Home โ€บ All games โ€บ Cockroach Salad
Drei Magier / Schmidt

Cockroach Salad

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…5.0 / 5 โ€“ editorial rating

Say "lettuce" while playing a pepper: a Stroop test disguised as a party game โ€“ gloriously maddening.

age 6+2โ€“6 playersapprox. 15 min.
Impulse controlFlexibilityLanguage

How it plays

Players slap down vegetable cards at full speed, shouting what they play โ€“ in theory. Because if a taboo card is showing or the card matches the "forbidden" vegetable, you must lie: shout any other vegetable, just not the real one and not the forbidden one. Stumble or shout wrong, and the whole pile is yours.

What it trains

What neuropsychologists test as interference control (the Stroop paradigm) is the actual game mechanic here: the dominant response โ€“ naming what you see โ€“ must be suppressed again and again and replaced with a rule-conforming one, under time pressure and shifting rules. Hardly any game trains inhibition and flexibility more intensely.

Interference control (inhibition)5/5
Cognitive flexibility5/5
Speech tempo & retrieval4/5
Community voices: Praised by game critics and educators alike; found on the shelves of many occupational and speech therapy practices. Families report tears of laughter โ€“ and that, of all people, it's Dad who keeps collecting the pile.
Our tip for parents: From a neuropsychological perspective a little gem: a Stroop test in game form.

Especially good for

  • Families from school age โ€“ adults fail just as hard
  • Executive function training with maximum fun
  • Short, high-energy rounds

Less suitable for

  • Kids with speech anxiety โ€“ slips of the tongue are the whole point
  • Very quiet game evenings

Advertising notice: the shop buttons are affiliate links โ€“ if you buy through them we earn a small commission, your price stays the same. The selection is editorially independent. Learn more