MY LITTLE PONY

MY LITTLE PONY

PONYVILLE SWEETIE BELLE’S GUMBALL HOUSE Playset

G.I. JOE

G.I. JOE

Pit Mobile Headquarters

KOTA & PALS

KOTA & PALS

Hatchlings Triceratops

G.I. JOE

G.I. JOE

The Rise of Cobra Movie Trailer

MONOPOLY Games

MONOPOLY Games

City Streets

LITTLEST PET SHOP Games

LITTLEST PET SHOP Games

Tricks 'N Talents Show

TRANSFORMERS

TRANSFORMERS

Timeline

MY LITTLE PONY

MY LITTLE PONY

Meet the Ponies

MONOPOLY

MONOPOLY

Tournaments

The History of Candy Land

Once upon a time...
in San Diego, California, a woman named Eleanor Abbot created a game. Ms. Abbot, a recovering Polio patient, decided to create an activity that would entertain children affected with the disease. So she submitted her board game to MILTON BRADLEY, who enthusiastically accepted it for production. And before she knew it, in 1949, a new game called CANDY LAND was introduced.

The first CANDY LAND games were sold for only a dollar. The advertisements assured parents that the game fulfilled "the sweet tooth yearning of the younger set without the tummy ache aftereffects."

As its packaging proudly stated for 30 years, CANDY LAND is "a sweet little game... for sweet little folks." Soon, the simple activity would become an enduring part of the collective American childhood. The theme and simplicity of play made it a perfect fit for the whole family.

At the time, few could have predicted the impact of the game, both on the Massachusetts-based game manufacturer and on generations of young children. To date, its distinctive red-and-white peppermint name has been printed on over 40 million games.

In a world filled with advanced technology and fading fads, the sweet simplicity of this classic game keeps it continually popular, generation after generation.

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