Clue, The Murder Mystery Game Gets A Makeover

The beloved murder mystery game Clue is getting a makeover. It’s been on the shelves for 60 years, but game maker Hasbro has redesigned the game for a modern audience.

Rob Daviau, who helped design the new version shared that the new game takes place at a modern mansion — at a party of the rich and famous.

The new board sits at 20 by 20 inches and features an impressive depiction of the Tudor Mansion, and the entire box is designed to recreate Boddy Black’s desk, featuring evidence he’s acquired to blackmail others.

The attention to detail also extends to the new murder weapon pieces, which are now metal and intricately detailed with a gorgeous golden finish. The pawns are now fully sculpted character movers too, so the Clue experience has been upgraded across the board.

The weapons have changed, the characters have bios and the mansion has new rooms, like a spa, a theater and a guesthouse. And the company added an element of suspense with a second deck of cards.

“A board game is basically a story that you’re telling around the table together. In this case, it’s a murder mystery,” Daviau says. “So what’s the pacing? How nervous should you be? How much time do people have? Because we know that people have less time now than they did before.”

The new game has nine weapons instead of six. There is no more lead pipe, and the revolver is now a pistol. The company also added a trophy, an ax and a baseball bat.

“The weapons aren’t in scale to each other,” Daviau says. “It oddly took a very long time to get the proportions of the baseball bat right — the handle, versus the knob, versus the thickness. My engineer was ready to kill me because I kept sending him back to trim another millimeter off the barrel.”

The characters have changed, too. Miss Scarlet has a first name: Cassandra. Colonel Mustard left the military; he’s a former football star. Victor Plum, formerly the professor who was always known as the smartest man in the room, became recast as a self-made video game designer — a dot-com billionaire.

But what about people who cherished the classic version of Clue and may not want to see changes? Daviau says Hasbro was very conscious of that when updating the game.

“We wanted something that the mom or dad who’s bringing home for the family [could say], ‘This is what I remember, and this is what I want to play with my kids,’ ” Daviau says. “At the same time, we wanted something the kids would feel like it belonged to them. And this is something that’s very appealing to them. So we tried to blend those two worlds. It plays like Clue, it feels like Clue, but it just feels like Clue that would have been created in the 21st century.”

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Published by Larry Fire

I write an eclectic pop culture blog called THE FIRE WIRE that features articles about books, comics, music, movies, television, gadgets, posters, toys & more!

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