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Milton Bradley’s SPIDER WARS, from 1988!

Very sad to hear that Cap'n Lou Albano died. Some of will remember Albano as the insane pro-wrestling manager with rubber bands all over his face, and others for his stint as you-know-who on The Super Mario Bros. Super Show. In remembrance, here's an old article I wrote about SMBSS. Incredibly, it's Halloween-themed!

Spiders seem to be all over this year's Halloween Countdown. At the risk of being a boring and repetitive cad, we're going back to the web one more time:

From 1988, it's Milton Bradley's SPIDER WARS! Imagine my good fortune to find such an obscure board game in nearly perfect condition at a local yard sale. Considering that this was otherwise one of the worst yard sales in history, with the wares including half-used bottles of calamine lotion and dented up popcorn tins, this was an especially lucky find. I know fate when I see it, so I didn't even bother to haggle with 'em on the $3 asking price.

Given that I would've been thoroughly within the game's target audience in 1988, I can't believe that I've never heard of it before. If you'll allow me to make broad and unchecked statements based on my own personal experiences, Spider Wars is a rare little ditty that didn't remain in production for very long. I'd say that it was too "high concept," but that's a stretch of a description for a game that comes in a box adorned with graphics of spiders in high-top sneakers.

On one hand, I can see why Spider Wars tanked: It's a pretty dumb game with retarded directions. On the other hand, there are just so few board games that come with an army of neon-legged spider toys.

The two-player game comes with everything above, as well as an oversized instruction manual that features quirky spider art such as this. I'm not sure if there is another game I could compare this to. It's something like Connect-4 and something like checkers, but it's definitely not just a "spider version" of either of those games.

The photo above, in all of its oversaturated glory, does not give a proper indication of gameplay. Actually, only the green spiders should be shown on that side of the web. The orange spiders should be on the other side, where the second player would sit. The goal is to knock your opponent's spiders off the board by poking your own spiders' legs into where your opponent's spiders' legs are. It sounds more confusing than it is.

The spider in the center is what the instruction manual calls a "dangler" -- that's a spider that's had one its legs knocked out by an opponent. If a player manages to knock both legs out, the spider falls to the floor and is disqualified from the game. Sounds easy, but it really isn't. Players are only afforded two moves per turn, so it's easy to get your "dangler" back onto the web before your opponent can move in for the kill.

Since a single game of Spider Wars could conceivably last for seven hundred years otherwise, there's a second way to win. You can skip past your opponent's spiders and simply get one of your own spider's legs into the opposing player's "nest," which is represented by a peg hole on the other side of the board. This speeds the game up manifold, but it's pretty cheap to win just by getting to the other side of the board. True Spider Wars enthusiasts would never stoop so low, so for the sake of brevity, it's a good thing there are no true Spider Wars enthusiasts.

I'll give the game this much: It's a lot harder to win than it looks. The methods of winning are ridiculously simple, sure, but they're also ridiculously simple for your opponent. Essentially, you'll only win if the opposing player make a really stupid move. If you don't want to invest too much time into Spider Wars, play against an idiot.

...or just skip the game altogether, and use the swank spiders for another purpose. Their peglegs make them less than ideal as flat-out toys, but God invented X-Acto knives for a reason.

Spider Wars certainly reflects its era. In 1988 and its surrounding years, there were seemingly hundreds of board games that were light on the gameplay and nuance, but heavy looking like big ass bulky "toys." Board games never looked as cool as they did during that time, but only some of them were as fun to play as they were to play with, if that makes sense?

Which begs the question: Have you even had a board game that had all the makings of being awesome, even if you never really played it the right way? My #1 would be Mouse Trap. I've owned that game at least ten times in my life, and I don't think I've ever played it the right way. Forbidden Bridge would be another one for sure. Never bothered to read the directions on that one, but I sure got a lot of use out of it with my action figures. HOW ABOUT YOU?

Posted by Matt on 10/14/2009. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 192 comments

My friends and I used to play Spider Wars when I was a kid,it was an OK game.

And rest in peace Captain Lou,the best manager of all time. Come on,it’s time to go,do the Mario.

Chestnuts roasted by Kid Nicky Rodan @ 10/14/2009 10:23 PM


I can’t believe that so many of you actually had Spider Wars. I guess it isn’t an obscure as I thought!

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 10/14/2009 10:25 PM


R.I.P. Captain Lou.

Matt= I strongly advised against using a Ouija board to contact Captain Lou. Just let him rest in peace.

123= I can’t tell you what to do with your relationship. You’ll have to figure that out on your own. Just don’t
let her find out how you feel from Randal Graves.

I had the Mouse Trap Game as a kid. What memories. I think I only tried to play that game with my sister and cousins only once. We would rather lay with the trap. There was another game that I like, yet never owned. Crossfire. I think you talked about it once Matt. I also remember them making board games based on video games in the Eighties.

Chestnuts roasted by Lonestar76 @ 10/14/2009 10:36 PM


Ah, Heroquest and The Omega Virus, those were great games. I remember being in pre-school and none of the asshole kids knew how to play Battleship properly. The red pegs were “sinkers” and the white pegs were “floaters”. You would shove the red pegs into the other players boats and try to jam the floaters into your own. This is when I first realized I was going to have trouble in school.

The Super Mario Super Show may not have been that amazing in retrospect, but god damn did I watch it every single chance I got. Captain Lou was a kickass Mario. Much thanks to him for making my childhood more bearable, even if it made me miss the bus three times out of ten. Also, that Zelda show was kind of crap, but why did it feel like a special treat every Friday?

Chestnuts roasted by Jack Stray @ 10/14/2009 11:18 PM


Dizzy Dinosaur

Chestnuts roasted by Los @ 10/14/2009 11:21 PM


Yup, I remember dizzy dinosaur too. COMPLETELY forgot bout that too. Well until now anyway. I liked the commercial for that game. “Dizzy dizzy dinosaur ” That’s the only part that hasn’t left my mind.

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 10/14/2009 11:31 PM


Crackers in my Bed, and Pizza Party

Chestnuts roasted by Gar-Halloween-Field @ 10/14/2009 11:50 PM


The red guy from the middle of my old school “Don’t Break The Ice” game served as the Emperor-esque character in many of the basement sagas of my youth..

Chestnuts roasted by Gralf @ 10/14/2009 11:58 PM


Another “Mouse Trap” rulebreaker, here.

Also: “Don’t Break The Ice.” Sure, I’d play it the right way. But I’d also get bored and put a WWF figure on top of the ice, or under the ice… because my WWF, Dollar Store wrestlers, Ninja Turtles, and He-Man figures were involved in every activity I did for ten years (including an all-inclusive Kids WWF, where I’d “play” my own TV show daily, use Mario Paint to make flashy colors for the wrestlers’ entrances like on TV, and used the Pee-Pee’s Playhouse playhouse set as the Prime Time Wrestling studio). Run-on sentence much?

Chestnuts roasted by Andy @ 10/15/2009 12:00 AM


I had Don’t Break The Ice too. And yeah, when I was done playing the right way, I’d put figures I knew were way to heavy on there on purpose. lol

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 10/15/2009 12:14 AM


I had the MOTU board game but growing up a only child and very little friends i never got to play so i just used the swords it came with and threw the rest away.

Chestnuts roasted by Ermac @ 10/15/2009 12:14 AM


The OMEGA VIRUS was already mentioned, so was TMNT Tower of Terror (which is the best skyscraper toy prop ever), I’ll go with Quicksand- which is a brilliant concept: board, dice, players and all! Your explorer player was made up of 5 pieces: shoes, pants, shirt, head, hat -and as you sunk in the quicksand, you’d remove a bottom piece AS THOUGH YOU WERE SINKING! I remember hours of fun putting just the head, hat, and feet together- times all four players… what a crazy bunch of munchkins.

Chestnuts roasted by FRESH SEANY D @ 10/15/2009 12:36 AM


The OMEGA VIRUS was already mentioned, so was TMNT Tower of Terror (which is the best skyscraper toy prop ever), I’ll go with Quicksand- which is a brilliant concept: board, dice, players and all! Your explorer player was made up of 5 pieces: shoes, pants, shirt, head, hat -and as you sunk in the quicksand, you’d remove a bottom piece AS THOUGH YOU WERE SINKING! I remember hours of fun putting just the head, hat, and feet together- times all four players… what a crazy bunch of munchkins.

Chestnuts roasted by FRESH SEANY D @ 10/15/2009 12:36 AM


I had a Disney Yahtzee game I got when I was 6… had no idea how to play and grew up an only child. I never asked anyone to show me how to play either, so I would just shake the die I the cup, spill them out, and stack them into random shapes…

Also, at the risk of sounding insensitive… can we please not bring down the Halloween Countdown with relationship issues? It’s really the only time we get to hear from Matt anymore and I, personally, come here to enjoy myself. Either make it a clean break or endure the relationship, bro. Let’s keep it out of the comments and certainly don’t carry it from one of Matt’s posts to another, please.

Chestnuts roasted by Starsmudge @ 10/15/2009 12:40 AM


Sometime this weekend I’m gonna do a 21 rubber-band salute for Captain Lou.

Chestnuts roasted by Loneman1 @ 10/15/2009 12:50 AM


i got a board game sometime in the 80s called arcade mania. it came with a handheld “arcade” machine that let you play 4 really basic games on a grid of 9 squares with red lights (similar to merlin). you were supposed to use the board to move pieces around and play the arcade game only when prompted, but i dont think i ever played the game on the board. i just wanted to play the arcade machine! i still have it, and about a month ago i tried the arcade machine and the damn thing still works.

someone else mentioned crossbows and catapults. im sure there were rules and objectives to that game, but i dont remember ever reading them. my friends and i just loved trying to destroy each others shit until there was nothing left.

Chestnuts roasted by Simon @ 10/15/2009 12:51 AM


I’m with Starsmudge on this one… with all sympathy, this is not the place for processing personal issues…

Chestnuts roasted by Teejay @ 10/15/2009 1:53 AM


RIP Captain Lou. Maybe I’ll break out the SMBSS dvds this weekend in his honor. I also have a Cptn Lou Mii I made for the Mario look-a-like contest when the mii contest channel first came out. Maybe I’ll do a few rounds of online Mario Kart with it, lol.

I never owned Mouse Trap, though I always wanted it. I DID have bed bugs, which it seems Matt has a history with. Other than that, I had a game called Tipsy Tower, which involved placing plastic, orange figurines of daredevils in various poses on a multi-colored, wobbly tower. You were supposed to put all of your guys on without knocking the other player’s guys off. However, since I was usally by myself, I would either try to fit them all as neatly as I could on the tower, or, the more likely senario, send the orange thrill seekers on …. thrilling… adventures.

Chestnuts roasted by Duskull @ 10/15/2009 2:33 AM


I have never seen this board game before it looks really cool. It would look great set up on a halloween mood table. The stickers must of been put on by the previous owner though because they are extremely crooked. I love the outside light that you used how some parts of the legs are white. Matt some pictures you take I look at them for a few extra seconds more then you would think so don’t think people take the quality camera work for granted.

That reminds me of a game I got when I was a kid for Christmas, one of those cheap games your relatives give you you don’t ask for that was like tic tac toe meets connect four. Ever since I got it I always felt not “normal” like everybody else got connect four except me. It had three rows that could slide across. You were either black or red and you would either put one of your pieces in and drop it in the top or slide one of the rows over one place. The pieces would fall out the side out the bottom. The goal was to have 3 in a row in any direction. It wasn’t a bad game, just the thought of getting a poor man’s connect four always stuck with me. The rounds were fairly short so if you got bored you could just wait until the round was over then put everything back in the box.

Lou, I had a tape for a couple of years at least store bought with a couple of the super mario bros super show episodes on it and one episode had Cyndi Lauper in the episode. I think he made a joke about girls wanting to have fun I dunno but I remember the tape got eaten by the VCR and I was very disappointed. I think I always skipped the Zelda cartoon on fridays, I just never been into that game. Sorry Zelda/Link fans but it’s true. Whoever is a friend of Cyndi is a friend of mine. Well, you know what I mean.

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 10/15/2009 3:14 AM


*Sigh*

I actually got slightly teary eyed when I heard about Captain Lou. I met him a couple of years ago in New Jersey when he was out promoting the first boxed set of the Super Mario Bros S.S.

I’m only 19 right now, and could only catch the show on reruns on ABC Family when I was little but…*sigh* I loved that guy so damn much.

I feel like I should do something, but I don’t know what. What a craptastic year for childhood idols ;-;

Chestnuts roasted by ThePlatinumStag @ 10/15/2009 3:22 AM


I just googled because I have to google everything the game I was talking about in the previous comment I posted was called shift tac toe. The link to see the picture and read about it is here.

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 10/15/2009 3:39 AM


Dear Abby is someone you want to write to when having relationship problems, not the X-E blog.

Chestnuts roasted by Scott @ 10/15/2009 8:12 AM


I had (actually have, as it is still in the closet at my mother’s house) a game called SPLAT which involved making bug game pieces out of Play-Doh, then getting to “splat” them with a big plastic hand piece if the game so called for it. Well, my cousins and I would often let game play be damned and content ourselves with making and subsequently splatting our bugs over and over.

Chestnuts roasted by Cheetara @ 10/15/2009 8:28 AM


Another amazing game that I used to love as a kid was Battling Tops. Not sure if there is really a wrong way to play it but it was fun as hell. Man, thinking of that makes me really want to get it for someone this Christmas!

Chestnuts roasted by drew do @ 10/15/2009 8:30 AM


Kerplunk was awesome until you lost all those little sticks. Then it was garbage.

Chestnuts roasted by Nickelodeon @ 10/15/2009 8:41 AM


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