Card game about problem solving
The Dilemmas Game invites you to flex your moral muscles and compare your problem-solving skills with those of your friends and family. Players must propose various solutions to 52 common dilemmas, using analogies or drawing on real-life experiences to explain their answers. It's an entertaining and insightful way to practice for life's inevitable dilemmas.
The cards cover five categories: Relationships – Work – Sociability – Family – Leisure
Some example dilemmas would be…
Your close friend has confessed to you that they are cheating on their partner, with whom you are also close. You have been sworn to secrecy, but you hate being a party to their deception. Whichever course you choose will mean betraying a friendship. What would you do?
You’ve been offered a prestigious job at a large multinational company. It’s your ideal role at an increased salary, but the company has a chequered record, having been implicated in several humanitarian disasters in underdeveloped countries. What would you do?
An old friend you have not seen in several years calls you up to say that they need you to lend them a high but ultimately manageable sum of money to help cover the cost of their mother’s funeral. Although they may well be telling the truth, your knowledge of their slightly chaotic past makes you suspect they may have another purpose in mind. What would you do?
This game is all about giving good advice - clever, persuasive, and most importantly, useful suggestions for solving a range of everyday dilemmas. In this game, the person who gives the best advice wins.
Card game about problem solving
The Dilemmas Game invites you to flex your moral muscles and compare your problem-solving skills with those of your friends and family. Players must propose various solutions to 52 common dilemmas, using analogies or drawing on real-life experiences to explain their answers. It's an entertaining and insightful way to practice for life's inevitable dilemmas.
The cards cover five categories: Relationships – Work – Sociability – Family – Leisure
Some example dilemmas would be…
Your close friend has confessed to you that they are cheating on their partner, with whom you are also close. You have been sworn to secrecy, but you hate being a party to their deception. Whichever course you choose will mean betraying a friendship. What would you do?
You’ve been offered a prestigious job at a large multinational company. It’s your ideal role at an increased salary, but the company has a chequered record, having been implicated in several humanitarian disasters in underdeveloped countries. What would you do?
An old friend you have not seen in several years calls you up to say that they need you to lend them a high but ultimately manageable sum of money to help cover the cost of their mother’s funeral. Although they may well be telling the truth, your knowledge of their slightly chaotic past makes you suspect they may have another purpose in mind. What would you do?
This game is all about giving good advice - clever, persuasive, and most importantly, useful suggestions for solving a range of everyday dilemmas. In this game, the person who gives the best advice wins.