About the Board Game Night Sequence Memory Game
A Simon-style pattern game. Tiles light up one after another in a sequence that grows longer every round. Watch carefully, repeat the sequence by tapping the tiles in order, and see how many rounds you can survive.
Arguments over the rules, a missing dice found under the sofa, and somebody always flipping the board — family board game night is a tradition older than any of us. Shuffle up the game-night deck and roll for first turn.
How to Play
- Press Start and watch the tiles light up in order.
- When the sequence finishes, tap the same tiles in the same order.
- Each round adds one more step to the sequence.
- One wrong tap ends the run — your best round is your score.
Why Play Sequence Memory?
- Trains working memory and serial recall
- Endless difficulty curve — the game grows with you
- Quick rounds make it a perfect 2-minute brain break
Fun Facts About Board Game Night
- Senet, played in ancient Egypt over 5,000 years ago, is one of the oldest known board games.
- Chess evolved from the Indian game chaturanga around 1,500 years ago.
- Dice are among the oldest gaming tools known — some excavated examples are over 4,000 years old.
- The memory game you're playing right now descends from the card game Concentration, also called Pelmanism.