Welcome to American Mosaic from VOA Learning English. I’m June Simms. Today on the show, we hear about the increasing popularity of board games among young people.
Toy industry experts say some people in the United States are turning off their electronic devices to play with classic toys like board games. This is especially true among the so-called millennial generation. People of this generation were born in the 1980s and 1990s. One coffee shop in Los Angeles is making profitable use of the increase in popularity of board games.
GameHäus Café opened in November of 2013. The café is dedicated to board games. It has more than 750 games available for its customers. The business does not feature wireless Internet connection.
Many customers like Roxanne Lee and her husband Agassi Lai think that is good. Ms. Lee praises the atmosphere of the café.
“I think it’s very interesting for us spending quality time together so that’s why I like it.”
Agassi Lai used to like playing video games. But everything changed when he discovered board games a few years ago. Agassi Lai likes to play a board game called “Escape the Curse of the Temple.”
“You keep rolling the dice and try to move to different places and try to escape the temple.”
Mr. Lai and almost all the customers playing board games at the café are millennials. Market research company Euromonitor International says the new interest by millennials in the games is expected to increase U.S. sales. But sales of video games are expected to grow more.
Twenty-three-year-old Weland Bourne is one of those board-game-loving millennials.
“I think more with my generation, they’re wanting to take time. They’re wanting to take it slowly and I think, too, video games have kind of lost their glamour.”
Millennials are not playing the classic American games they know and love. They are choosing new games from Europe. Terry Chiu is an owner of GameHäus Café. He says many “Euro games” have become popular around the world. He believes this is because the games are not based in language. Instead, they use symbols and have simple rules.
“Because of the rise of European games, or Euro games, or German games as they might also be known, in the last 15 to 20 years, it’s actually become sort of universal. There are certain titles that have really crossed a lot of cultures to really capture the imaginations of different people.”
Many millennials, including Kristie Nehme, say there is one thing a board game can offer that a video game cannot provide.
“The more personal aspect of just being with friends and seeing each other in person and that’s probably the main difference, the main appeal.”
Adrienne Appell is with the Toy Industry Association. She says the new generation just wants to put down the telephone and Tablet and connect directly with other people.
I'm June Simms. Join us again next week for American Mosaic from VOA Learning English.