The National Football Museum currently has an excellent exhibition 'Batteries Not included' on the glory days of soccer themed board and computer games on its top floor. Our visit to the exhibition, which launched in July and finishes on 25th February 2024, was a blast of nostalgia and we had a lot of fun trying everything out. First up was an exhibit from a Victorian fairground game from Blackpool pier. This was one of the largest exhibits and was not interactive for visitors, but we did get a good photo!
In our groundbreaking book Foundations of Managing Sporting Events we talked about some of the merchandising that the FA came
up with for the event based around their lion character, World Cup Willie. One
of these things was a game, Willie Soccer, which is featured here along with
some other board games which attempted to portray aspects of soccer, including
couple of attempts at management games.
The exhibition is an excellent collection of games which have
attempted to represent football in different ways, some more successfully than
others and runs at the NFM until 25 February 2024!
But even this exhibition couldn't cover everything and here at Soccer Mad Boffins we also have fun with other football games such as 'Striker League Champions' which integrates elements of the board game classic Monopoly, with a 'live action' penalty shootout in which players take turns to operate a plastic goalkeeper and a plastic striker whose leg kicks a plastic ball wen his head is pushed.
Managing your team involves buying and selling players using banknotes, to upgrade your team's rating and thus the number of shots you can take against your opponent in a match/shootout.
Of course, such a board game requires time and space and sometimes all you need is something more basic and convenient. We recommend the card based 'Top of the League Football Trivia Set' for car journeys and sophisticated after-dinner entertainment!
A special thanks to Dr Alexander Jackson and the National Football Museum in Manchester, England, for producing such an excellent exhibition.
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