces. A simple game to learn with long
lasting appeal.
To see the review
page please click here.
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BBC
Match of the Day wrote:
Bladdered: I'm just bursting to tell you about this new Bladder
Game I got hold of the other day. I tell you what when it
comes to game strategy I could show that Kasparov a thing
or two. Bladder's a cross between football and chess and not
recommended for the likes of Tony Adams - it's addictive.
To see the review page
please click here.
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New
Woman wrote in December 2000:
We reckon this fab board game should be called Football: The
Root of All ruined Saturday Afternoons.
To see the review page
please click here.
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The
Daily Star wrote in December 2000:
Footie fellas may like the new table-top game Bladder. It's
available from Hamleys or call 020 7490 5593 for your nearest
stockist.
To see the review page
please click here.
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The
Games Gazette wrote in December 2000:
Bladder-the root of all football is a 2-player boardgame from
Purkess Brittain Games created around the strategies of chess
and the niceties of a combined English soccer and Games Workshop's
BloodBowl. So much of Bladder points to an amusing comical
game- the falvour text, the artwork, the squat little Bladderite
villagers, the way the Bladder is carried, the "spot the ancestors"
competition and the way the rules allow for players to be
"lamed" and tackled. But underneath all of this frivolity
lies a deeply thoughtful game. The board is an 8 x 8 square
with the two central horizontal lines extended by one square
(like ears) and the two end central squares criss-crossed
as goals. In turns, starting with the dark side, players move
their team pieces one square at a time in accordance to the
rules (horizontally, diagonally and vertically forward - never
backwards and never through, past, onto or over other pieces)…
To read the full
review click here.
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In
the Candis Christmas 2000 issue they wrote:
Crazy name, crazy game. A hybrid variation of chess and football
(two teams of players move across the board as with chess,
but with a ball), this strategy game has consistently outsold
all-comers all over Europe and has just been introduced to
the UK. Better than the name would suggest.
To see the review
page please click here.
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In
September 2000 the Evening Standard wrote:
If you do one thing… While David Beckham will never be the
next Gary Kasparov, and Nigel Short, I fear is unlikely ever
to achieve notoriety for his banana free-kicks, neither should
despair: there is a game both can enjoy together- Bladder,
named after the ancient medieval version of soccer, and nothing
to do with Paul Gascoigne. Played on a chess style board the
pieces compromise two teams of 14 ugly-mugged figurines with
strange haircuts (imagine an England team made up entirely
of Peter Beardsley's relatives). Like chess the pieces move
in turn around the square board. Unlike chess, a ball- the
Bladder is past between them. To pass it, your piece transfers
it from his head to that of another player. Strategy is everything.
Tackling involves surrounding an opponent's piece with your
own team-members: to cripple a rival piece, you can 'lame'
him (your opponent may wish to cry and/or throw a tantrum
at this stage). You then attempt to transport the bladder
to the goal. Simple but addictive. The drawback? No terrace
chants, not even "who's the b****** in the white and/or black".
Bladder costs £21.99 and is available from Hamleys (www.bladdergame.com).
To see the review
page please click here.
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In
September 2000 The Guadian's GUIDE writes:
This ugly fella is the unexpected link between chess and football.
Bladder is a new game combining chequerboard strategy with all
the aesthetics of medieval football.
To see the review page
please click here. |
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Bizarre
Magazine, July 2000
"If you love football and chess then this should be your game
of choice. Highly competitive as you plan your opponent's
downfall. Fantastically brilliant!"
To see the review
page please click here.
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Fun
& Games, David Pritchard
Bladder
From the title of this piece you might be forgiven for thinking
that I'm about to embark on a dissertation on a genito-urinary
tract. Not so: Bladder is a two-player boardgame themed on
football.
To
see the review page please click here.
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Mike
Siggins' 'Gamers Notebook' (About Olympia)
"When you come across an interesting game, with an enthusiastic
designer and a decent marketing angle, you cheer up instantly
and all is right with the world. This year the game was Bladder
- and even if it is an abstract, it has that elusive instant
appeal."
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'Games
Games Games' March issue 2000 (G3 Buyer's Guide)
"To win you need to get the ball into your opponent's goal.
The easiest way to accomplish this is by eliminating most
of his men!" (ST) - 4/5 'stars'
"Clever chess variant with excellent pieces. The moves capture
the feel of the medieval football theme well. Recommended."
(CJ) - 4/5 'stars' (with pic)
To see the review from
December 2000 please click here.
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