Scrabble Deluxe (q.v. Computer Scrabble) (1988) 
| Details (Commodore Amiga) | Supported platforms | Artwork and Media | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Publisher: Genre: Author(s): Minimum Memory Required: Maximum Players: Joysticks: Language: Media Code: Media Type: Country of Release: Comments: | Leisure GeniusMiscellaneous 512K Yes Eng 3.5" Floppy disk Worldwide | Commodore Amiga |
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(Anonymous) (Unknown) 25th Nov 2010 10:29Title Scrabble Deluxe
Publisher Leisure Genius/Virgin (1984-1991)
['Board Genius' Compilation - Beau Jolly (1991)]
Game Type Strategy (Board Game)
Players 1-4
HD Installable No
Compatibility All Amigas (disable caches)
Submission Dennis Smith Profiled Reviewer
Review
Scrabble is far and away the most famous word-based board game, in which
opponents take turns at placing letter-tiles on to the board to make
words. One scores points based on the individual scores for the letters
used and on 'premium' squares on the board which may double or triple
the score of the letters or words which are placed over them.
Against human opponents, the game is a faithful rendition of the board
game, the only real advantages being the built-in dictionary (though this
is a mixed blessing), timer and automatic scoring. The main disadvantage
is the inability to move the letters about on your rack - you can jumble
them randomly, but there's no way to shuffle them manually. Against the
computer, the game is more worthwhile, providing lonely Scrabble-fans with
up to three computer antagonists with eight different skill levels, the
first being pathetically easy to beat, the eighth being fully conversant
with all of the oddest of the words in the dictionary. The dictionary is
less than perfect, however, and you'll likely find yourself having to
confirm once or twice a game that ordinary words (such as 'guild' and
'safety') really exist, even though it doesn't bat its electronic eyelids
at Scrabble favourites like 'zo' and 'ee'. Furthermore it leads to the
computer playing one or two words that you won't find in any dictionary and
you can't challenge it; can someone explain to me what 'dones' means, for
example?
Publisher Leisure Genius/Virgin (1984-1991)
['Board Genius' Compilation - Beau Jolly (1991)]
Game Type Strategy (Board Game)
Players 1-4
HD Installable No
Compatibility All Amigas (disable caches)
Submission Dennis Smith Profiled Reviewer
Review
Scrabble is far and away the most famous word-based board game, in which
opponents take turns at placing letter-tiles on to the board to make
words. One scores points based on the individual scores for the letters
used and on 'premium' squares on the board which may double or triple
the score of the letters or words which are placed over them.
Against human opponents, the game is a faithful rendition of the board
game, the only real advantages being the built-in dictionary (though this
is a mixed blessing), timer and automatic scoring. The main disadvantage
is the inability to move the letters about on your rack - you can jumble
them randomly, but there's no way to shuffle them manually. Against the
computer, the game is more worthwhile, providing lonely Scrabble-fans with
up to three computer antagonists with eight different skill levels, the
first being pathetically easy to beat, the eighth being fully conversant
with all of the oddest of the words in the dictionary. The dictionary is
less than perfect, however, and you'll likely find yourself having to
confirm once or twice a game that ordinary words (such as 'guild' and
'safety') really exist, even though it doesn't bat its electronic eyelids
at Scrabble favourites like 'zo' and 'ee'. Furthermore it leads to the
computer playing one or two words that you won't find in any dictionary and
you can't challenge it; can someone explain to me what 'dones' means, for
example?
| Cheats | Trivia |
|---|---|
| There are no cheats on file for this title. | No trivia on file for this title. |
History
This title was first added on 4th January 2007
This title was most recently updated on 25th November 2010






