Ants In the Pants
The folks at the Schaper company were definitely the kings of
the insect games. They first hit it big in 1949 with the
delightful construct-a-bug game, Cootie.
In the 1960s, they followed up that deathless hit with Ants In
The Pants, another game that included plenty of creepy-crawlies.
Like Cootie, it became a hit with kids and is still an important
part of the toy world today.
Schaper Games first unleashed Ants In The Pants on unsuspecting
kiddies in 1967. Essentially, it was an insect-themed variation on
Tiddlywinks, played by two to four people. The game consisted of a
large freestanding plastic pair of pants (complete with
suspenders) and 16 two-inch 'ants'.
The ants - which came in red, yellow, blue, and green - were
made of springy, bendable plastic, allowing kids to make them jump
by gently pushing on the ants' backsides with a finger. The object
was to get all of one's ants into the pants before the rest of the
players. In the process, everyone had lots of ant-flipping fun.
The gimmicky fun of Ants In The Pants caught in a big way, and
it remains an important item on the game shelves at toy stores
today. Board-game titan Milton Bradley currently manufactures this
classic.
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