Close up on the 3d printed replacement pieces. The thermoformed overlay can be seen along with the braille on the spaces indicating the colors. Each replacement piece has a shape on it that corresponds to the color.
Candy land box
Wide shot of the board of candy land with the tactile clear overlay on it. The 3d printed replacement pawns are on the board along with 6 of the cards with braille on them.
Close up on the play cards. The special cards have the words of the item on it. A letter indicates the color followed by the full spelling of the colors.
A top down view of the board, cards and the pieces
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Close up on the 3d printed replacement pieces. The thermoformed overlay can be seen along with the braille on the spaces indicating the colors. Each replacement piece has a shape on it that corresponds to the color.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Candy land box
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Wide shot of the board of candy land with the tactile clear overlay on it. The 3d printed replacement pawns are on the board along with 6 of the cards with braille on them.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Close up on the play cards. The special cards have the words of the item on it. A letter indicates the color followed by the full spelling of the colors.
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, A top down view of the board, cards and the pieces

Candy Land Accessibility Kit

Regular price
$45.00
Sale price
$45.00
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Accessibility Kits require the retail version of the game in order to play.

This accessibility kit introduces braille letters and moving.

Includes transparent braille board, transparent stickers for cards and custom 3d printed game pieces.

BRF Rules(none yet)  Quick Audio Description




Product Description from Board Game Geek:

Created by Eleanor Abbott in the early 1940's to entertain children recovering from polio and first published by Milton Bradley (now Hasbro) in 1949, Candy Land encourages young players to socialize, exercise patience, recognize colors, learn rules, and follow directions.

Players race down a rainbow-colored track to be the first to find the lost King Kandy at Candy Castle, but watch out for obstacles like the sticky Molasses Swamp! Start by placing your plastic Gingerbread Man (or other character marker) at the beginning of the track. Each turn, players draw a simple card and move by matching the color on the card to the next color on the track. Some cards show a named location on the board; players who draw these cards move forward or backward on the track to the named location. The game ends when the first player arrives at Candy Castle by reaching or moving beyond the last square on the track.

In the 2004 version, younger players are not required to remove backward on the track if they draw a named card, and the last square of the track was changed from a Violet Square to a Rainbow Square, resolving a 55-year dispute over whether a player needs to land on the Violet Square or move beyond the Violet Square to win.

Prior to the 2006 version, three colored spaces on the track (one in Molasses Swamp and two "Cherry Pitfalls") were marked with a dot. Players who landed on a dot were "stuck," and were unable to move from the spot until they drew a card that matched the color of the square they were on. The 2006 version replaced gum drops with licorice spaces; players who land on a licorice space only lose their next turn.

“The Legend of the Lost Candy Castle” is printed inside the box and can be read out loud. The game parts can be stored below it. The game board is colorful and has lots of yummy candy references.



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