The Great Grape Escape

  1. The Great Grape Escape Game
  2. The Grape Escape Temecula
  3. The Grape Escape Geneva Ohio
Great
The Grape Escape
Publisher(s)Parker Brothers
Players2–4
Setup time3-7 minutes
Playing time15 minutes
Random chanceHigh (die rolling)
The Great Grape Escape

The Grape Escape is a board game released in 1992 by Parker Brothers (now Hasbro) and licensed by Rehtmeyer Inc..[1] The game was intended to entertain younger audiences of 5+ years old.[2] The game was short-lived having only been available for one year. In 2010 Hasbro released a game called Smashed Potatoes with the same game play but with potatoes instead of grapes (probably because of Parker Brothers being part of Hasbro who owns the rights to Mr. Potato Head).[3] However, Smashed Potatoes was eventually discontinued.

The game consisted of playing pieces constructed of various colored Grape Goop (Play-Doh[4]) that were fashioned after grape-like action figures. Game play consisted of maneuvering clay playing pieces through several plastic obstacles on a board that were aimed to physically disfigure or decapitate the playing piece; destroying the Grape Goop figure often resulted in losing the game, but sometimes had the affected player re-mold their Grape Goop figure using one of the included grape mold templates and returning to the start space. The obstacles included: crank/rubber band operated scissors, a steam roller, a large saw blade, and a grape stomping boot activated by lever and rubber band. (In Smashed Potatoes, the grape stomping boot was replaced with a french fryer.)

Game play[edit]

Players form clay grapes with an included mold to use as their playing pieces. Players then travel around the board which is mostly covered by a hand cranked mechanism that will stomp, roll, cut, or cause other forms of grape torture according to what space you land on. If you get squished you have to re-mold your grape and start over. Re-implemented by: Play-Doh Smashed Potatoes Game. Grape perks Click here and learn more about our great perks and discounts from local businesses. Come see why our small home town feeling has become such a famous family tradition.

Each player rolls the die in turn. (In Smashed Potatoes, the die was replaced with a spinner.) They then move their grape the number of spaces indicated on a factory conveyor belt style board. The hazard stations are counted as a place as well. The Grape Leap roll allows the player to jump ahead one space of the grape in the lead. If a player rolls Turn Crank they can operate the apparatus and take out any grape on one of the four stations (in which case, the affected player must re-mold his or her grape piece and start over). Should a player land on the same place as an opponent's grape, that grape is pushed to the next hazard station. The first grape to reach the finish wins.

The Great Grape Escape Game

Advertising[edit]

The Grape Escape Temecula

The Grape Escape was advertised primarily through television commercials aired during children's television programs. The commercials consisted of animated claymation figures being crushed or sliced while children played the game. The theme song was set to the tune of the famous Italian song Funiculì, Funiculà.[5]

The Grape Escape Geneva Ohio

References[edit]

  1. ^Rehtmeyer, Inc. // Licensing // Toy Experts Game Experts Board Game Manufacturing Prototyping Toy Manufacturing
  2. ^The Grape Escape at BoardGameGeek
  3. ^http://www.hasbro.com/common/documents/dad261421c4311ddbd0b0800200c9a66/2B7CDEDE5056900B10455DA39581374B.pdf
  4. ^Grape Escape instructions from Hasbro
  5. ^YouTube - Grape Escape
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