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International TableTop Day

International TableTop Day is held on April 27. Celebrate on the last Saturday of April. This event in the third decade of the month April is annual. Help us Help us 
27 April - International TableTop Day
Board games were played as early as 5,000 years ago (that we know of). The Royal Game of Ur is the oldest playable boardgame in the world, originating around 4,600 years ago in ancient Mesopotamia. The game's rules were written on a cuneiform tablet by a Babylonian astronomer in 177 BC.
Families and friends are getting together and having fun. People are saving their eyeballs from too much screen time! Board games are a great way to get a group of people together and give them something in common to focus on. They even work across language barriers if you choose the right type of game.
We’ve stumbled upon a really interesting fact from classic board game trivia that is surprisingly connected to WWII, of all things. In some POW camps, the Nazis would allow Allied soldiers to play board games like “Monopoly.” Some would even provide the games. The British state was clever enough to exploit that opportunity. They didn’t send standard Monopoly game boards and pieces. Instead, they placed compasses, banknotes, and real-world maps for POWs to use for escape.

Similar holidays and events, festivals and interesting facts

World Veterinary DayWorld Veterinary Day on April 27 (Last Saturday in April);
International Sculpture DayInternational Sculpture Day on April 27 (Held on the last Saturday of April);
International A cappella Week HanoverInternational A cappella Week Hanover on April 27 (Begins on Saturday of the last full week of April);
Babe Ruth DayBabe Ruth Day on April 27 (On April 27, 1947, Babe Ruth attended Yankee Stadium for Babe Ruth Day. It was to be the second last time he was at the stadium);
Cubicle DayCubicle Day on April 28 (Designed by Robert Propst and known for a complete absence of individuality, cubicles were first introduced in 1967 as a way to subdivide open office space and provide workers with a degree of privacy);
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