Anthropologie reported a spike in sales for tabletop games including backgammon, mancala, and mahjong, according to Modern Retail. The move reflects a documented shift in consumer spending toward tactile, offline entertainment as screen fatigue drives purchase behavior.
The retailer expanded its games category to capture demand for analog play objects that double as display pieces. Anthropologie positioned these games as both functional entertainment and decorative home objects, priced at premium points that align with its aesthetic-first buyer. The category sits alongside candles, textiles, and kitchenware rather than in a dedicated toy section, signaling the brand treats games as lifestyle accessories, not children's products.
The mechanism works because the product solves two jobs simultaneously. The buyer acquires a ready-made social prompt — a game creates structure for gathering without requiring the host to program the evening — and a permanent display object that signals taste when not in use. A $78 marble mancala board or a $128 backgammon set in acacia wood earns counter space between uses. The price premium over mass-market game equivalents reflects the material upgrade and the permission to leave the object visible. Anthropologie's customer pays for the optionality: play when guests arrive, decoration when they leave.
Screen fatigue accelerates the shift. Consumers report spending 8+ hours daily on screens for work and leisure, according to Nielsen data cited across trade press. Tabletop games offer a purchased exit: a physical object that enforces a different engagement mode. The transaction is a commitment device. Spending $80-$150 on a game creates accountability to use it, unlike a free app that disappears into a folder. The buyer is purchasing structure, not just the game itself.
The steal for a small physical-product brand: bundle your core product with a simple, unplugged activity that requires your product to execute. A candle brand ships a $42 two-pack with a printed deck of conversation prompts. A textile brand offers a $68 linen table runner with embroidered tic-tac-toe grid and two small stone sets. A barware brand includes a leather-bound book of classic two-player card games with every cocktail shaker set over $95. The activity must be instant — no instruction manual over one page — and must use your product as the stage. The game is the structure; your product is the required setting.
Source the activity component at $4-$8 per unit from game manufacturers who produce custom card decks or simple board overlays. Print on-demand services handle conversation card decks at $2.50 per set for orders above 200 units. Position the bundle as a gift: the buyer is purchasing a complete experience to give or to host. Price the bundle 20-30% above your core product sold alone. The increment covers the game component and captures the value of solved occasion anxiety. A $65 candle becomes a $85 candle-plus-prompts set. The margin expands because the perceived value compounds: the buyer is not comparing candle to candle, but complete evening to improvised one.
Photograph the product mid-use with hands in frame. Show the cards fanned on a table next to your candle, or the embroidered grid with stones mid-game and your textile as the field. The image must communicate that the activity is happening now, not aspirational. Shopify product pages convert 18-24% higher when imagery includes hands and in-use context, per Baymard Institute's checkout research. The game component de-risks the purchase: even if the buyer never lights the candle or uses the runner for dining, the game provides standalone value and usage permission.
The broader pattern: consumers will pay a premium for products that enforce a behavioral shift they want but struggle to execute alone. The tabletop game is a forcing function. Your product becomes the infrastructure for the shift, not just an object consumed passively.
The takeaway
Bundle a simple, unplugged activity with your product and price the set 20-30% above core SKU to capture solved occasion value.
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