Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Excellent New Game To Play At Home

Lockdown has taken its toll, travel doesn’t really exist anymore, meeting your mates “down the pub” is done on zoom, so what next? We need new and exciting ideas for things to do without going outside – things to keep us occupied in the safety of our own homes, even if it means being mask loyal. Thankfully, in 2021, creativity continues and there are a few cool and up and coming gaming companies releasing new games. Enter the intriguing world of “20 Dreams“…

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home
Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home

For creative buffs and those who love a bit of friendly competition whilst keeping up good mental spirit, 20 Dreams is the game you have been waiting for. And it’s a card game which fits inside a small box – making it also an easy game to move around with, and when travel eventually happens – this will be a game to play on flights, in hostels and bars the world over. Created by Karen Stallard, an Arts Psychotherapist, I was intrigued by the fact that the game is also great for mental health. My struggles with mental health down the years meant days of depression, nights of nightmares, months of madness and years of yearning. Order 20 Dreams, bring round a few friends or family and get creative and ease your worries in life. Here’s how to play it –

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home
Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home

Here are the rules of 20 Dreams –

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Excellent New Game To Play At Home

And here is what my pack of cards look like – a colourful mix in a fresh black box of secrets all ready to unearth the game and play for fun, and also for competition. Who tells the best dreams, who knows the emotions when we waken up?

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home
Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home

So once you are ready to play, here is how to tell the dreams –

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Excellent New Game To Play At Home

After that, it’s a case of counting points and taking it in turns to play until all the cards are used. It’s such a simple game to play yet one that can keep friends and families occupied for hours during lockdown. Unfortunately due to the situation around the world, I have been in Poland for a full year and haven’t seen my family but I have flatmates and can’t wait to play my new game with them soon!

So what are you waiting for?? Get the game ordered now and relieve your stress and boredom by telling your dreams. Remember, creativity is key here…

Buy 20 Dreams.

Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home
Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home
Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home
Introducing 20 Dreams: A Great Game To Play At Home

Follow 20 Dreams on Social Media

20 Dreams on Instagram
20 Dreams on Facebook
20 Dreams on Twitter

Get in touch with 20 Dreams –

Email on [email protected]

Reach them via post at the below address:

Kemp House, 152-160 City Road, London, England, EC1V 2NX

Call 20 Dreams on 0207 112 4822

Random Travel Game: Time Spent in Each Country or Disputed Territory

Following on from my Random Travel game (League of Nations) , my list of EVERY COUNTRY IN THE WORLD and my list of countries I’ve visited by flag, here is a new random travel game – time spent in each country. I’ve made yet another league table of how many individual days I have spent in each country on my backpacking centurion journey so far.

The World Wall of Flags at the Monk's Bunk.
Random Travek Game: How many days in each country?

The Rules of this Random Travel Game: Time Spent in Each Country or Disputed Territory

– You get 1 day for every day spent in that country (even if it was for one minute, you get a day, 24 hours and 1 minute is also two days, crossing midnight also counts as a new day).
– The time goes by the time in the country you are/were in, including customs and airport/land border.
– If you visit two (or three or four) countries on the same day, you get a day for each country of course (hence why the list is even possible to have more days on it than days we are alive!).
– When flight and train changes to another country mean you have left the country you were in, and progress to a new country, they are counted in this chart (I don’t count them in my normal travel journeys unless I’ve actually seen the country).
– Transit visits to airports and train stations are counted on the list as ZERO days (therefore I have spent 0 days in Kenya).

So I’ve done the same with my travel lifestyle since the day I was born. I hope that kind of makes sense, so here are the results, I cannot guarantee 100% accuracy but I have done my best. These are the countries I have been to on the most days since 1980, correct as of 16th July 2015:

Days – Country (Rank)

8,395 – Northern Ireland (1)
2,190 –  England (2)
1,095 – Hong Kong (3)
724 – Poland (4)
508 – Australia (5)
64 – China (6)
59 – Republic of Ireland (7)
48 – United States of America (8)
38 – Spain (9)
38 – Scotland (10)
37 – Brazil
35 – India
29 – France *
29 – Iran
27 – Guatemala

//

(after this it got hard to remember and check the exact days and put them in order)
74 – Kyrgyzstan
3 – Afghanistan
11 – Uzbekistan
8 – Tajikistan
10 – Kazakhstan
22 – New Zealand
24 – Turkey
20 – Georgia
18 – Argentina
17 – Italy
17 – Germany
17 – Canada
16 – Malaysia
16 – Thailand
16 – Israel
15 – Sweden
15 – South Africa
14 – Honduras
15 – Romania
12 – Antarctica (counted as the day we left Argentina to the day we returned)
10 – Bolivia
10 – Russia
8 – Malta
1 – Sovereign Military Order of Malta
1 – Northern Cyprus
4 – Cyprus
2 – Ivory Coast
2 – Western Sahara
5 – Morocco
4 – Benin
6 – Togo
8 – Sri Lanka
11 – Suriname
10 – Indonesia
10 – Azerbaijan
13 – Netherlands
8 – South Korea
7 – Jordan
7 – Armenia
7 – North Korea
9 – Singapore
7 – Wales
7 – Philippines
15 –  Hungary
6 – Turkmenistan
12 – Saudi Arabia
4 – Oman
10 – Portugal
7 – Myanmar
7 – Lithuania
7 – East Timor

6 – Tanzania
7 – Czech Republic
6 – Colombia
6 –  Guyana

5 – Ethiopia
7 – United Arab Emirates

9 – Denmark
4 – Palestine
4 – Venezuela
4 –  Qatar
4 –  Moldova
4 – Latvia
4 – Slovenia
4 – Swaziland
7 – Slovakia
3 – Botswana
3 – Macau
5 – Switzerland
5 – Ecuador
3 – Paraguay
4 – Nagorno Karabakh
3 – Andorra
2 – San Marino
2 – Chile
1 – Liechtenstein
1 – Luxembourg
1 – Trinidad and Tobago
9 – Belgium
4 – Mongolia
14 – Belarus
6 – Laos
6 – Cambodia
7 – Peru
6 – Iceland
8 – Austria
4 – Japan
7 – Greece
3 – Brunei
7 – French Guyana
22 – Mexico
7 – Belize
29 – Iran
21 – Uruguay
17 – Taiwan
11 – El Salvador
10 – Iraq
4 – Nicaragua
5 – Costa Rica
3 – Kosovo
4 – Montenegro
4 – FYR Macedonia
6 – Bulgaria
2 – Transnistria
6 – Vietnam
8 – Tunisia
1 – Vatican City
4 – Kuwait
1 – Austenasia
2 – Gibraltar
2 – Uzupis
2 – Panama
2 – Algeria
1 – Frestonia
1 – Christiania
10 – Bosnia-Herzegovina
1 – Lovely
6 – Kaliningrad
8 – Kashubia
1 – Chernobyl Exclusion Zone
5 – Ukraine

* I’ve never been to Kenya and don’t count it on my real countries list. I stopped at Mombasa airport for an hour in between 2 countries so it qualifies for this list only.
** If I counted ferry dockings while working on the ferries France would be around 70
*** If I had included the Channel Islands, or even crazier included them separately, the results would bring Guernsey and Jersey into the top 10. Crazy.
**** Extra countries/territories included in the Traveler’s Century Club list are Tasmania, two Antarctic territories and Channel Islands. I haven’t included them on this.

Conclusion
This is a crap system to work out how well travelled you are, as my home country of Northern Ireland comes first, meaning I haven’t really travelled at all! If it’s any consolation, most of these days spent in Northern Ireland were in the first 20 years of my life. In the last 6 years, I have registered 10 visits and less than 60 days.

It’s only a random travel game for fun, but I like it!