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Monopoly, anyone?: Playing a board game may reduce your risk of dementia

Board games have made a massive comeback in the past decade. And researchers are discovering that board games are not only fun, they may also benefit our brains, especially as we age.

The global board games market has an estimated value of $18.53 billion and is projected to grow by $5.17 billion from 2025 to 2029. Classic games such as chess, Monopoly, Scrabble and Go remain popular, now joined by modern favorites such as Ticket to Ride, Pandemic and Wingspan.

If you think you don’t have anyone to play with, no problem. Board game cafes and bars offer a place to drink, socialize and play outside the home.

Since antiquity — senet, a board game played by the Egyptians, dates to around 3100 B.C. — players have reveled in the shared experience, healthy competition and sheer entertainment value of board games.

Playing board games has been associated with higher cognition, improved quality of life and lower risk of developing dementia for older adults. Experts think some of the effects could be explained by their social nature.

Some research suggests that face-to-face play may have an additional benefit above playing them alone. Stimulating leisure activities such as board games are thought to enhance cognitive reserve, the brain’s ability to function despite aging, injury or disease.

“There is a certain complexity, even for simple board games, in this process of understanding the game system that demands something from your cognition,” said Carla Sousa, a games researcher at the Center for Research in Applied Communication, Culture and New Technologies (CICANT) at Lusófona University. “Analogue games, in general, are also much more social than digital games.”

A 2025 randomized controlled trial showed that a group of nursing home residents who engaged in board game sessions facilitated by trained professionals showed improvements in comprehension, memory and attention. Getty Images

Board games and brain improvements

Research from the past two decades has found significant links between board games and brain-related improvements.

In one study, out of 17 cognitive and physical activities, only playing board games, reading, dancing and playing musical instruments were associated with a lower risk of dementia among adults older than 75.

In another study of people 65 and older, board game players had a 15% lower dementia risk than non-players, even after adjusting for confounders such as age, gender and education.

More recently, a 2025 randomized controlled trial showed that a group of nursing home residents who engaged in twice-weekly board game sessions facilitated by trained professionals showed improvements in cognitive function in skill areas such as comprehension, memory and attention, while a control group did not.

If you haven’t played board games in a while, start with one you played as a kid. Getty Images

Quality of life gains

The nursing home residents also showed gains in quality of life, with reported increases in dimensions of emotional well-being, interpersonal relationships, personal development and social inclusion.

“The value I see in board games in the elderly are different from the value that board games have in the young,” said Federico Emanuele Pozzi, a clinical neurologist at the Memory Clinic of the Fondazione IRCCS San Gerardo dei Tintori.

“In the young, they can help develop the brain through pattern recognition and other skills. But in the elderly, the value of games is more linked to being socially engaging.”

Pozzi and his colleagues conducted a 2023 meta-analysis of 15 studies that showed several cognitive benefits of traditional board games such as chess, Go and mah-jongg. The studies involved participants older than 60 who were at risk of or who had dementia and took part in a board game-based intervention that lasted from three to six months.

The meta-analysis revealed that playing board games appeared to improve mental function, as measured by cognitive assessment tests that evaluate memory, attention, concentration and other skills. Chess players reported an improved quality of life, according to the World Health Organization Quality of Life scale, while mah-jongg players had a reduction in symptoms of depression.

“In the end, we want to find spaces and activities in which elderly people feel that their life is enjoyable and has meaning,” Pozzi said. “And if there is an approach that is both stimulating, cognitively speaking, and socially engaging — like board games — then we have a win-win.”

“The most amazing thing when you play board games is that you are socializing,” said Jorge Moya‐Higueras, a professor of psychology at the University of Lleida. “And in these times, when one of the biggest problems with the elderly is loneliness, board games could be a good way of not feeling alone.”

How to get started

Games have come a long way since the days of Monopoly and Scrabble. Modern board games range from strategic to luck-based, with diverse themes such as birding, zombies and railroads.

American-style games — which, despite the name, can originate from anywhere in the world — have a strong storyline and rely on randomness, often through rolling of dice. Eurogames, on the other hand, emphasize strategic decision-making and long-term planning.

“If I want to feel my brain burn, then I’ll play a Eurogame,” Moya-Higueras said.

Here are some tips to get started:

• Start simple. If you haven’t played board games in a while, start with a game you played when you were a kid. Or, Moya-Higueras suggested, start with “filler games,” which are short, simple and easy to learn. Sousa suggested popular games such as Carcassonne, Kingdomino and Catan.

• Play in person rather than virtually. Research suggests that face-to-face play is associated with a greater brain boost compared with virtual play. “The social component is fundamental,” Pozzi said. Start by suggesting a low-stakes game night to family and friends as a weekly or monthly ritual.

• Expand your gaming circle. If you want to venture beyond your existing network, find a board game club, store or cafe. “I would go to my local board game shop — sometimes you can also play there — and board game cafes are very good places to meet people,” said Sousa, whose preliminary research shows that the board game community is inclusive and accepting of diverse groups of people.

Pozzi recently led a study that brought groups of older adults together for board game lessons, and the participants enjoyed their experience so much that they continued to meet, even after the study had long ended.

“Since we are in Italy, I can tell you that those study groups became ‘pizza groups’ — they had a group chat and were constantly organizing a pizza together,” he said.

“There is a loneliness epidemic, in the elderly especially, and the main takeaway is that board games can enhance wellness and make people feel better.”

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