Where Will Your Road Take You?
Board Games
1313 Dead End Drive is a murder-themed board game from Parker Brothers. Released in 2002, it was the sequel to 1993 game 13 Dead End Drive.
The story behind the game revolves around the death of Aunt Agatha, a wealthy old woman and heiress to a "kitty-litter empire." Sixteen of her closest companions have gathered at her estate for the reading of her will, and to collect their inheritance, they must escape Aunt Agatha's trap-filled mansion before midnight.
30 Seconds is a fast-paced general knowledge game. Players generally play in teams of two or four. One player must guess a word from their teammate's explanation, much like Charades, with the aim to guess as many possible answers in 30 seconds. The main restriction on the explanation is that it may not contain the actual word or part of the word.
Aadu puli attam
Abalone
Abalone
About Time
Accasta
Achi
Acquire
Acquire
Acronymble
Adel Verpflichtet
Adugo
Afrikan tähti
Agon
Agon
Agricola
Air Charter
Aladdin's Dragons
Alhambra
Alias
Alquerque
Amazons
American Megafauna
Amun-Re
Andantino
Anti-Monopoly
Apples to Apples
Arimaa
Armenian checkers
Articulate!
Astar
Ataxx
Attack!
Auf Achse
Australia
Awithlaknakwe
Awithlaknannai Mosona
Axis & Allies
Backgammon
Bagh bandi
Bagha-Chall
Balderdash
Bang!
Barbarossa
Battleship
Bear games
Beer pong
Bezzerwizzer
Bizingo
Blankety Blank
Blockhead!
Blokus
Blokus
Blokus
Blood Feud in New York
Blood Bowl
Blue Max
Blue & Gray
Boku
Bookchase
Brain Chain
Brainstorm
Brax (game)
Break the Safe
Breakthrough
Breakthru
Buccaneer
Buckaroo
Buga-shadara
Bul
Butterfly
Camelot
Camp Granada
Can't Stop
Candy Land
Candy Land
Capitol
Carcassonne
Careers
Caribbean
Carrom
Cartagena
Cartagena
Catch the Hare
Cathedral
Caylus
Chapayev
Chaturaji (India)
Chaturanga (Indian chess)
Check Lines
Checkers
Chess (Western chess)
Chicken Cha Cha Cha
Chicken Cha Cha Cha
Chinese Checkers
Choko
Chopsticks
Cinc Camins
CirKis
Civilization
Clans
Cluedo (Clue in North America)
Cluedo
Connect Four
Connect 4x4
Connect6
Conspiracy
Conspirateurs
Coppit
Cosmic Encounter
Courier chess (German chess)
Cranium
Crash! The bankrupt game
Crokinole
Crossings
Crosstrack
Crosstrack
Da Vinci Game, The
Dablot Prejjesne
Dala
Daldøs
Dara
Dark Tower
Dart Wars
Dash-guti
Death Stacks
Demala diviyan keliya
Diaballik
Diamant
Die Macher
Diplomacy
Dixit
Djambi (modern French chess variant)
Djambi
Domaine
Dominion
Don't Miss The Boat
Don't Wake Daddy
Don't Break the Ice
Don't Quote Me
Doom: The Boardgame
Dorn
Dots and Boxes
Downfall
Draughts (also known as Checkers)
Drunter und Drüber
Dune
Dungeons and Dragons
DVONN (part of the GIPF project, listed below)
DVONN
Egara-guti
El Grande
Elfenland
Emergo
Empire Builder series
En Gehé
Enchanted Forest
English draughts
Entdecker
Entropy (1977 and 1994 games)
Epaminondas
Escape from Atlantis
Evo
Fanorona
Fanorona
Farlander
Felli
Fetaix
Figure It Out
Finance
Fireball Island
Fitchneal
Five Field Kono
Flibbix
Focus
Focus
Forbidden Bridge
Formula Dé
Fortress chess (Russia)
Four Field Kono
Four-handed chess
Fox games, such as Fox and Geese
Freedom
Game of the Goose
Ghettopoly
Ghosts
GiftTRAP
Giganten
Gipf
Girl Talk
Gnip Gnop
Go
Go
Go
Gobblet
Gol-skuish
Gomoku
Gonnect
Gonu
Gounki
Great Train Robbery
GridIron Master
Guess Who?
Halatafl
Halma
Hare & Tortoise
Hare games
Hare and Hounds
Hare and Tortoise
Hat diviyan keliya
Havannah
Heroscape
Hex
Hex
Hey Pa! There's a Goat on the Roof
Hey, That's My Fish!
Hi Ho! Cherry-O
Hiashatar (Mongolian chess variant)
High Jump
Hijara
Hijara
History of the World
Hive (Board-less chess like game)
Hive
Hnefatafl
Hotels
Hungry Hungry Hippos
Hungry Hungry Hippos
I'm the Boss!
Icehouse pieces
Imperial
Indian and jackrabbits
Ingenious
Inkan aarre
Irensei
Isola
Isola
Italian Damone
Janggi (Korean chess)
Janggi (Korean Chess)
Jarmo
Java
Jenga
Jeson Mor (Mongolian chess variant)
Join Five (aka. Morpion solitaire, Cross 'n' Lines, Line Game)
Journey through Europe
Jul-Gonu
Jungle (Dou Shou Qi, The Game of Fighting Animals)
Junta
Junta
Kalah
Kalah
Kamisado
Kamisado
Kaooa
Kensington
Kerplunk
Kharbaga
Khet
Khet
Kill Doctor Lucky
King Oil
Kingdoms
Kingdoms
København
Kolejka
Kolowis Awithlaknannai (Fighting Serpents)
Komikan
Konane
Kotu Ellima
Krazy Maze
Kropki
L Game
Landslide
Lasca
Lau kata kati
Le Havre
Leap Frog (board game)
Len Choa
Liberian Queah
Lines of Action
Liu po
Logo Board Game
Lost Cities
Lotus
Löwenherz
Luck of the Draw
Ludo
Ludus latrunculorum
Mad Gab
MagnetX
Maharajah and the Sepoys (Indian chess variant)
Main Tapal Empat
Mak-yek
Makonn
Makruk (Thai chess)
Mall Madness
Mancala and related games
Manhattan
Martian chess (for two to six players)
Master Labyrinth
Master Mind
Masterpiece
Medici
Medina
Mensch ärgere dich nicht
Merchant of Venus
Meurimueng-rimueng peuet ploh or Dam-daman or Ratti-chitti-bakri
Meurimueng-rimueng-do
Mexica
Mine a million
Ming Mang
Mississippi Queen
Mlynek
Modern Art
Monopoly
Monopoly Junior
Monopoly
Morabaraba
Morris - Three, Six and Nine Men's Morris
Mouse Trap
Mozaic
Mu Torere
Neutron
Niagara
Nim
Nine Men's Morris
Nine Holes
Obsession
Okey
Omega Virus
Operation
Other Chess-like games
Outrage!
Pack & Stack
Paddles
Pah Tum
Pandemic
Parcheesi
Parqués
Pasang
Patolli
Pawn duel
Pay Day
Pentago
Pentago
Pente, a slight simplification of Ninuki-renju
Peralikatuma
Perfection
Permainan-Tabal
Personal Preference
Phutball
Picaria
Pictionary
Pirate's Cove
Plateau
Plateau
Polarity
Poleconomy
Pong Hau K'i
Power Grid
Power Grid
Pretwa
Primordial Soup
Princes of Florence
Puerto Rico
Pulijudam
PÜNCT
Pylos
Quarto
Qubic
Quoridor
Quoridor
Qwirkle
Ra
Rail Baron
Rappakalja
Razzia
Renju
Reversi, also known as Othello
Rhumb Line
Rhumb Line
Rhythmomachy
Ricochet Robots
Rimau
Rimau-rimau
Ringo
Risk 2210 AD
Risk
Risk
Rithmomachy
Rivers, Roads & Rails
RoboRally
Rummikub
Rummoli
Sáhkku
Saint Petersburg
Salta
Samurai
San Marco
Santorini
Scattergories
Score Four
Scotland Yard
Scrabble
Senet
Senterej (Ethiopian chess)
Sequence and its variations
Sequence
Shadow Hunters
Shadows over Camelot
Shatar (Mongolian chess)
Shatranj (Persian and Arabian chess)
Shax
Sher-bakar
Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective
Shisima
Shogi variants
Shogi (Japanese chess)
Shogun/Samurai Swords
Sittuyin (Burmese chess)
Sixteen Soldiers
Skirrid
Small World
Snakes and ladders (aka Chutes and Ladders)
Snakes and Ladders
Solarquest
Sorry!
Space Hulk
Space Hop
Sprouts
Spy Alley
Square chess
Squatter
Star Wars Epic Duels
Star Wars Tactics
Star Wars Tactics
Stock Ticker
Stonehenge
Strange Synergy
Stratego
Stratego
Sua Ghin Gnua (aka Tigers and Oxen)
Subbuteo
Sugoroku
Summit
Super Quiz
Surakarta
Sz'Kwa
Tâb
Tablut
Tafl games
Taj Mahal
Take Off!
Take It Easy
Tamerlane chess (Persian)
Tant Fant
Tantrix
Tantrix
Tapatan
Tau
Teeko
TEG
Terhuchu
The Settlers of Catan
The Settlers of Catan
The Great Train Robbery Board Game
The London Game
The Really Nasty Horse Racing Game
The Game of Life
The Cross and Circle game family
Three Musketeers
Through the Desert
Thud
Thurn and Taxis
Tic Tac Toe (aka Noughts and Crosses)
Ticket to Ride
Ticket to Ride
Tiger and Buffaloes
Tigris & Euphrates
Tikal
Timberland
Titan
Top Secret Spies
Top Secret
Torres
Totopoly
Tracks to Telluride
TransAmerica
Transformers
Trax
Triagonal
Trivial Pursuit
Trouble
Tsoro Yematatu
Tsuro
Tuknanavuhpi
Tukvnanawopi
Turkish draughts
Twilight Imperium
Twister
TwixT
Ubongo
Vanished Planet
Villa Paletti
Vinci
Wali
War on Terror
Wari
Xiangqi (Chinese chess)
Y
Yahtzee
Yinsh
YINSH
Yote
Yut
Zamma
ZÈRTZ
Zombies!!!
Card Games
Trick-taking games
The object of a trick-taking game is based on the play of multiple rounds, or tricks, in each of which each player plays a single card from their hand, and based on the values of played cards one player wins or "takes" the trick. The specific object varies with each game and can include taking as many tricks as possible, taking as many scoring cards (or as few penalty cards) within the tricks won as possible, taking as few tricks as possible, or taking an exact number of tricks. Bridge, Whist, Euchre, Spades, and the various Tarot card games are popular examples.
[edit] Matching games
The object of Rummy, and various other melding or matching games, is to acquire the required groups of matching cards before an opponent can do so. In Rummy, this is done through drawing and discarding, and the groups are called melds. Mahjong is a very similar game played with tiles instead of cards. Non-Rummy examples of match-type games generally fall into the "fishing" genre and include the children's games Go Fish and Old Maid.
[edit] Shedding games
In a shedding game, players start with a hand of cards, and the object of the game is to be the first player to discard all cards from one's hand. Some matching-type games are also shedding-type games; some variants of Rummy such as Phase 10 and Rummikub, as well as the children's game Old Maid, fall into both categories.
[edit] Accumulating games
The object of an accumulating game is to acquire all cards in the deck. Examples include most War type games, and games involving slapping a discard pile. Egyptian War has both of these features.
[edit] Fishing games
In fishing games, cards from the hand are played against cards in a layout on the table, capturing table cards if they match.[7] Fishing games are popular in many nations, including China, where there are many diverse fishing games. Scopa is considered one of the national card games of Italy. Cassino is the only fishing game to be widely played in English-speaking countries.
[edit] Comparing games
Comparing card games are those where hand values are compared to determine the winner, also known as "vying" or "showdown" games. Poker, blackjack, and baccarat are examples of comparing card games.
[edit] Solitaire (Patience) games
Solitaire games are designed to be played by one player. Most games begin with a specific layout of cards, called a tableau, and the object is then either to construct a more elaborate final layout, or to clear the tableau and/or the draw pile or stock by moving all cards to one or more "discard" or "foundation" piles.
[edit] Drinking card games
Drinking card games are, true to their name, a subset of drinking games using cards, in which the object in playing the game is either to drink or to force others to drink. Many games are simply ordinary card games with the establishment of "drinking rules"; Asshole (Presidents), for instance, is virtually identical to Daihinmin but with additional rules governing drinking. Poker can also be played using a number of drinks as the wager. Another game often played as a drinking game is Toepen, quite popular in the Netherlands. Some card games are designed specifically to be played as drinking games.
[edit] Multi-genre games
Many games borrow elements from more than one type of game. The most common combination is that of matching and shedding, as in some variants of Rummy, Old Maid and Go Fish. However, many multi-genre games involve different stages of play for each hand. The most common multi-stage combination is a "trick-and-meld" game, such as Pinochle or Belote. Other multi-stage, multi-genre games include Poke, Flaps, Skitgubbe and Tichu. Vici is an example of a multi-genre card game which combines elements of 5-card hands and bluffing techniques from poker, with gathering and matching strategies from rummy and certain partnering aspects from bridge.
[edit] Collectible card games (CCGs)
Collectible card games are defined by the use of decks of proprietary cards that differ between players. The contents of these decks are a subset of a very large pool of available cards which have differing effects, costs, and art. A player accumulates his or her deck through purchase or trade for desirable cards, and each player uses their own deck to play against the other. Magic: The Gathering and Yu-Gi-Oh! are well-known collectible card games. Such games are also created to capitalize on the popularity of other forms of entertainment, such as Pokémon and Marvel Comics which both have had CCGs created around them.
[edit] Casino or gambling card games
These games revolve around wagers of money. Though virtually any game in which there are winning and losing outcomes can be wagered on, these games are specifically designed to make the betting process a strategic part of the game. Some of these games involve players betting against each other, such as poker, while in others, like blackjack, players wager against the house.
[edit] Poker games
Poker is a family of gambling games in which players bet into a pool, called the pot, that the value of their hand will beat all others according to the ranking system. Variants largely differ on how cards are dealt and the methods by which players can improve a hand. For many reasons, including its age and its popularity among Western militaries, it is one of the most universally known card games in existence.
[edit] Other card games
Many other card games have been designed and published on a commercial or amateur basis. In some cases, the game uses the standard 52-card deck, but the object is unique. In Eleusis, for example, players play single cards, and are told whether the play was legal or illegal, in an attempt to discover the underlying rules made up by the dealer.
Most of these games however typically use a specially made deck of cards designed specifically for the game (or variations of it). The decks are thus usually proprietary, but may be created by the game's players. Uno, Phase 10, Set, Slamwich, 1000 Blank White Cards, and Sopio are popular dedicated-deck card games; the last game is unique in that the cards for the game are designed by the players of the game while playing it; there is no commercially-available deck advertised as such.
[edit] Fictional card games
Many games, including card games, are fabricated by science fiction authors and screenwriters to distance a culture depicted in the story from present-day Western culture. They are commonly used as filler to depict background activities in an atmosphere like a bar or rec room, but sometimes the drama revolves around the play of the game. Some of these games, such as Pyramid from Battlestar Galactica, become real card games as the holder of the intellectual property develops and markets a suitable deck and ruleset for the game, while others, such as "Exploding Snap" from the Harry Potter franchise, lack sufficient descriptions of rules, or depend on cards or other hardware that are infeasible or physically impossible.
Computer Games
Radio Controlled Vehicles
Table Games
Billards
Pool
Table Tennis
Video Games