But when was learning a game, something designed for children to enjoy (as well as adults), ever such a problematical excersize or strewn with such difficulty before?
Originally, the average child could buy the game and learn it by him/her self, and play a game in the same afternoon. Now you need a Language Degree and the mentality of a Legal Analyst conducting scientific research.
We have adults used to long, wordy rulebooks, tax forms, and technical manuals struggling to grasp the basics... of a game!
(Sorry for the slight thread hijack - but thought i should respond - just to clarify my point).
Yes, my children (and adults who have never played the game before) will just love reading that... and it's a mere snippet of the 60+ pages worth.Rulebook: Bouncing Ball (part)...
If the ball is dropped or not caught, or the ball bounces to a square with a Prone or Stunned player, or a player is pushed to, or lands in, the ball’s square, or the square where a thrown ball lands is unoccupied, (or is occupied by a Prone or Stunned player), then it will bounce.

