Scrabble, Risk, Monopoly—they’re classics for a reason. But as we wade through week six of the pandemic, we could all stand to boost our game stash.

We turned to three local beloved game cafés—Thirsty Dice, The Basement Board Game Cafe, and Queen & Rook—for recommendations. Even better: Thirsty Dice and Queen & Rook are still taking game orders and making game (and food…and in the case of Thirsty Dice, even toilet paper, flour, and pizza- and cookie-making kit) deliveries. And all of them are selling gift cards, which you can buy now to show them some love, and use for an outing when we’re all on the other side.

Have fun, and be sure to check our podcast and book recommendations for other fun things to do during coronavirus quarantine.

For couples Patchwork: In Patchwork, two players build “quilts” while trying to be the person with the most buttons at the end of the game, explains Thirsty Dice’s Matt Hendricks. “It’s kind of like this very simple, almost Tetris-style game, where you’re puzzling pieces into a patchwork quilt, and it never ceases to amaze me how in-depth it can get, despite it taking just five minutes to explain.” Onitama: Like chess but with fewer rules, Hendricks says this game is different every single time you play. “You’re trying to get your master into your opponent’s temple or capture your opponent’s master,” he explains (entendre unintentional). “What makes it very interesting is that there’s a limited set of moves you can use per game, and each time you play, that set of moves changes.” Related from The Philadelphia Citizen: Business For Good: Puzzle So Hard Could a Philly-based puzzle company offer an antidote to all the coronavirus crazy?

For Families With Young Kids Dixit: “Using a deck of beautifully illustrated cards that all have Dali-esque, dreamlike images on them, you get points by trying to get others to choose your card,” says Hendricks about Dixit. It’s great for kids, he adds, because it’s language-independent: “If you’ve got children who are at different reading levels, they’re all going to be able to participate.” On a Scale of One to T-Rex: From the makers of Exploding Kittens, this one is like charades, with a twist: At any given time there are three charades out on the table, but players also have cards with numbers on them, indicating how intensely or not they’re supposed to act out the charade. “If the charade is being a T-Rex and you have a level-one card, you’re doing a very understated, quiet T-Rex,” Hendricks explains. If you have a 10, you’re doing an overblown one. And you’re not trying to figure out what the charade is—you’re trying to guess the intensity number. Related from The Philadelphia Citizen: The Citizen Recommends: The Chase Series Philly native John Butler III creates children’s books with characters all kids can relate to