GiftTrails is a family centric game designed to spark imagination and reward critical thinking skills. The creative setup builds secret hidden trails within your home to be discovered. Ages 8 - Adult!
As the GiftTrails Host, you set the trail. Use the tools of the game to construct a journey of discovery within your own home.
GiftTrails is a set of Clue Cards containing multiple challenges of varying degrees of difficulty that can be adapted for any age group.
How to Set Up GiftTrails
The Host provides a series of scenarios, clues and challenges to test the problem solving skills of the Hunters.
Teaser Video:
The GiftTrails experience will flex the Hunter’s brain power with clues set along the trail. You slay the clues, you win the game.
Rhyming clues, for example, have an innate flair so that kids can get into the action naturally. The card deck is the foundation with 200 Clue Cards to choose from. The cards are riddles laced with humor and vary in their level of difficulty. Adding to the base deck, there are 200 puzzles designed to print off this website and mix into your game to up the challenge. These are housed in our Challenge Library.
Mixing puzzles into your game deepens the challenge and thwarts the pace of your Hunter. These are mind bending word puzzles and brain teasers designed for any age. The older your Hunter, the stronger the puzzles set along the trail. As the game plays over and over, the Host will get good at mixing favorite combinations together, tailored for the Hunter, for waging epic battles. Let the new family rituals begin.
“We knew we wanted to get the kids off of their screens more often, but we didn’t realize how engaged they would become playing GiftTrails.”
— Patrick O.
“It’s a brilliant setup. The possibilites really are infinite with the Host’s imagination. The more you play, the more enriching each experience becomes.”
— Trevor J.
“We break out GiftTrails every holiday season when the kids and extended family are home. Gift giving has become an adventure with a new twist every year.”
—Renita B.