MooT is a question and answer board game, similar to Trivial Pursuit, that asks questions about the history and meaning of English words. Success is determined by a player's ability to answer questions about grammar, etymology, slang, euphemism, and semantics. The game was invented by Jon Steeves and is published by Blair Arts Ltd.
2. Do cons speak prose?
3. Its name means opposite bear in Greek. Which large landmass is it?
(2) Yes - Non-metrical spoken or written language is prose.
(3) The Antarctic -- in Greek anti arkitos means "opposite bear."
2. A member of the collective rolls the die and selects a question that matches the number rolled (see Card Values below).
3. Without looking at the answer, the member reads the question out loud; all members now discuss it until an answer is agreed upon.
4. If the answer is correct, move the red marker forward the amount shown on the die. If the answer is incorrect, move the blue marker forward the same amount.
5. Repeat steps 2 to 4 until one of the markers has gone completely around and off its section of the board -- i.e., past 30. If the red marker finishes first, the collective wins.
2. The red team rolls the die; a member of the blue team then selects a question that matches the roll (see Card Values below) and, without looking at the answer, reads the question aloud.
3. The red team discusses the question and arrives at an answer, the player who rolled the die having the final say.
4. If the blue team believes that the red team is incorrect, they can challenge by saying "We're challenging" and then submitting a different answer. However, if they either can't agree upon an answer or believe that the red team is correct, they can waive the challenge.
Note that the only time teams lose points is if they challenge and are incorrect.
5. A player now reads the answer out loud. If the red team is correct, they move their marker forward the amount shown on the die; if incorrect, their marker is not moved.
6. If the blue team challenged and was correct, they get the points; if incorrect, they lose the points. If they didn't challenge, their position remains the same.
7. Repeat steps 2 to 6 with the blue team rolling the die and the red team challenging.
8. Repeat steps 2 to 7 until one team wins by going completely around and off its section of the board -- i.e., past 30.
green = a roll of 4 to 6
yellow = a roll of 7 to 9
blue = a roll of 10 to 12
For example, if you roll a 4 and then get the question right, red moves 4, but if you are wrong, blue moves 8. If you are still easily beating MooT, you can further increase the difficulty by tripling (then quadrupling, etc.) the points given for incorrect answers.
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"MooT (game)".
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