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Children learn through play. As an occupational therapist who works with children and youth, I use games and toys almost every day to help develop important cognitive, visual perceptual, motor, sensory, social, play and leisure skills. While many different types of activities can be used in therapy, this blog focuses on off-the-shelf games and toys that are accessible to most. Whether you are a therapist, parent, teacher, or a game lover like me, I hope you discover something useful while you are here. Learn a different way to play a game you already own or discover a new game for your next family game night. Either way, just go play. It's good for you!

The OT Magazine named The Playful Otter one of the Top 5 Pediatric OT Blogs.


Jan 3, 2022

Brain Freeze

 

Have you ever experienced sphenopalatine ganglioneualgia? Sounds like you should get to the emergency room, quick! However, it's just the scientific name for brain freeze. Brain freeze is that brief, but intense pain in the front of your head that occurs right after you take a bite or drink of something extremely cold. Is it a common problem for you but you still want to enjoy ice cream, popsicles, snow cones and the like? Or are you a fan of these treats but want to avoid the calories? Then Brain Freeze, with its many frozen treats, may be just the game for you.

 


Brain Freeze is a game of logic and deductive reasoning. Two players play to see who can be the first to discover their opponent's Sweet Treat Secret Square. Players do this by asking questions and then secretly recording answers on their boards. It reminds me of the game Battleship, except that a player must determine the four attributes of the secret square, not just two.

Contents of the box.

Each player will have a game board and a secrecy shield (vertical piece), 2 clips to assemble the game board, a dry erase marker, and a cloth eraser. The grid on the board is labeled 1-10 horizontally and A-J vertically. Each of the 100 squares on the board has a picture of a frozen treat. There are five different treats and five different flavors. Each are pictured on the game board (four times each for each treat and flavor). Both boards are the same.

Object:

Be the first to identify your opponent's Sweet Treat Secret Square.

Set up:

Give each player a 2-piece game board, 2 clips (to attach the two pieces), a dry erase marker, and an eraser. Players assemble their boards so their opponent cannot see what they write. Each player secretly chooses one square on their board as their Sweet Treat Secret Square. Each player will mark the coordinates at the top of the secrecy shield and circle the flavor and the treat.

Play:

    Players take turns. On each turn you will guess a row, a column, a treat, and a flavor. For instance a player may guess "B-9, a cherry popsicle". The other player will respond either yes or no. Respond yes if there is at least one correct attribute, and answer no if there are no correct attributes. If the player guesses all four attributes correctly, but does not say he is solving the puzzle, just answer yes. Players record the answers they get on their game board. If an answer is no, then cross off those squares on your board. If the answer is yes, then circle that exact square on your board. By reducing the possible squares you will get an idea of what is the correct secret square. 

    On each turn a player may either take a guess or solve the puzzle. If you are ready to solve, you will say so at the beginning of your turn. Guess correctly and you win the game. Guess incorrectly and you lose the game. 

    Try this:

    • Skip the game but use the board. A player will call out a random flavor and a random treat. Both players quickly search their board to see who can find all four of them first. 
    • Use a symbol or letters of your choice, that the individual is working on, to mark off the squares as you find them.
    • Clean the board as soon as you are done playing to eliminate marks that may be left behind. If you leave the marker on too long it will not clean off entirely and will leave a shadow.
    • Skip the game and practice using the grid. Call out a number and letter and ask the player what is in that square. Reverse it and call out a letter, then a number. Call out a specific treat and ask the player to tell you the coordinates.

    In the box:

    2 2-piece games boards, 2 clips, 2 dry erase markers, 2 cloth erasers

     


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