The Japan Times - Word nerds have a weekend on the tiles at Thailand's Scrabble title

EUR -
AED 4.266572
AFN 73.190798
ALL 95.122317
AMD 427.776083
ANG 2.080092
AOA 1066.499332
ARS 1648.513115
AUD 1.625811
AWG 2.091176
AZN 1.947488
BAM 1.95118
BBD 2.340328
BDT 142.632281
BGN 1.940053
BHD 0.438257
BIF 3459.264635
BMD 1.161764
BND 1.484566
BOB 8.029024
BRL 5.855407
BSD 1.161934
BTN 110.321885
BWP 15.599661
BYN 3.210058
BYR 22770.578781
BZD 2.336977
CAD 1.607818
CDF 2639.527895
CHF 0.91486
CLF 0.026371
CLP 1037.884868
CNY 7.860904
CNH 7.86325
COP 4218.307807
CRC 527.943142
CUC 1.161764
CUP 30.786752
CVE 110.004536
CZK 24.283181
DJF 206.91651
DKK 7.473571
DOP 67.858451
DZD 154.894895
EGP 60.321589
ERN 17.426463
ETB 184.151766
FJD 2.569765
FKP 0.863338
GBP 0.864649
GEL 3.102511
GGP 0.863338
GHS 13.664411
GIP 0.863338
GMD 84.245461
GNF 10185.882296
GTQ 8.863898
GYD 243.100213
HKD 9.105734
HNL 30.922384
HRK 7.537063
HTG 152.107881
HUF 356.450757
IDR 20709.609048
ILS 3.278092
IMP 0.863338
INR 110.584212
IQD 1522.176202
IRR 1569601.554846
ISK 143.570621
JEP 0.863338
JMD 183.026637
JOD 0.823681
JPY 185.498309
KES 150.483188
KGS 101.596428
KHR 4662.899179
KMF 490.264625
KPW 1045.419634
KRW 1756.738359
KWD 0.359298
KYD 0.968282
KZT 568.237215
LAK 25467.808003
LBP 104057.46495
LKR 384.479645
LRD 212.062411
LSL 18.88289
LTL 3.430388
LVL 0.70274
LYD 7.380525
MAD 10.674466
MDL 20.044023
MGA 4885.453455
MKD 61.676015
MMK 2439.088356
MNT 4155.050139
MOP 9.380347
MRU 46.433058
MUR 55.04392
MVR 17.886256
MWK 2014.894531
MXN 20.181589
MYR 4.606374
MZN 74.242575
NAD 18.882647
NGN 1591.547296
NIO 42.758207
NOK 10.783033
NPR 176.515774
NZD 1.962456
OMR 0.446703
PAB 1.161954
PEN 3.950096
PGK 5.077977
PHP 71.835392
PKR 323.471398
PLN 4.23788
PYG 6993.351143
QAR 4.235671
RON 5.248965
RSD 117.39978
RUB 83.641985
RWF 1705.816989
SAR 4.359422
SBD 9.331825
SCR 15.696632
SDG 697.640242
SEK 10.832621
SGD 1.486396
SHP 0.867374
SLE 28.571225
SLL 24361.61733
SOS 664.118952
SRD 43.183355
STD 24046.173834
STN 24.441812
SVC 10.167925
SYP 128.412237
SZL 18.869079
THB 37.93976
TJS 10.724929
TMT 4.066175
TND 3.393864
TOP 2.797249
TRY 53.327836
TTD 7.891349
TWD 36.396676
TZS 3032.208137
UAH 51.493975
UGX 4380.571308
USD 1.161764
UYU 46.649545
UZS 13845.217875
VES 637.44266
VND 30580.538773
VUV 137.627029
WST 3.154409
XAF 654.399092
XAG 0.015591
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.139725
XCG 2.094214
XDR 0.812662
XOF 654.407521
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.223669
ZAR 18.991882
ZMK 10457.273986
ZMW 21.119086
ZWL 374.087606
  • RYCEF

    -1.1200

    16.88

    -6.64%

  • RELX

    1.7100

    34.5

    +4.96%

  • RIO

    1.9400

    108.33

    +1.79%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.79

    +0.22%

  • GSK

    -1.1600

    49.38

    -2.35%

  • BCC

    -1.6600

    67.84

    -2.45%

  • BTI

    -0.4350

    61.355

    -0.71%

  • BCE

    -0.0900

    25.02

    -0.36%

  • NGG

    -1.5200

    80.01

    -1.9%

  • VOD

    0.0050

    14.965

    +0.03%

  • AZN

    -4.5600

    181.11

    -2.52%

  • BP

    1.3200

    43.19

    +3.06%

  • JRI

    -0.1600

    12.76

    -1.25%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    22.86

    -0.31%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5000

    61.5

    -2.44%

Word nerds have a weekend on the tiles at Thailand's Scrabble title
Word nerds have a weekend on the tiles at Thailand's Scrabble title / Photo: chanakarn LAOSARAKHAM - AFP

Word nerds have a weekend on the tiles at Thailand's Scrabble title

If he were no longer physically able to play Scrabble, 86-year-old Tan Jin Chor said he would "shut the lights and call it a day", but his love of the word game has kept the veteran verbophile competing.

Text size:

The Malaysian senior started playing the globally popular board game with friends over beers, but has now spent tens of thousands of dollars travelling the world to Scrabble tournaments.

"Competitiveness, I like that, I enjoy that. Even though I lose most of the time," he told AFP at the finals of a major Scrabble championship in Bangkok on Monday.

When Tan first started competing seriously 35 years ago, prizes could include a pair of socks, a necktie, or sometimes a plaque.

"Nowadays, it's for money... that's the main thing I've found is different from the old days," he said.

A $10,000 top prize brought some 450 serious Scrabblers from 30 countries to the Thai capital at the weekend for back-to-back matches at the four-day Causeway Challenge.

Onomatopoeia could not adequately describe the sound of Scrabble tiles being shaken in a bag, a logophilic rattlesnake hiss that filled the Bangkok hotel room.

Singaporean organiser Michael Tang called his creation a "household brand name among the Scrabble community globally".

"Scrabble is not about English," he said.

"It's really about memory, about strategy, it's mathematics... you have to draw the tiles, so there's a luck element."

Tang's favourite word from the tournament was "craziest" -- a superlative he used to describe himself for his plan to host a thousand competitors at the next tournament in 2028.

Players clutched red bags above their heads in a show of fair play as they chose their lettered tiles.

"Scrabble for me, it has... there's a certain je ne sais quoi," said tournament winner David Eldar, adding that a lot depends on luck.

"I'm not the best player in the room, but I won," the 36-year-old Australian said, adding he would be "paying for a lot of beers tonight".

"It's nerve-racking, it's mentally stimulating, it's challenging. It's awesome."

- 'A bit nerdy' -

British woman Natalie Zolty was hesitant when she began competing professionally 10 years ago.

"I was thinking I don't know... this is a bit strange. Everybody's a bit nerdy," Zolty said.

It takes "a lot of time" to get to a high standard in a competitive, male-dominated game, she said, and "some women don't have that time".

Scrabble has since changed the 61-year-old maths teacher's life.

She said a lot of people at the event were not native English speakers.

"Most of the top players are maths-based because it's all about the probabilities and playing the odds... you don't need to know what the words mean," she said.

The game demands eidetic knowledge of the English vocabulary -- not necessarily spoken proficiency -- and maths skills to exploit the points letters are assigned.

"Unfortunately, I'm very bad at maths," Malaysia's Tan said. "So I'm not like those top players... I'm middling-rank."

He said he would take part in a Malaysian seniors' championship this coming weekend, despite being certain that he wouldn't win.

"I lose many more games than I win," he said.

"But I enjoy it. I love it."

H.Hayashi--JT