One game played in Europe is to spot the 26 letters of the alphabet on passing number plates, starting with A and working forwards. To make this a competitive game between two teams, a second team can work backwards at the same time. Another game involves spotting number plates with each number from 1 to 999 in order. The
letters around the numbers are ignored. This was playable in the UK prior to 2001 when number plates read XXX 111X or X111 XXX, but since the current system of XX11 XXX was introduced in September 2001, such plates have become rarer and this particular game harder to play. In
Bulgaria plates typically have 4 numbers. The goal of the game is to make the first half equal to the second by using various calculations. For example, one scores a point with XX4282XX, as soon as he figures that 4 + 2 = 8 - 2. The letters around the numbers are ignored. In countries where local regions are marked on number plates, such as France or Germany, players can look for cars from different areas. In France, the last two digits of the number plate shows the car's department (e.g. 49 is
Maine-et-Loire and 16 is
Charente.). German plates also indicate where the car is registered (e.g. B is
Berlin and KL is
Kaiserslautern), however this changed from 2014. Another game is spotting unusual
vanity plates, where the car owner has paid a premium to get a particular code, like "REDBMW", "HERTOY," or "BONZO". In most European countries, premiums for such license plates are very high (sometimes as much as 2,000 euros), so very few drivers own such plates. Another European version is spotting a plate and taking the letters - in order - and trying to construct a word which contain all the letters in the same order. For example, a Swede might see the plate "SVG111" and construct the Sweden words
sving ("swing") or
Sverige (Sweden). Points can be rewarded in different manners, such as finding the shortest word or finding the longest word. A similar variant, particularly popular in the United Kingdom, involves considering the last three letters of a number plate to be an
acronym, and creating a three-word sentence that fits. For example, a number plate ending in ZKG could be "Zebra Kills Giraffe". This game is not playable with most European number plates, unless they contain three characters in a row. ==In North America==