The venue for this year's French-language Scrabble World Championships is Dakar, Senegal.
As we said, Scrabble's a pretty big deal in Senegal. The country's sports minister formally declared this year's championships a national priority. The competition even has its own official song. It was composed by Senegalese singer, Pape Diouf. The lyrics proclaim that "Senegal loves Scrabble."
29 year old Senegalese Scrabble champ, Ndongo Sylla, seconds that.
Ndongo Sylla: Everywhere it is played, in schools, in families, in the streets. It's a very popular game. People like scrabble, and institutionally there are more and more efforts that are done by the government to help the sport, it's not only a game, now it's a sport, to come at the front of our culture. More and more people are saying that Senegal is a country of Scrabble. There is nowhere in the Francophone countries where there is such a passion for Scrabble.
Scrabble champion Ndongo Sylla is an advisor to the Senegalese president
Ndongo Sylla is one of hundreds of competitors from 21 countries who gathered in Dakar for this year's Francophone Scrabble World Championships. The tournament wraps up tomorrow. The rules are a little different from the ones you may be used to. In the competition, the players are not given individual tiles, or letters, to play with. Instead, an announcer picks out the tiles. Then every player uses the same set of letters to try and come up with a winning word. There are other differences between French and English Scrabble. That includes the value placed on some letters of the alphabet, as Ndongo Sylla explains.
Ndongo Sylla: For example "Y", which is a very unusual letter in French, is credited ten points. This is a difference with English (Scrabble) because in English we use many words with "Y", and that's why in English (Scrabble) "Y" is not credited so much.
The scrabble players in action in Dakar. Top players learn about 50, 000 words
The world francaphone scrabble championship has come to Dakar
The scrabble masters at work, all players work with the same tiles and are guided by the board projected on the giant screen.
Check out this video of Senegalese musician, Pape Diouf singing about the 37th Francophone Scrabble World Championships in Senegal.