Chicago Sun-Times

Looking for some fun at home? How about the board game Pandemic?

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO, STAFF REPORTER sesposito@suntimes.com | @slesposito

You’ve taken all of the grim news you can handle for the day. So you turn off the TV and settle down with the family around something that conjures a more carefree era: a board game.

What do you choose?

If you’re like a lot of people in the Chicago area, you’re playing Pandemic, the collaborat­ive game that asks players, “Can you save humanity?”

Craig Marney, store manager at Good Games Chicago on West Webster in Lincoln Park, says he’s sold out of the popular board game.

“Everyone has been buying it,” Marney said Thursday. “I just restocked [Wednesday], after we just got bought out completely. There are several different versions and people are just flocking to it.”

The reason, Marney said, is perhaps psychologi­cal.

“The wonderful, fantastica­l nature of board games is that in your imaginatio­n, at least, you can take control of the situation,” he said.

Puzzles are also selling well, he said. “We’ve always sold a reasonable amount of puzzles, just because of where we are — we have a lot of family and young children around here — but it really ramped up over the weekend and the early part of this week,” he said.

And nostalgia has played a part in what people are buying. Monopoly sets are selling well.

“Which is crazy because it often leads to arguments,” Marney said.

Sales have also been brisk at Chicagolan­d Games: Dice Dojo in Edgewater, even though they have been recently operating on reduced hours.

“I wouldn’t use the word ‘traffic,’ because people come in very quickly and buy their stuff,” said store owner Alex Dunning. “We went from a place where people spend all day gathering and playing to a place people come into for five minutes, make a very quick purchase and go home.”

Dunning said it’s been “very, very hard” on customers accustomed to hanging and talking about their shared passion.

“It’s mostly community — it’s finding people who like what you like,” he said. “If you’re a ‘Star Trek’ guy or a ‘Star Wars’ guy or you have a strong opinion on [a particular] board game, you can come here and yell about it.”

Dunning said his store has a “very limited” supply of Pandemic in stock.

“There is an element of the macabre,” Dunning said, noting Pandemic is his store’s top-selling game.

But it’s more than that.

“In the Pandemic game, you are the research scientist trying to save the world,” Dunning said. “So you’re not like vicious scientists trying to outdo each other. You’re trying to save everybody. There’s a sense of working together. There’s a sense of making progress.”

Model kits, with hundreds of tiny parts, are also selling well, Dunning said. So are games that might stretch on into the night, for people who have, as Dunning said, “got nothing but time.”

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Pandemic and other games at Chicagolan­d Games Dice Dojo, 5550 N. Broadway Ave.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Pandemic and other games at Chicagolan­d Games Dice Dojo, 5550 N. Broadway Ave.

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