Treasure hunt (game)

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Children hunt for Easter eggs like these.

A treasure hunt is one of many different types of games with one or more players who try to find hidden objects or places by using a series of clues. Treasure hunt games may be an indoor or outdoor activity. Outdoors they can be played in a garden or the treasure could be located anywhere around the world.

Children's games

Treasure hunts are sometimes organised as a game to be played at children's parties. The game could include searching for items, following clues as a group or splitting into teams to race to a prize.

An "armchair treasure hunt" is an activity that requires solving puzzles or riddles in some easily portable and widely reproduced format (often an illustrated children's book), and then using clues hidden either in the story or in the graphics of the book to find a real treasure somewhere in the physical world. Although these may seem to be for children, this genre is aimed at dedicated adults.

Treasure hunts for adults

The treasure hunt as a party game is attributed to socialite Elsa Maxwell. She said that:

In the Treasure Hunt . . . intellectual men were paired off with great beauties, glamor with talent. In the course of the night's escapades anything could happen.[1]

There is a growing market for treasure hunts using fixed landmarks in the real world, rather than a specially laid trail at a particular event. Companies provide these hunts as corporate team building activities in cities around the world.

Geocaching is an outdoor treasure-hunting game in which the participants use a global positioning system (GPS) receiver or other navigational techniques to hide and seek containers (called "geocaches" or "caches").

Letterboxing is another treasure hunt activity. In the UK it is particularly associated with Dartmoor. It is played outdoors and combines elements of orienteering, art and problem-solving. Letterboxers hide small, weatherproof boxes in publicly accessible places (such as parks or open moorland) and distribute clues to finding the box in printed catalogs, on one of several web sites, or by word of mouth. Individual letterboxes usually contain a logbook and a rubber stamp.

Treasure trails are a variation on the theme of a treasure hunt in which participants follow a set of directions and discover clues to help solve a puzzle en route. Trails may be on foot or use vehicles, including public transport. They may follow circular routes or be linear.

An armchair treasure hunt uses a book or a puzzle as basis, in which clues are hidden. This type of treasure hunt may take months to solve and often has large prizes to be won.

Online treasure hunts are a new development in which participants follow clues and visit different websites (or even physical locations) to solve riddles. Participants can win prizes for correctly solving puzzles to win treasure hunts. Many of these online hunts are subject to internet gaming laws that vary between jurisdictions. A photo treasure hunt is a new way to play the well-known treasure hunt game. The main difference between them is that in a photo treasure hunt the competitors have to collect pictures rather than collecting items.[citation needed]

In 1956, comedian Jan Murray created and hosted a variation for television, also known as Treasure Hunt. This US game show featured a pair of contestants answering questions to qualify to go on a treasure hunt that involved choosing from among thirty treasure chests that included anything from gag prizes to valuable merchandise and/or cash. The show also offered home viewers a chance of a treasure hunt, when a postcard was chosen from a large drum by a young guest who revolved the drum several times to randomise the entries. The show aired daily in the morning and once a week in the evening until 1959, when the networks began canceling game shows in the wake of the quiz show scandal.

The current Guinness World Records title for 'most participants in a treasure hunt game' is held by Team London Ambassadors, who broke the previous record (of 308 participants) in London on 23 June 2012. 466 Participants, all London Ambassadors for the Olympic and Paralympic Games, worked in 93 teams of five, each completing a set of 12 clues hidden on either side of the River Thames, starting and finishing at City Hall, London. The treasure hunt in the form of a spy mission game formed part of World Record London for 2012.[2] A separate points competition was held with one team emerging the winner of the 'treasure'.

See also

References

  1. Time article Elsa at War retrieved April 10, 2007
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links

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