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Best Family Games for 2024

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$8 at Amazon

Disney Lorcana

Multiplayer card game for the Disney fanatic

$30 at Amazon

Image of Castle Panic 2nd Edition Image of Castle Panic 2nd Edition

Castle Panic 2nd Edition

Best family game for young teams

$60 at Amazon

Board game tiles on a table with beer glasses in the background Board game tiles on a table with beer glasses in the background

Heroes of Barcadia (currently unavailable)

Best adult family game

Contrary to popular belief, countless new board games are released each year, possibly in the thousands. But there’s no need to sieve through all of them to find the ones worth investing in. That’s what we’re here for. We’ve found some interesting and fun picks to help you spend quality time with loved ones — or just keep the kids busy.

What’s the best family board game?

When you want to involve the most family members of different ages, a game like King of Tokyo is the best place to start. It feels like a simple game for kids ages 8 and up, and it is, but it also has plenty of layers to make it fun for adults, too. King of Tokyo has a lot of expansions as well, making it replayable, even if you play it every week.

What makes the best family board game?

The perfect family game needs to be:

  • Accessible to a broad age group
  • Appealing to people with a wide range of interests
  • Quick to set up
  • Potentially easy to drop midway through

If you have younger kids or older adults intent on never learning new tricks, finding the balance between complexity for enthusiasts and simplicity for everyone else can seem impossible.

No single game does it all, but these are the best for achieving each goal. I’ve personally played every one of these games, many of them dozens of times. After years of experience and informal research, here are the best family board games you can pick up right now.

Read more: Best Strategy Board Games

Best family board games

James Bricknell/CNET

Like

  • Kaiju battles are fun for everyone
  • Good amount of luck to offset lack of skill
  • Colorful

Don’t like

  • Can feel simple for older families

King of Tokyo has been a longtime favorite family board game in our house, because it’s easy to pick up (even for younger players), quick to play and still strategically satisfying. Each player takes control of a monster — think Godzilla or King Kong — and attempts to control Tokyo on the central game board. What ensues is a fun and often hilarious game of dice-rolling (imagine Yahtzee, but using dice with claws, energy bolts and points on them), aggressive play and chaotic attempts to wrest control of Tokyo from your competitors. The game ends when only one monster remains alive or when someone reaches 20 points. It’s simple but endlessly fun, even in a mixed crowd.

James Bricknell/CNET

Like

  • Easy to learn
  • Beautiful pieces and artwork
  • Fast-paced

Don’t like

  • Only accommodates four players

My family and I recently started playing Fire Tower, and it has quickly become one of our favorites. My 5-year-old has a little trouble playing with the cards but loves the fire gems; we all do, really. To play, you have to defend your fire tower from the raging forest fire around you while pushing the fire to destroy the other players’ towers. There is a really fun luck component to the game, where the wind direction can be changed by the dice. This means a fire could sweep across the board in entirely new ways. It’s exciting and quick to play so makes a great lunchtime game.

James Bricknell/CNET

Like

  • Simple family fun
  • Lots of different versions
  • Who doesn’t love trains?

Don’t like

  • Some of the pieces are a little flimsy

Ticket to Ride is a family game for the ages. It’s so simple to learn — you get tickets to build tracks for trains across the country — and easy to play, yet it never feels stale or boring. It also comes in a huge number of flavors. The original is set in North America, but there’s a European version, one based in New York, or the latest Ticket to Ride Paris, all of which offer unique mechanics and gameplay experiences.

Old or young, your family will enjoy playing with trains in this simple yet effective board game.

James Bricknell/CNET

Like

  • Complex gameplay
  • Ever expanding
  • Disney art is stunning

Don’t like

Disney Lorcana is an almost perfect mix of Magic: The Gathering and everything Disney. You play as an artist, bringing the characters of the world of Disney to life using ink — your currency in-game — so they can quest for forgotten lore. It’s clearly been worked on for a long time, as it feels like a game that’s existed forever. It’s so well-polished.

Like

  • So pretty!
  • Easy to master
  • Low stakes

Don’t like

  • Instructions were unclear

This was an impulse buy that turned out to be one of the best games of the year in our house. We got it as part of a deal and when we sat down to play, we were blown away by how pretty and fun the game was. The premise is simple: You’re growing houseplants and need to collect water, sun and plant food. You do that by playing cards from your hand and then trading that hand with the person next to you. Because each round is played simultaneously, Planted is faster than most turn-based games and has the feeling of a co-op game without actually being one. It’s a joy to play and is now a staple in my family’s game night.

Fireside Games

Like

  • Cooperative fun
  • Great visual artwork
  • Easy to learn

Don’t like

  • Lots of small, easy-to-lose pieces

While many casual video games have been based on board games, Castle Panic is the reverse. It’s based on those iOS tower defense games you see all over. As a family, you have to defend your castle from the horde of monsters coming from all sides. 

Because the bad guys are based on dice rolls and follow set paths, there is no need for one person to be the baddie; everyone gets to be the hero. 

James Bricknell/CNET

Like

  • Easy to pick up and play
  • Great intro to D&D ideas
  • Bright and colorful

Don’t like

  • Easy to damage cards and tokens

Dungeons and Dragons is a big, scary game that feels intimidating to get into, and Wizards of the Coast, the company that makes it, knows that. Dungeon is an entry-level game for ages 8 and up that introduces the concepts around D&D; things like fighting monsters for loot and rolling dice to simulate that combat. 

The board is separated into different levels of difficulty, and the character you play will decide what difficulty you should be aiming for. This means that younger players can play without too much fear of loss, while older players can up the challenge rating. 

Once you have mastered Dungeon you can move onto Adventures Begin, the next phase in your D&D introduction. Keep playing these games, and soon you’ll be playing full-blown D&D! 

Palm Court

Like

  • Easy to pick up and put down
  • Fun dial mechanic

Don’t like

  • Harder to hold everyone’s attention

This is a super simple game to pick up and play and just as easy to drop when food arrives or people want to move on. Essentially, a card with two categories is revealed (say, “easy to sit on” or “hard to sit on”), and one player is shown a meter with a point somewhere between the two ends. They then must come up with a word that will get everyone else to guess where that point falls (for instance, if the point was close to “hard to sit on,” I might say “cactus”). It’s a simple game but quickly gets a group talking and laughing about the weird disagreements that never would have surfaced without Wavelength (like, “How hard is it really to sit on a cactus?”).

James Bricknell/CNET

Like

  • Infinitely replayable
  • Easy to travel with
  • Loads of variations

Don’t like

  • Cards not waxed (can get damaged easily)

When my family and I want to play together but don’t want the hassle of getting a giant board out to play, we normally settle on one of the eight packs of Fluxx we own. Fluxx is a fast-paced, ever-changing card game that starts with a basic set of rules: draw one, play one. From there, everything about the game can be changed — from the goal required to win to how many cards you pick up each turn.

Fluxx also has a lot of licensing agreements, so it has a ton of variations. From Marvel Fluxx to Spongebob Fluxx and beyond, there is a version for everyone. There is even a drinking version that has waterproof cards for more adult families.

Dude Games

Like

  • Quiet game
  • Lots of teamwork

Don’t like

  • Harder for younger players to not speak

In Magic Maze, four wizards are trying to shoplift from a mall and escape before the time runs out. There are two problems: players can communicate only by passing a nondescript game piece back and forth (that means no talking or pointing), and each player is responsible for a movement rather than a character. Yes, that means one player is responsible for making every wizard turn left, use an escalator or just walk forward. What results is a near-silent, yet chaotic experience that will stretch your family’s nonverbal communication to its limit. If that’s the sort of thing you’re into, winning the game together is about as satisfying as board games get.

Indie Boards and Cards

Like

  • Great for large groups
  • Lots of strategic play

Don’t like

Plenty of bluffing games are on the market, but The Resistance is one of the best for large groups. It’s a simple game of deception in which some players attempt to mount a resistance against an oppressive regime through covert operations, and the rest of the players try to stop them. Problem is, no one knows who’s who.

If you’re looking for something that is a little more of a strategy game with more depth (and maybe a little less character assassination to get your parents to believe you more than your siblings), Sheriff of Nottingham balances a fun market-building mechanic with the intrigue of sneaking goods past (or just bribing) whichever player is filling the sheriff’s shoes at the moment.

Hasbro

Like

  • Great for young kids
  • More than one game in the box

Don’t like

  • Will need to buy more clay at some point

Cranium is an oldie but a goodie: It’s perfect for bringing together kids as young as 5 or 6 with the rest of the family. This classic game includes everything from sculpting clay to Pictionary-like challenges and pop culture trivia. Hasbro has released a new version of Cranium called, aptly, New Cranium, with new games for the modern age.

If the kids you have in mind are a little older, an alternative might be Ticket to Ride, a fun train-themed building game with simple enough mechanics for an elementary-age kid to enjoy, but enough complex strategy to keep everyone else interested.

Gamewright

Like

  • Teamwork makes the dream work
  • A fun sense of impending doom
  • Tiles add variety

Don’t like

  • Can feel overly simplistic after repetition

Magic Maze may be cooperative, but the lack of verbal communication makes it feel less cooperative than other games of the same type. So I’m giving the title of Best Cooperative Game to Forbidden Desert. While it’s a fairly simple game to play, fun elements like the ever-shifting board and unique actions available to each player make this a fun game for mixed company. It has a wonderful sense of urgency too as the island is slowly sinking the whole time.

James Bricknell/CNET

Like

  • Fantastic drinking game
  • Great for adults
  • Waterproof pieces

Don’t like

Heroes of Barcadia isn’t a normal family game; it’s an adult family game. The game is a cocktail of dungeon-crawling board-builder and a literal drinking game. You build your dungeon as you play and battle against your family, but because it is a drinking game, you use your glass to measure your hit points and drink when you take damage. It doesn’t have to be alcohol, but it’s a lot of fun when it is!

The best thing about the game is that it’s fully waterproof. Everything from the cards to the manual is made of a thin, flexible plastic that acts like paper but won’t be destroyed the first time you drunkenly spill your “health potion” all over it.

How we test family board games

As you can imagine board game testing is a grueling and often stressful experience. I’m kidding; testing board games is awesome. It is, however, subjective in a lot of ways. I tend to look at certain criteria as to what makes a board game “good, however.”

  • Is the board and piece quality good?
  • Are the instructions clear?
  • How long does it take different age groups to learn?
  • How long does the game take to play?
  • How fun is it? (This is incredibly important)
  • Can you replay it and it still feel fresh?

Because board gaming is a team sport, my family’s opinions are used to help me average out testing. While I may like a 5-hour-long game with 1,000 pieces, my 17-year-old son may not feel the same. Getting a good spread of opinions helps me find the best overall games in each category.





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