Super Scrabble (1187786082)
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''Super Scrabble'' is a
board game A board game is a type of tabletop game that involves small objects () that are placed and moved in particular ways on a specially designed patterned game board, potentially including other components, e.g. dice. The earliest known uses of the ...
introduced in 2004 and a variant of ''
Scrabble ''Scrabble'' is a word game in which two to four players score points by placing tiles, each bearing a single letter, onto a Board game, game board divided into a 15×15 grid of squares. The tiles must form words that, in crossword fashion, re ...
''. It is played on a 21×21 grid board instead of Scrabble's usual 15×15, and uses twice as many letter tiles. In North America ''Super Scrabble'' is made and marketed by Winning Moves Games, but licensed by
Hasbro Hasbro, Inc. (; a syllabic abbreviation of its original name, Hassenfeld Brothers) is an American multinational corporation, multinational toy manufacturing and entertainment holding company founded on December 6, 1923 by Henry, Hillel and Herma ...
. In the rest of the world it is manufactured by Tinderbox Games under license from
Mattel Mattel, Inc. ( ) is an American multinational corporation, multinational toy manufacturing and entertainment company headquartered in El Segundo, California. Founded in Los Angeles by Harold Matson and the husband-and-wife duo of Ruth Handler, ...
. ''Super Scrabble'' is available in
English English usually refers to: * English language * English people English may also refer to: Culture, language and peoples * ''English'', an adjective for something of, from, or related to England * ''English'', an Amish ter ...
and German. In February 2007, a ''Deluxe Super Scrabble'' was released with a rotating gameboard and interlocking tiles, just like ''Deluxe Scrabble''.


Gameplay differences

The changes from standard ''Scrabble'' in ''Super Scrabble'' are summarized by the latter's tagline, "More spaces, more tiles, more points—add to your fun!" The board is larger; (21×21 or 441 squares vs. 15×15 or 225 squares); there are more premium squares (going up to quadruple letter and word score spaces); there are 200 tiles, twice as many as a normal ''Scrabble'' set. The middle 15×15 squares are identical to a ''Scrabble'' board, so standard ''Scrabble'' may be played on a ''Super Scrabble'' board. All the high-scoring quadruple premiums lie near the outside of the board, with the quadruple word squares at the four corners of the board. Other than the differences in the board and the number of tiles, gameplay is similar to ''Scrabble''. Each player has seven tiles in their rack as normal, scoring is the same, and the same word lists are used. However, the differences are enough to upset normal ''Scrabble'' strategies. For example, earning fifty points in a bingo bonus (using all seven tiles) is not nearly as significant when compared to the high final scores. For a two-player game, scores over eight hundred points are not uncommon. Tournament-level ''Scrabble'' games are usually limited to two players. Many tournament players find games with more players cramped. With its larger board, ''Super Scrabble'' is ideally suited for three- and four-player games. Indeed, its scoring sheets do not have enough lines to keep score for most two-player games. ''Super Scrabble'' has exactly twice as many tiles as ''Scrabble'', but the distribution of letters is not simply the original distribution doubled. The distribution is: *4 blank tiles (scoring 0 points) *''1 point'': E ×24, A ×16, O ×15, T ×15, I ×13, N ×13, R ×13, S ×10, L ×7, U ×7 *''2 points'': D ×8, G ×5 *''3 points'': C ×6, M ×6, B ×4, P ×4 *''4 points'': H ×5, F ×4, W ×4, Y ×4, V ×3 *''5 points'': K ×2 *''8 points'': J ×2, X ×2 *''10 points'': Q ×2, Z ×2 The and indicate modifications from double the original distribution, with indicating more than double the original distribution, and indicating fewer. Note, for example, that there are more than twice as many S's (ten, whereas standard ''Scrabble'' has four). This was done to make more opportunities for plurals and third-person singular verbs. Due to the board and letter distribution alterations, the highest theoretical score from one word is 11520, scored from the word BENZALPHENYLHYDRAZONE (using the two Z tiles and a x144 multiplier from the TWSs and QWSs). How the word on the board can be constructed is currently unknown.


Strategy

Many of the same strategies that are applied in standard ''Scrabble'' play can be utilized in this version. Premiums play a larger role in ''Super Scrabble'', due to both the presence of quadruple letter and word scores, and also because near the edge of the board, double word scores are spaced closely together, making it much easier to score a "double-double". In addition, opportunities for bingos are increased due to the three extra squares in each direction. For the same reason, hooks can play a larger part in strategy (a hook is a letter that can be played at the start or end of a word already on the board and as part of the same move in a new word in the cross direction). Certain high scoring words that are impossible to make in ''Scrabble'' without using blanks, such as words with doubled Z's (e.g. FUZZ, JAZZ, DAZZLE), and words with doubled K's (e.g. KICK, KINK, KNOCK, KARAOKE), can be played. The word KNICKKNACK, with 4 K's, cannot be played in ''Scrabble'' because there is only 1 K and only 2 blanks - but it is possible to play this word in ''Super Scrabble''. The same is true for words with four Z's, such as PIZZAZZ and RAZZMATAZZ. With quadruple-letter scores spaced only three squares away from a double-word score, it is not uncommon to see a single play score over one hundred points, even without a fifty-point bonus. Guarding against such plays becomes vital to strategy. However, due to the larger size of the board, this becomes increasingly difficult, especially late in the game.


External links

*, includin
A ''Super Scrabble'' board

''Super Scrabble'' page
Link to ''Deluxe Super Scrabble'' page on Winning Moves USA's website
Rules
Link to the game's rules on the Winning Moves USA site {{Scrabble Board games introduced in 2004 Scrabble variants Winning Moves games