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Alphafun
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ALPHAFUN
- World's Most Popular Game
What's
it | Play Guide | AlphaFun Champions' Club
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Playing
Guide
How to Setup and
Start Playing
You should have Alphafun magnetic
game board, 100 magnetic letter tiles, a letter bag/box (to keep
magnetic letters hidden), and four magnetic racks.
Before the game begins, all players should agree upon the dictionary
that they will use, in case of a challenge. All words labeled as
a part of speech (including those listed of foreign origin, and
as archaic, obsolete, colloquial, slang, etc.) are permitted with
the exception of the following: words always capitalized, abbreviations,
prefixes and suffixes standing alone, words requiring a hyphen or
an apostrophe.
Place all magnetic letters in the pouch, or facedown beside the
magnetic board, and mix them up. Draw for first play. The player
with the letter closest to "A" plays first. A blank magnetic
tile beats any letter. Return the magnetic letters to the pool and
remix. All players draw seven new magnetic letters and place them
on their magnetic racks.
The Rules of
the Game: Game Play
1. The first player combines two
or more of his or her magnetic letters to form a word and places
it on the magnetic board to read either across or down with one
letter on the center square (Marked with MFM logo). Diagonal words
are not allowed.
2. Complete your turn by counting
and announcing your score for that turn. Then draw as many new magnetic
letters as you played; always keep seven magnetic letters on your
rack, as long as there are enough magnetic tiles left in the bag.
3. Play passes to the left. The second
player, and then each in turn, adds one or more magnetic letters
to those already played to form new words. All magnetic letters
played on a turn must be placed in one row across or down the magnetic
board, to form at least one complete word. If, at the same time,
they touch others magnetic letters in adjacent rows, those must
also form complete words, crossword fashion, with all such magnetic
letters. The player gets full credit for all words formed or modified
on his or her turn.
4. New words may be formed by:
- Adding one or more magnetic letters
to a word or letters already on the board.
- Placing a word at right angles
to a word already on the board. The new word must use one of the
letters already on the board or must add a letter to it. (See
Turns 2, 3 and 4 click here)
- Placing a complete word parallel
to a word already played so that adjacent letters also form complete
words. (See Turn 5 in the Scoring Examples section, on back page)
5. No magnetic tile may be shifted
or replaced after it has been played and scored.
6. Blanks: The two blank magnetic
tiles may be used as any letters. When playing a blank, you must
state which letter it represents. It remains that letter for the
rest of the game.
7. You may use a turn to exchange
all, some, or none of the letters. To do this, place your discarded
letter(s) facedown. Draw the same number of letters from the pool,
then mix your discarded letter(s) into the pool. This ends your
turn.
8. Any play may be challenged before
the next player starts a turn. If the play challenged is unacceptable,
the challenged player takes back his or her tiles and loses that
turn. If the play challenged is acceptable, the challenger loses
his or her next turn. Consult the dictionary for challenges only.
All words made in one play are challenged simultaneously. If any
word is unacceptable, then the entire play is unacceptable. Only
one turn is lost on any challenge.
9. The game ends when all letters
have been drawn and one player uses his or her last letter; or when
all possible plays have been made.
Scoring
1. Use a score pad or piece of paper
to keep a tally of each player's score, entering it after each turn.
The score value of each letter is indicated by a number at the bottom
of the tile. The score value of a blank is zero.
2. The score for each turn is the sum of the letter values in each
word(s) formed or modified on that turn, plus the additional points
obtained from placing letters on Premium Squares.
3. Premium Letter Squares: A Orange square doubles the score of
a letter placed on it; a Red square triples the letter score.
4. Premium Word Squares: The score for an entire word is doubled
when one of its letters is placed on a Light Green square: it is
tripled when one of its letters is placed on a Dark Green square.
Include premiums for double or triple letter values, if any, before
doubling or tripling the word score. If a word is formed that covers
two premium word squares, the score is doubled and then re-doubled
(4 times the letter count), or tripled and then re-tripled (9 times
the letter count). NOTE: the center square is a Light Green square,
which doubles the score for the first word only.
5. Letter and word premiums count only on the turn in which they
are played. On later turns, letters already played on premium squares
count at face value. 6. When a blank tile is played on a Light Green
or Dark Green square, the value of the word is doubled or tripled,
even though the blank itself has no score value.
7. When two or more words are formed in the same play, each is scored.
The common letter
is counted (with full premium value, if any) for each word. (See
Turns 3, 4 and 5 in the
Scoring Examples section.)
8. BINGO! If you play seven tiles on a turn, it's a Bingo. You score
a premium of 100 points
after totaling your score for the turn.
9. Unplayed Letters: When the game ends, each player's score is
reduced by the sum of his
or her unplayed letters. In addition, if a player has used all of
his or her letters, the sum
of the other players' unplayed letters is added to that player's
score.
10. The player with the highest final score wins the game. In case
of a tie, the player with
the highest score before adding or deducting unplayed letters wins.
Scoring Examples
In the following, the words added on five successive turns are shown
in bold type. The scores shown are the correct scores if the letter
R is placed on the center square. In Turn 1, count HORN: in Turn
2, FARM; in Turn 3, PASTE and FARMS; in Turn 4, MOB, NOT and BE;
in Turn 5, BIT, PI and AT.
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Turn
1 - Score = 14
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Turn
2 - Score = 9
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Turn
3 - Score = 25
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Turn
4 - Score = 16
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Turn
5 - Score = 16
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