序号 专利名 申请号 申请日 公开(公告)号 公开(公告)日 发明人
181 Apparatus and method for improved tag game US111948 1998-07-08 US06004232A 1999-12-21 Anita L. Sennott
A tag game kit of parts comprising of a plurality of tag units. Each tag unit has a clothing attachment clip to which is rotatably connected, via a connecting ring, a colored, strip-like, fabric pennant. The tag game kit of parts is provided with at least three groups of tag units, each tag unit group being provided with pennants of a distinctive color, with each distinctive color being different from the colors of the other groups' pennants. For game play, at least two players divide into at least two groups, with each group being represented by the color of the groups' tag unit pennants. Each player, using the clips, attaches a number of tag units to the player's clothing. Then, the players chase after each other with the members of each team attempting to obtain the tag units of the other teams' members by grabbing and pulling the pennants and thus detaching the clips from the clothing. Once a player loses all of his or her tag units, that player is out of the game. If there are two teams, play ends when there is only one tag left, with the winning group being the player having the remaining attached tag unit. If there are more than two teams, play still ends when there is only one tag left, but the group with the highest number of captured tag units wins.
182 Water targeting game US900580 1997-07-25 US5855371A 1999-01-05 Gary M. Sanders
A water targeting game (10), known as WATER TAG.TM.. The game (10) consists of three major elements: a targeting vest (12), a water gun (140) and an obstruction maze (142) wherein the game is played. The targeting vest (12) includes a front vest (14) and a back vest (16) that are joined together at their upper peripheral edge (26) by a pair of adjustable shoulder straps (70) and that are adjusted at a person's waist by a pair of waist straps (74,76). Between the two vests is a cavity (56) and on the front section (42) of the vest, is located a plurality of water collecting openings (58) that serve as targets. When playing the game, the water gun emits a stream of water that is aimed at the openings (58) from where the water falls into the cavity (56). The water collected in the cavities (56) is viewed through a sealed vertical window (62) that is also located on the vest's front section (42).
183 Game apparatus for releasably holding a game object US333280 1994-10-02 US5454571A 1995-10-03 Steve Morrison
A game apparatus is disclosed including a support post and an attachment mechanism which may be attached to and removed from the support post. The attachment mechanism releasably holds a piece of material so that the material can be easily attached to and removed from a position adjacent the support post, thereby facilitating the playing of games such as Steal The Flag. The attachment mechanism is designed to allow a player of the game to take the piece of material without contacting the support post, thereby decreasing the chance that a player might be injured. In addition to its use for games such as Steal The Flag, the apparatus can also be used as a boundary marker for other types of games and competitions.
184 Game apparatus US197889 1994-02-17 US5377995A 1995-01-03 Nattkemper L. Clark
A game apparatus includes a dual-bodied missile member which consists of two ball elements or other discrete masses connected to each other by a flexible strap portion, and a tossing/catching implement or stick member which is used in launching and receiving the missile. The missile bodies are preferably identical to each other in size, shape, and weight.
185 Sailing disk and catch game US756253 1991-09-06 US5123655A 1992-06-23 James M. Rones
A sailing disk and catch game is formed of at least one hand held catch baton having on a distal end a strip fixable attached about the periphery of the rod with radially projecting short length hooks on a radially outer surface of the strip. A thin, hand throwable sailing disk consists of a unitary, light weight semi-rigid, soft highly porous non-woven plastic fiber material with the exposed plastic fibers on the surface thereof constituting with the short length hooks of the baton strip, a two component hook and loop releasable fastening system. The game is readily applicable to indoor play since the sailing disk weighs at the most several ounces and has little impact force when thrown in the style of a FRISBEE.RTM. sailing disk, for catching during flight by the hand held catch baton.
186 Game device and method of playing limbo US344533 1989-04-25 US5120077A 1992-06-09 John A. Belli
A limbo game device and method of amusement for testing the flexibility of and balance of the players. Each player is required to pass beneath a horizontal stream of water. All successful players, those who remain dry, then make an additional pass beneath the stream of water which has been lowered relative to the ground. The height of the stream of water is successively lowered until only one player remains dry.
187 Throw and catch game US484855 1990-02-26 US4971334A 1990-11-20 James C. Stewart
A throw and catch game including a projectile for throwing from a first person to a second person, the projectile including a plurality of contiguous flat surfaces, on which is placed releasable bonding material and a vest-type garment including front and rear panels, containing bonding material thereon for receiving and catching the projectile, the garment further containing scoring indicia proximate to the bonding material for indicating a score dependent upon receipt of the projectile in a particular area thereon, wherein the projectile is of a weight-to-size ratio such that its travel from the first person to the second person is affected by the wind stream flowing over the flat surfaces to vary its trajectory from a normal parabolic path.
188 Parlor game US170236 1988-03-18 US4813683A 1989-03-21 Elizabeth F. Ginovsky; Colleen J. Richenberg
The parlor game disclosed is played by placing a number of pucks on the top faces of the blades of a stationary ceiling fan and, with the fan running, opposing players on opposite sides of a center line under the fan catching as many as possible of the pucks in free fall after they are ejected from the fan blades. The several pucks are information bearing, indicative of various point values, double score, bonus points, or a free spin of the fan to the player who catches the same. The game may be divided into periods, with preestablished numbers of spins of the fan. The fan spin may also be reversed. Several variations are disclosed and many more are possible.
189 Method of playing a sport US45030 1987-05-01 US4792144A 1988-12-20 Edward LaDue
A field sport providing an outer boundary defining the playing area and consisting of a wall, fixed or portable, and an inner boundary defining an inner playing field in predetermined space relation from the outer boundary and in which the field the players must remain during play, the distance between the outer and inner boundaries being sufficient to prevent the possibility of contact between the wall and the players. A player passes a playing object (e.g. ball, puck, etc.) by projecting it against the wall to rebound back onto the playing field while the player remains in the field. Goals at either end of the playing area are provided. Goal keepers must remain between the inner and outer boundaries at either end of the playing area.
190 Flag football belt device and coupling therefor US22239 1979-03-20 US4304403A 1981-12-08 Porter C. Wilson
An improved flag-tag football device comprising a novel ball and socket coupling assembly for detachably securing a first member to a second member in environments where it is desirable to provide predetermined resistance to pull-away detachable separation of the members in use, such as, for example, in flag-tag games; the coupling including an essentially rigid female socket part internally shouldered around the open end thereof and a male ball part rendered resilient by a closed transverse slot to permit inward deformation of the ball cheeks during coupling with the socket part and then outward expansion thereof at least toward predetermined normal configuration for trapping the ball part in the socket part to resist but not prevent separation of the coupling parts by normal pull-away tension during use, when the center axes of the coupling parts are in approximate general alignment.
191 Game and article for use therewith US131231 1980-03-17 US4295647A 1981-10-20 James E. Daly
An amusement article used in playing a game includes a sock having a padded tubular enlargement extending beyond the toe thereof. Each player of the game wears at least one of the special socks and the object is to effect extraction of the oppenent's sock by stepping on the padded tubular enlargement.
192 Skidwheel game US61630 1979-07-30 US4293132A 1981-10-06 Louis J. Starr
An article of manufacture for and a method of playing the skidwheel game. The invention comprises a longitudinally disposed generally flat playing surface with a design thereon containing value zones, used in combination with automobile steering wheel playing piece having a generally circular periphery which is linearly projected with a reverse spin along the longitudinal axis of said playing surface such that said wheel generally rolls in contact with said surface first in one direction and then in the reverse direction and either comes to rest within one of said zones or traverses the entire length of said playing surface and returns to its starting point, the desired effect depending on the method selected to award points for each toss.
193 Play and exercising device US60136 1979-07-24 US4268031A 1981-05-19 Fay G. Schomburg
A play and exercising device comprising a hoop and a ball disposed substantially at the center of the hoop and connected to the hoop by at least four tensioned, radially disposed elastic strings or lines. In use, the ball is held in a hand and, through motion of the hand, the ball is oscillated back and forth thus causing the hoop to also oscillate back and forth relative to the ball, the amplitude of oscillation of the hoop being a function of the force applied to the ball and of the resiliency of the radial elastic strings or lines.
194 Devices for practising ball-game stroke play US14608 1979-02-23 US4239215A 1980-12-16 Eric Farr
This invention concerns devices for practising ball-game stroke play. The device has a handle portion and a head portion, the heat portion being resiliently displaceable transversely relative to the handle portion. The overall length of each device, the weight of the device, and the weight distribution of the device are arranged to be similar to that of a conventional ball-game implement which the device is arranged to simulate so that when the head portion is struck against a solid object or target, the device will reproduce the characteristics and sensation to the user of the implement which it simulates when that implement is used in stroke play.
195 Water gun game with revolvable target movable along a line US887019 1978-03-16 US4165073A 1979-08-21 Donald L. Kellerstrass
A game comprising an above the ground line stretched between two upright supports, a target member including a pulley wheel suspended from the line and gun-type hose attachments connected to a source of pressurized water. The object of the game is for each player, using the water gun, to move the target member to the opposite end of the line.
196 Game of physical skill US832228 1977-09-12 US4153245A 1979-05-08 Kenneth H. McCoy
A game of physical skill to be played by two or more persons wherein the participants each stand within their respective small and encompassing ground boundaries or on small portable platforms which hold them a slight distance off the ground. Each participant then grasps onto a hand line which is connected at an intermediate point to every other participant's hand line. Each participant starts with an extra length of hand line which is also provided with a plastic tube grip over the line for grasping the line therein and to permit effective controlled slipping of the line through the hands without friction burns. The object of the game is to unbalance all other participants such that they can no longer stay within their respective boundaries or on the platform, or in the alternative to dislodge the hand line away from all other participants. The respective ground boundaries may be marked on the ground surface, or provided by mats or raised platforms.
197 Game apparatus US827949 1977-08-26 US4124207A 1978-11-07 Jeffrey D. Breslow; John O. Spinello; Eugene Jaworski
A physical activity game for opposing teams of two or more players comprises a plurality of adjustable, flexible straps adapted to be looped around the arms and/or legs of the players of each team. An elongated flexible element is provided for each team and is adapted to be passed through the looped straps on the players in a selected order. A chance selector comprising an enlarged mixing area and a restricted display area for a plurality of chance elements is provided for randomly determining the order that the flexible element must be passed through the looped straps on the players' wrists and ankles. The straps and chance elements have corresponding indicia such as color coding whereby the order randomly determined by the chance means directs the order of passage of the flexible elements through the particular color coded straps positioned on the players' arms and legs. After a selected order is determined, the game begins, and the first team of players to complete the passage of the flexible element through all of the looped straps in the proper order wins the game.
198 Exercising apparatus to aid in the practice of karate US756873 1977-01-05 US4111415A 1978-09-05 Andrew Reitano
Exercising apparatus to aid in the practice of karate comprising an overhead horizontal support bar mounted between two vertical supports, a rotatable wheel mounted between the ends of the support bar, various exercising components being provided for connection to the support bar for inducing forced use of the various muscles of the body and hooks provided for removably joining the exercising components to the rotatable wheel on the support bar. One exercising component includes a pair of straps respectively attachable at one end to circumferentially spaced portions of the wheel, the other ends of the straps being respectively provided with a power hand grip and a foot grip. A second exercising component includes a spring, one end of which is attachable to the wheel and the other end is provided with a head strap and a chin strap. A third exercising component includes a solid rubber square karate kick target having straps attached to opposite ends thereof. The other ends of the straps are respectively attachable to the wheel and a floor attached loop.
199 Pneumatic cushion toy US669316 1976-03-22 US4077625A 1978-03-07 William A. Clarke
Pneumatic cushion childrens' toy in which two children are respectively confined between a sling and opposite sides of a huge pneumatic cushion attached to the center of the sling. By reason of the cushion, the children can dance about and push or pull or bump each other without direct bodily contact.
200 Manual dexterity percussion game US722389 1976-09-13 US4067574A 1978-01-10 Robert Osann
A percussion game is provided comprising at least one target, each adapted to be manipulated by the hands of one contestant and to be hit by at least one striking implement, each manipulated by the hands of another contestant, said targets each comprising a base portion to which is affixed a handle for manipulating the target, a metallic body mounted above said base and adapted to emit an audible sound upon impact with a striking implement held by the other contestant, the outer dimensions of said base when viewed from above being at least equal to those of said metallic body mounted thereabove, such that such metallic body will emit a substantial audible sound upon contact with a striking implement from above the base portion when the target is in a normal upright position with respect to the base.
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