Still Made in Michigan. Still the Best Game at Camp.
The Carrom Company has been making solid hardwood games in Michigan for over 130 years. Nok Hockey is the one camp directors and campers remember most — and the one that keeps earning its spot in the equipment room, session after session. But it's not the only one.
The Right Game for the Right Moments.
Ask anyone who spent time at camp in the past fifty years and Nok Hockey comes up. Ask a camp director why they keep ordering it and you get the same answers every time.
Built to Last. No Batteries Required.
Nok Hockey is a two-player tabletop game played on a solid hardwood board. Each player uses a stick to shoot a puck into the opponent's goal — blocked by a notched wooden barrier that gives the game its name. It plays like air hockey but tougher, quieter, and built to last decades without a replacement part.
Made in Michigan. American hardwood. No setup beyond putting it on a table.
What's in the box
- Solid hardwood Nok Hockey board
- 2 wooden sticks
- 1 puck
- Replacement parts available separately
The original. Over 130 years of play.
Carrom Board
The game that started it all. Carrom is a tabletop billiards-style game played with a striker and wooden discs — similar to shuffleboard or pool, but on a smooth hardwood surface that fits on any table. Up to four players, easy to learn, hard to put down. Works especially well for slightly older campers and staff who want something with more depth.
2–4 players | Ages 8+ | Tabletop play | Made in Michigan
Knock them down. Do it again.
Skittles
Skittles is a spin-top bowling game played on a hardwood board with nine pins and a spinning top. Campers spin the top and try to knock down as many pins as possible. Fast, physical, and easy to run as a station or a tournament. Works great for younger campers and larger group settings.
2–8 players | Ages 5+ | Great for Groups | Made in Michigan
The one they still talk about.
Nok Hockey
Two players. Two sticks. One puck. The game that camp directors in the Northeast have been ordering since 1947 and that camp directors everywhere are discovering now. Icebreaker, rainy-day standby, character builder — it earns its place in the equipment room every single season.
2 players | All ages | Indoor play | Made in Michigan since 1947
Volume Pricing for Camp Programs.
We work directly with camp directors on volume orders. No retail markup, no middleman. Mix and match games across an order — Nok Hockey, Carrom, and Skittles can all be combined toward volume tiers.
| Quantity | Pricing | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 3–5 units | Volume pricing | Mix any games toward this tier |
| 6–9 units | Better pricing | Direct invoice available |
| 10+ units | Best pricing | Custom branding available |
Put Your Camp's Name on It.
For programs ordering 10 or more units, we offer custom branding — your camp name, logo, or colors on the playing surface. A board with your name on it becomes part of the camp's identity. Campers remember it. Alumni recognize it.
Custom orders require lead time. Reach out early in the season to confirm availability and turnaround.
Let’s discuss if you’d like branded games for sale in your camp store as well.
Boards That Last. Parts When You Need Them.
A Nok Hockey board from 1985 can still be in rotation today. We stock replacement sticks, pucks, and hardware so your boards stay in service season after season. No need to replace the whole game when a part wears out.
Made in Michigan
Since 1889
The Carrom Company has been manufacturing hardwood games in Ludington, Michigan for over 130 years. Nok Hockey has been part of the lineup since 1947 — the same game, made the same way, built to the same standard. No overseas production. No shortcuts on materials. American hardwood. American made.
Every game in the camp line is built with the same commitment: durable enough for daily use, simple enough to run without instructions, and good enough that people remember it for the rest of their lives.
Ready to Talk About Your Camp?
Volume pricing, custom branding, the full game line — we work directly with camp directors.