Ouija, released in October in time for Halloween, was, by all  accounts, a cliché-ridden turkey about a group of teenage girls who  experiment with a board and get scared. It has a disastrous 7 per cent  rating on Rotten Tomatoes, the review aggregating site, but became an  occult hit, to the delight of its backers. Hasbro, the toy company  behind Monopoly, pushed for the revival of the film, which had stalled  in development, and partnered with Universal to make it happen. Its  Ouija Game, including a glow-in-the-dark version, is – sure enough – the  biggest seller online.
All of which is appropriate, because the  Ouija-board trend, circa 1890, was always about selling games. Spirit  writing dates back much further. In 12th-century China, it was believed  that spirits had the power to guide a "planchette" to write Chinese  characters. In the late 19th century, when doubts about God inspired by  Darwin's little birds led to a boom in spiritualism, planchettes became a  novelty hit in the west. Elijah Bond, an American lawyer and inventor  from Baltimore, devised and patented in 1891 "a toy or game by which two  or more persons can amuse themselves by asking questions of any kind  and having them answered by the device used and operated by the touch of  the hand, so that the answers are designated by letters on a board".
Read Full Story: Independent UK
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Ouija boards are the must-have gift this Christmas. "You know, for kids"
Ouija boards are the must-have gift this Christmas. "You know, for kids"
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Tags : 
Christmas,
Game,
Ghosts,
halloween,
Hasbro,
Haunted,
Horror,
Ouija Board,
Paranormal,
Spirits
