Vintage Game Nerd Alert: Bottoms-Up
06.22.09 By Deanna DahlsadLast month I wrote about vintage Bingo games & The Game-Lovers Library Bingo game by Metro Manufacturing Co. At the same thrift shop, I also discovered not one but two copies of Bottoms-Up, a vintage game by E. S. Lowe Company. I grabbed them both for several reasons…
The collectibility: Along with my adoration of old games, Bottoms-Up is also a vintage game designed to sit on the shelf, like a book. Like Metro Mfg. Company’s Game-Lovers Library series, Lowe’s “Bookshelf of Games” were made in the 40’s, came in both the cheap and DeLuxe Editions (bound in Genuine Top-Grain Leather), and are smaller, portable sized games.
The ultimate reason for purchasing: The pig butt game pieces. Yup, you read that right; the game pieces feature the bottoms of pigs! My mom, who now has a nice collection of pig behinds, needed more — and I couldn’t pass the other game up for myself either. So I greedily snatched up both games on the spot.
Now that I own the vintage game, I’ve fallen in love with it for other reasons…
While the pork playing pieces are absolutely charming, the final joy lies in the fact that Bottoms–Up is played like one of my favorite games, Shutbox aka Shut The Box.
You begin by hiding all the pig behinds, so that the nine pieces display their dot-numbered sides (1-9). Then you roll the dice, and then turn down (or ‘bottoms up’) playing pieces that equal the total sum of the numbers on both dice. For example, if you roll an 8, you may ‘bottoms up’ the 8, the 7 & 1, the 5, 2 & 1, or some other valid combination totaling 8. You keep rolling the dice & doing the math to display as many pig bottoms as you can, until you roll a sum which cannot be equaled in the remaining numbered pieces.
The goal is to get zero, or as low a score as you can when you add up the remaining numbered pieces. Then the next person plays and tries to beat your score.
According to the official game rules:
The game proceeds in this fashion until all players have had their chance at the play. The player remaining with the lowest number on his face-up blocks, wins the game and is credited with the number of points left by each other player.
If a player wins by turning down all of his blocks, he wins double and is credited with double of the amount of points remaining in every other player’s hand.
The official rules for Bottoms-Up state that this is a game of 2, 3, or 4 players; however, I enjoy playing the game alone, competing against myself for the lowest score (just as with Shutbox and Solitaire). No game-Nazi can prevent me from playing this way if I so choose. Besides, you can’t take away this option for a lover of vintage games… Not everyone will play old games with me — or for as long as I like.
And with Bottoms-Up, well, I guess it takes a special kind of game nerd to also get such a kick out of pig bottoms.
But the final reason to love this old game is for the irony. Edwin Lowe is said to be the father of the Bingo game:
…while traveling through Georgia one late December night in 1929, Lowe came across a country fair where a very popular game by the name of Beano was being played. Sensing a possible winner, Lowe inquired about the game, learned it had originally come from a fair in Germany, bought some of the game cards, and returned home to New York. With some cards of his own and some dried beans, he introduced the game to friends. One woman, seeing she had won, got so excited, she couldn’t remember to yell “Beano” and yelled “Bingo” instead. In an interview years later, Lowe recalled that moment: “I cannot describe the sense of elation which that girl’s cry brought to me, all I could think of was that I was going to come out with this game and I was going to call it Bingo.”
So while I don’t (yet) own a Lowe Bingo game, I’m a bit closer to justifying that future purchase.
It will be another “space” filled on my checklist of Bookshelf Of Games games — so when I do get them all, I’ll not only be a fulfilled (and rationalizing) collector, but I’ll have achieved a full-card Bingo. And that’s satisfying on so many levels for this vintage game nerd.
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Article Tags: collectibles, collecting, e.s. lowe, edwin lowe, games, reviews, vintage, vintage games================
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June 22nd, 2009 at 10:30 am
What a funny game! Wonder who came up with the idea of pig-butts. Your mom sounds like a hoot! Thanks for another entertaining blog!
June 24th, 2009 at 7:33 pm
My mom is a hoot — and not just for appreciating pig behinds either :p
There are, surprisingly or not surprisingly depending upon your adoration of pigs, quite a number of pig themed games. I shall no doubt bore you with more of them in the future.
August 21st, 2009 at 10:19 pm
I just founf a red box with pigs on it dated 1935 copywright and it is also same game as above but in a red box. where can I find out how much it is worth?
December 9th, 2009 at 2:20 am
I own the 1943 Vintage Lowe Baseball Game #533….Are you Interested in Purchasing it…I’m listing it on EBAY as we Speak……..
I got it from my Sister’s “adopted Grandma” and have enjoyed playing it…!!
December 27th, 2009 at 11:18 am
I’m late responding to this one but I thought you may want to know that there was a third company who manufactured the bookshelf pocket games that were marketed primarily to purchase and send to a soldier during WWII. The third company is Dreuke. My family has had the Metro Chess pocket game before I was born. That’s why I have focused on collecting that particular brand. I haven’t been able to find a great deal of information on them but Deanna helped me immeasurably by providing a complete listing of Metro’s games. Thanks again Deanna.
December 28th, 2009 at 1:47 pm
Thanks, Becky, I didn’t know about Dreuke games. I suspect there were quite a number of manufacturers who made games for those in the service as war then consumed a huge part of manufacturing and public awareness… These games are sort of a rather forgotten bit of history — and a reminder of how past wars differ from current ones. I hope you (and others) continue to collect and play these games and have fun doing it.