Asmodee launches inclusive board game studio Access+

Asmodee has announced Access+, a first-of-its-kind board game studio adapting Asmodee’s hit titles for players with cognitive disabilities.

Created using clinical data from Asmodee Research (the research and development department of Asmodee), Access+ games open up the fun world of board gaming to all by making the company’s top games more accessible and creating a welcoming style of play for patients, families and caregivers.

To kick off the new studio, Access+ will create Spot It! Access+, Cortex Access+ and Timeline Access+; adapted from three of Asmodee’s greatest hits, the games will be available in France, Belgium and Canada in late 2022 and worldwide in 2023.

Asmodee has also brought in an external scientific committee of expert care professionals to join forces and create games for players with cognitive disabilities affecting speech, social relationships, attention, emotional control, planning and memory. The Access+ team and its partners will adapt and test the material, rules and difficulty of its titles to ensure they stimulate cognitive functions, promote positive emotions and social relationships and provide the joy of discovering (or rediscovering) the pleasure of playing together.

“Over several years, Asmodee has invested in scientific research to demonstrate the societal impact board games can have,” says Mikaël Le Bourhis, head of Asmodee Research. “Now we’re ready to put that research into practice with Access+, creating games that not only are fun to play, but provide real, tested benefits to those with special needs, starting with cognitive impairment.”

“Access+ is being launched because, at Asmodee, we believe board games are universal,” says Stéphane Carville, CEO of Asmodee. “By starting to adapt some of our most popular titles to fit the needs of all, we can strive to make board gaming as inclusive and accessible as possible.

“As an industry leader, we want to create products that can truly make a difference in people’s lives. Board gaming is social by nature, and Access+ titles allow families and friends to re-introduce the fun of board gaming to their loved ones with special needs, creating moments of happiness that can only come from shared experiences.”

Access+ titles are ideal games for medical practitioners, schools and caregivers who have people with special needs, including cognitive disabilities, under their care. Accessibility features of Access+ games include bigger, thicker and easy-to-hold cards, adapted rules, different difficulty options and a “single-player” version to promote patient autonomy. Each game comes with a booklet presenting the benefits of playing the game, according to scientific experts.

For more information about Access+ and its games, visit http://www.accessplus-asmodee.com