Description
Product information
Item Weight | 1 pounds |
---|---|
ASIN | B00112CHCK |
Item model number | N1384 |
Manufacturer recommended age | 12 years and up |
Best Sellers Rank | #6,016 in Baby (See Top 100 in Baby) #82 in Baby Food Meals |
Customer Reviews |
4.7 out of 5 stars |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Release date | December 10, 2007 |
Department | Unisex-Adult |
Manufacturer | Mattel |
Warranty & Support
Feedback

Apples to Apples [Discontinued by Manufacturer]
Share:
Found a lower price? Let us know. Although we can’t match every price reported, we’ll use your feedback to ensure that our prices remain competitive.
Where did you see a lower price?
($)
($)
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Please select province
($)
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Amazon Customer –
Played this game many years ago. It holds up for a casual game night.
Sandra –
We are an avid board game family. We couldn’t believe we didn’t have Apples to Apples. Do we quickly had to order and add to our bookcase of board games.We did have one long ago and feel the quality has gone down like most board games. Companies finding ways to save a bit of money to cut back on quality. But it’s a card game so we can’t really complain. Wish they would lower the price to compliment the quality. Sadly you can’t find higher quality board games unless you find older used versions. Nostalgic for the better quality everything was “back then when we were kids”But if you live board games this is a must on your collection! Family friendly and can quickly turn into “adult friendly” game if playing with older friends.Love this game!
Lizz –
I don’t know that a group of cocktail drinking adults could sit through too many rounds of this game without feeling a little silly, but it’s perfect for mixed company. We always played tons of games at family gatherings and around the holidays when the whole motley crew would be staying with my grandparents…but as they began getting up in years it was harder for them to play host & hostess to all of us and things gradually started transitioning to my folks house more and more. My parents had candyland from when I was little (25 years ago) and that wasn’t really cutting the mustard. I took it upon myself to get on amazon and order a dozen or so games for them to keep at their house and this was one of them.I had never heard of it before. I ordered it because I basically ordered the top 12 most popular games that appeared to be family friendly. It has been a few years since I purchased this and I can report it has gotten the most use out of the whole lot. I believe it’s been such a big hit for the following reasons:- its easy enough for little kids to play & really enjoy (if they can read, they’re old enough to play without a helper)- its fun for adults to play if there are little kids playing or hilarious old people playing- its good for families that don’t see one another a lot because it involves a degree of making personality inferences when you’re playing to win- every turn involves all the players so nobody has time to mess with their smart phone or iPad or whatever – its like actually engaging family time- it goes by pretty quickly. It’s nothing like the time it takes to play monopoly or trivial pursuit and the like. If everybody is having fun then you just play another game but if you’re nearing dinner time or whatever the game can wrap up pretty quickly.- I don’t think it matters how many people play, it’s basically just a card game. 2 players wouldn’t work but we’ve had 8 or 10 playing lots of times- the content is clean, there’s nothing vulgar, nothing controversialSo, if you ever have company I would for sure keep this game on hand. You can’t go wrong.
apoem –
We love family games. My daughter loves games that are word oriented. My husband loves games that are not long and easy to learn to play. This game makes all of us happy.Essentially you are trying to find the word (or phrase)in your hand that best matches the word or phrase on the played card. The person who gets to judge the phrases or words suitability rotates through the players. You play five rounds and then the person who has had the most winning plays wins.Part of what makes this fun is the table banter, getting to know the other players through the words and phrases they pick to play or pick to win each round. The other part of what makes this fun are the crazy little phrases or quotes on each of the cards.So, an example might be this- the main card played that everyone has to match might be Rotten. At this point player one will pull one card from his hadn that matches this word. It might be Cruella DeVille. Player two might play the word apples. Another player might play traffic. The judge then reads everything and picks the word he thinks best matches Rotten.This set comes with many cards. We have been playing off and on for over a year and haven’t opened all of the cards. We have a family of five and play this once a week almost every week. So the party box while good for a big party will also provide you with years of fun as a family.Well worth the money. Enjoy.
R. Eye –
This game is wonderful for families with adults, teens or kids. It is a refreshing non competitive game where no player can direct the outcome by being smarter, more knowledgeable, or experienced. The game consists of stacks of cards – green and red. Each player takes a turn at being the “judge” and draws a green card with a word on it such as “easy” or “disgusting” and announces the word to the other players. The other players hold seven red cards and each selects one of these red cards in response to the judge’s green card word and passes it to the judge face down among the pile of other player’s cards so that the judge cannot know which player sent a particular card. Players draw a new red card each time they send a card to the judge. The red cards may have words on them such as the name of a famous person, place, or thing, or other words like “spilled milk” or “my hair.” The judge looks at and announces the words on all the collected red cards and chooses one that strikes the judge as complementing the his/her green card. The judge may decide to choose a red card that is the opposite of or related to his/her green card word, or one that is silly or makes no sense. The player who contributed the card that the judge selects wins and receives the judge’s green card. The play continues until one player has collected eight green cards.This game is more fun with a larger group so it is a nice choice for rainy days, family vacations, and group gatherings. Highly recommended!
Sharon V –
It was fun to play this game with my grandchildren
c smith –
My granddaughter loves it!!
Cynthia L. Beer –
Fun game
T. Osgood –
When our college-age game-playing son recommended this game, I decided to buy it to enjoy with him and his girlfriend. But when another son, who hates playing games, and my “avoid-games-at-all-costs” husband actually enjoyed playing it, I knew it was a hit!The “game players” in our family enjoy fast thinking, fast acting games like Cranium, Taboo, Scattergories, and various card games. The non-game players hate these kind of games, and so generally avoid playing any games. But this game has no time pressure, and is a great equalizer of players: everyone takes a turn as judge and each person’s individual approach to decision-making is “right” when it is his or her turn to judge.The “rules” take less than 2 minutes to explain and are easily grasped, even by those with mild cognitive impairments. (A player must be able to read, but there is no benefit to speed. A “quick thinker” has no advantage over a plodding or deeper thinker in this game.) Note also that with minor adaptions, it could be played by those with hearing impairments.The game is low-key enough for a group that doesn’t know each other well, and it can be played by people of different generations (although there are a few names of famous individuals that tweens and teens may not know). It is family-friendly, and would be appropriate to play with your pastor present.A very high recommendation from our family (players ages 18-72).
BSS –
We have a 14 yr old, our 32 yr old, we’re 55, and my Mom who is 76. I ordered this for Christmas (looking for something not too geared toward a lot of rules to remember, for my Mom to play too) and we had a GOOD time! Lots of discussion and laughs over choices. Even the 32 yr. old, who is a true introvert, was getting into a little chatter! Fast games and you can play as short or long as you choose.How to play:1. First pass out 7 red cards to all players. Red cards have all kinds of varied titles. Waterfalls, Grand Canyon, New York, Princess Diana, Dirt, Bicycles, Amazon River, Barbie Dolls, etc, etc.2. Taking turns, first “Judge” picks a green card. Green cards have the word you are trying to match with one of your red cards. IE: “Excitement” and you can put Las Vegas, or tap-dancing, or Getting Married, or a puppy, etc etc.3. Each person EXCEPT “Judge” plays one red card.4. The “Judge” picks the red card that best suits the meaning of the green card, in their opinion. You can have a lot of fun with this!5. Next player assumes “Judge”ship and passes one card out to all players, and repeat game play, and so forth.6. We played longer than the 7 cards it said to limit a game to, and you could play shorter if desired!