Jenga was created by
Leslie Scott, the co-founder of
Oxford Games Ltd, based on a game that evolved within her family in the early 1970s using children's wooden building blocks, A
British national, Scott was born in
Tanganyika, now
Tanzania, where she was raised speaking English and Swahili, before moving to live in Ghana, West Africa. Scott launched the game she named and trademarked as "Jenga" at the London Toy Fair in January 1983 and sold it through her own company, Leslie Scott Associates. The blocks of the first sets of
Jenga were manufactured for Scott by the
Camphill Village Trust in
Botton, Yorkshire. The
V&A Museum of Childhood has exhibited one of the original sets of
Jenga since 1982. In 1984, Robert Grebler, an entrepreneur from California who was the brother of a close friend of Scott, contacted her and expressed interest in importing and distributing
Jenga in Canada. In April 1985, Grebler acquired from Scott the exclusive rights to
Jenga for the United States and Canada, and then in October of that year, Scott assigned the worldwide rights in
Jenga to Grebler, which he in turn assigned to Pokonobe Associates. Convinced of
Jenga's potential, Grebler had invited two cousins to form Pokonobe Associates with him in 1985 to increase distribution of
Jenga. Pokonobe then licensed Irwin Toy to sell
Jenga in Canada and to be master licensee worldwide. Pokonobe Associates takes 80% of royalties while Scott receives 20% or less, despite Scott having authored and published the game while Grebler effectively acted only as an agent, the reverse of the customary split; Scott says she "came to regret signing away my rights to Jenga on those terms." Irwin Toy licensed
Jenga to Schaper in the United States, and when that company was bought by Hasbro,
Jenga was launched under the Milton Bradley banner in 1987. Eventually, Hasbro became licensee in most countries around the world. By 2019, according to Pokonobe Associates, owners of the
Jenga brand, over 80 million
Jenga games, equivalent to more than 4.3 billion
Jenga blocks, had been sold worldwide. On November 5, 2020,
Jenga was inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame. ==Rules==