Index of gaming articles

Last updated

Articles pertaining to games and gaming include:

0-9

8-bit era - 16-bit era - 32-bit and 64-bit era - 128-bit era

Contents

A

Abalone (board game) - Abandonware - Abstract strategy game - Acquire - Advanced Dungeons & Dragons - Advanced Squad Leader - Adventure game - Algebraic chess notation - Alpha–beta pruning - Alpha Blitz - Alquerque - Amazons (game) - Amiga games - Anagrams - Ancient game - Andantino (game) - Anime game -

Apocalypse (chess variant) - Arcade cabinet - Arcade game - Arduin - Army of Zero - Ars Magica - Articulate! - Assassin (game) - Audio game - Avalanche chess - Avalon Hill - Axis & Allies - Art

B

Backgammon - Balbo's Game - Balderdash - Banach–Mazur game - Battleship (game) - Beetle (game) - Beirut Chess - Betrayal at House on the Hill - Big two - Bingo - Bishōjo game - Black Box (game) - Blood Bowl - Board game - Board game complexity - Bohnanza - Boggle - Boggle Master - Bookworm - Breakthrough (board game) - Bridge - Broadsides and Boarding Parties - Bunnies and Burrows - Business simulation game - BuyWord - Buzzword bingo - Byoyomi - Ben 10: Alien Force The Game

C

Calculation (solitaire) - Canadian checkers - Candy Land - Can't Stop (board game) - Capablanca Chess - Capture the flag - Car game - Carcassonne (board game) - Card game - Careers (board game) - Carrom - Car wars - Casino - Casino game - Castle Risk - Cat's cradle - Chancellor Chess - Chaosium - Charades - Chaturanga - Chaupar - The Checkered Game of Life - Checkers - Cheddar Gorge (game) - Chesquerque - Chess - Chess endgame - Chessboard - Chess columns in newspapers - Chess historian - Chess piece - Chess problem - Chess puzzle - Chess variant - Chicago (bridge card game) - Chicken game - Children's game - Chinese checkers - Chinese dominoes - Cho Hunhyun - Chutes and Ladders - Circe chess - Citadels (game) - City-building game - Civilization (1980 board game) - Civilization (2002 board game) - Civilization (2010 board game) - Clapping game - Cluedo - Collectible card game - Computability logic - Computer chess - Computer game - Computer Go - Computer Olympiad - Computer poker players - Congo (chess variant) - Connect Four - Consequences (game) - Console emulator - Contract bridge - Conway's Game of Life - Cooperative game - Counting-out game - Cranium (board game) - Crokinole - Crossings (game) - Crossword - Crossword abbreviations - Cryptic crossword - Cut (playing cards)

D

Dahrumasan ga koronda - Dating sim - The Dark Eye - Decimal Falcon-Hunter Chess - Diamond (game) - Diamond game - Dice - Die game - Dingbats - Diplomacy (game) - Djambi - Dojin game - Dots and Boxes - Drakar och Demoner - DragonQuest - Drinking game - Dungeon Master - Dungeons & Dragons - Duplicate bridge - DVD TV games - Dvorak - Dynamo Chess

E

Earthdawn - Edmund Hoyle - El Grande - Elfenland - Elo rating system - Entropy (1977 board game) - Entropy (1994 board game) - Epaminondas (game) - Eton wall game - Europa (wargame) - Evaluation function - Evolutionarily stable strategy - Experience point - Exquisite corpse

F

Fairy chess piece - Falcon-Hunter Chess - Fanorona - The Fantasy Trip - Fan translation - Fédération Internationale des Échecs - Fictionary - fifty-move rule - First-person shooter - Fischer Random Chess - Five Field Kono - Fiver (puzzle) - Flight simulator - Fluxx - Flying Buffalo Incorporated (F.B.I) - Fork (chess) - Four fours - Francis Willughby's Book of Games - FreeCell - Freeform role-playing game - Fundamental theorem of poker

G

Gambling - Game - Game basic topics - Game classification - Game clock - Game controller - Game Critics Awards - Game design - Game design document - Game designer - Game development - Game Developer Magazine - Game engine - Game engine recreation - GameFAQs - Game mechanic - Game of chance - The Game of Life - Image:Game of life blinker.png - Image:Game of life block.png - Image:Game of life boat.png - Image:Game of life diehard.png - Image:Game of life glider.png - Image:Game of life glider gun.png - Image:Game of life infinite1.png - Image:Game of life infinite2.png - Image:Game of life infinite3.png - Image:Game of life lwss.png - Image:Game of life methuselah.png - Image:Game of life toad.png - Game of Mill - Games of physical skill - Game of status - Game of the Goose - Game of the Three Kingdoms - Game play - Game port - Game producer - Game programmer - Game semantics - Game show - Game studies - Game theory - Game tree - Game-tree complexity - Gamemaster - The Games Machine - Games played with Go equipment - Games Workshop - A Gamut of Games - Gen Con - Generalized game - Generic game - German game designer - German-style board game - Gimp - Global Diplomacy - GNU Chess - GNU Go - Go (board game) - Go handicap - Gomoku - Go players - Go proverb - Go Seigen - God game - Gonnect - Gonu - Gother Than Thou - Government simulation game - Grand Chess - Greek electronic game ban - Grid chess - Group-dynamic game - Guessing game - GURPS - Gwat Pai

H

H Game - Halma - Hanafuda - Handheld game console - Hangman (game) - Larry Harris (game designer) - Hasbro - Havannah - Hearts (card game) - Hex (board game) - Hexdame - Hexshogi - High Score!: The Illustrated History of Electronic Games - History of Board Games - History of video games - Honinbo Shusaku - Horizon effect - Hostage Chess - Housie - Huff (board games) - Hypermodernism - Hypertext group games

I

Icehouse (game) - Icehouse pieces - Immortal Game - Impartial game - Independent Games Festival - Interactive Achievement Awards - International Olympic Committee - Iterated prisoner's dilemma

J

Steve Jackson (US) - Steve Jackson (UK) - Janggi - Janggi variant - Japanese games - Java - Joker (playing card) - Jotto- Jumangi- Jenga

K

KenKen - Kensington - Kill Doctor Lucky - Killer heuristic - Kingmaker scenario - Reiner Knizia - Korean chess -

L

L Game - Letter game - Level (computer and video games) - Level editor - Lewis chessmen - Level design - Liar dice/Liar's dice - Lines of Action - Live action role-playing game - Ian Livingstone - Loaded dice - Localized versions of the Monopoly game - Andrew Looney - Lord of the Rings Roleplaying Game - Losing chess -Lost Cities game - Lucena position - Ludic - Ludo - Ludus duodecim scriptorum

M

MMOFPS - MMORPG - MMORTS - MUD - Madrasi chess - Magic: The Gathering - Magic: The Gathering video games - Mahjong - Makruk - Mak-yek - Man, Myth & Magic - Mana - Mancala - Masonic Chess - Masonic Shogi - Massively multiplayer online game - Mastermind (board game) - Mathematical game - Maven - Maze of Games - Mazes and Monsters - Mechanical puzzle - Mehen - Microsoft Puzzle Hunt - Middle Earth Role Play - Sid Meier - Mind sport - Mind Sports Organisation - Minimax algorithm - Minishogi - Misère game - MIT Mystery Hunt - M,n,k-game - Mod (computer gaming) - Monopoly (game) - Monster chess - Mornington Crescent - Morpion solitaire - Mr. Three - Multi-genre game - Multiplayer - H. J. R. Murray - Mystery Date

N

Nard (game) - Nash equilibrium - Neopets - Newcomb's paradox - Next Game, Inc. - Aron Nimzowitsch - Nine men's morris - Ninuki-renju - The No Game - Non-zero-sum - Non-zero-sum game - Nuclear War - Null-move heuristic -

O

Olympic medalists - Ombre - Omega chess - Omweso - Oni - Online game - Onyx (game) - Open gaming - Origins Awards - Origins of chess - Othello - Oware - Owari (game)

P

Pac-Man - Pachisi - Pagat.com - Pai gow - Parallel Worlds Chess - Parcheesi - Parchis - Parchisi - Parques - Partizan game - Party game - Patolli - Patrol Chess - Pay Day - Payoff matrix - PC game - Peg solitaire - Pencil and paper game - Pente - Pentominoes - Perfect play - Phutball - Pick-up sticks - Pick-up sticks (Haida) - Pictionary - Pie rule - Play-by-mail game - Player (game) - Player's Handbook - Player killer - Playground game - Playing card - Playtest - Ply (chess) - Poker - Poker strategy - Pool checkers - Portable Game Notation - Prisoner's dilemma - Progressive chess - Puerto Rico (game) - Puzzlehunt - Puzzles

Q

Quatrochess - Qubic - Quizbowl - Quoridor

R

Racetrack - Real-time card game - Real-time strategy - Real-time tactics - Redemption game - Renju - Reversi - Revoke - Rhythmomachy - Risk game - Risk 2210 A.D. - Risk Godstorm - Rock, Paper, Scissors - Roguelike - Role-playing game - Rolemaster - Roulette - Rubber bridge - RuneQuest - RuneScape - Rythmomachia Roblox

S

Sid Sackson - Scissors (game) - Scotland Yard (board game) - Scrabble - Seefahrer- Mike Selinker - Senet - The Settlers of Catan - Shanghai solitaire - Shannon switching game - Shapley value - Shatranj - Shell game - Shogi - Shogi variant - Shortest proof game - Shove ha'penny - Shuffling playing cards - Shut the Box - Simulationist RPG - Singing game - Six Men's Morris - Skat - Slaughter rule - Smart Game Format - Snakes and ladders - Snap-dragon (game) - Solitaire - Solitaire terminology - Solved board games - Sorry! (game) - Source port - Space Shogi - Spiel des Jahres - Spoken game - Sport - Sprague–Grundy theorem - Sprouts - Star (board game) - StarCraft - Staring contest - State-space complexity - Stormbringer - Storytelling game - Stratego - Strategy & Tactics - Strategy game - Strategy-stealing argument - Stratomic - String game - Subbuteo - Submarine simulator - Suit (cards) - Sudoku

T

Table-top game - Tables (board game) - Taboo (game) - Tabula - Tag (game) - Talecraft (game) - Tanbo - Tantrix - Tarocchi - Tarot - Technology tree - Klaus Teuber - The Chess Variant Pages - The Game - Third Reich game - Three-dimensional chess - Three men's morris - Three Musketeers (game) - Tiddlywinks - Tien Gow - Tigris and Euphrates - Tikal - Tile-based game - Time control - Timeline of video games - Titan game - Torres (board game) - Traditional game - Transposition table - Trick-taking game - Trishogi - Trivial Pursuit - Troccas - Trouble - Tunnels and Trolls - Turn-based game - Turn-based strategy - Turn-based tactics - Twenty Questions - TwixT

U

Ultimate Play the Game - Unclassified game - Universal Chess Interface - Upwords

V

Vaporware - Video game - Video game adaptation (anime) - Video game console - Video game controversy - Video game developer - Video game genres - Video game industry - Video game industry practices - Video game music - Video game player - Video game publisher - Video game theory - Videogame type - Virtual Pet - Virtual universe - Vish

W

John Wallis (publisher) - Wargaming - Weet weet - Wild card (poker) - Word game - World records in chess

X

XBoard - Xiang Qi

Y

Y (game) - Yahtzee - Yi Chang-ho

Z

Zendo (game) - Zero game - Zero-player game - Zero-sum fallacy - Zero-sum game - Zillions of Games - Zugzwang

Lists

Related Research Articles

Board game game that involves counters or pieces moved or placed on a pre-marked surface or "board", according to a set of rules

A board game is a tabletop game that involves counters or pieces moved or placed on a pre-marked surface or "board", according to a set of rules. Some games are based on pure strategy, but many contain an element of chance; and some are purely chance, with no element of skill.

Backgammon one of the oldest board games for two players

Backgammon is one of the oldest known board games. Its history can be traced back nearly 5,000 years to archeological discoveries in Mesopotamia. It is a two player game where each player has fifteen pieces that move between twenty-four triangles (points) according to the roll of two dice. The objective of the game is to be first to bear off, i.e. move all fifteen checkers off the board. Backgammon is a member of the tables family, one of the oldest classes of board games.

Steve Jackson Games game publisher

Steve Jackson Games (SJGames) is a game company, founded in 1980 by Steve Jackson, that creates and publishes role-playing, board, and card games, and the gaming magazine Pyramid.

A zero-player game or no-player game is a game that has no sentient players.

This is a list of all video game lists on Wikipedia, sorted by varying classifications.

Abstract strategy game strategy game that minimizes luck and does not rely on a theme

An abstract strategy game is a strategy game in which the theme is not important to the experience of playing. Many of the world's classic board games, including chess, Go, checkers and draughts, xiangqi, shogi, Reversi, nine men's morris, and most mancala variants, fit into this category. As J. Mark Thompson wrote in his article "Defining the Abstract", play is sometimes said to resemble a series of puzzles the players pose to each other:

There is an intimate relationship between such games and puzzles: every board position presents the player with the puzzle, What is the best move?, which in theory could be solved by logic alone. A good abstract game can therefore be thought of as a "family" of potentially interesting logic puzzles, and the play consists of each player posing such a puzzle to the other. Good players are the ones who find the most difficult puzzles to present to their opponents.

Yahoo! Games was a section of the Yahoo! website, launched on March 31, 1998, in which Yahoo! users could play games either with other users or by themselves. The majority of Yahoo! Games was closed down on March 31, 2014 and the balance was closed on February 9, 2016. Yahoo! announced that "changes in supporting technologies and increased security requirements for our own Yahoo! web pages, made it impossible to keep the games running safely and securely". It was then announced by Yahoo! that its Games section would be dissolved completely on May 13, 2016. However, the Yahoo! Games service is still available on Yahoo! Japan, along with Yahoo! Auctions.

A Mahjong video game is a video game that is based on the classical Chinese game mahjong. However, many mahjong video games, especially among those released in Western territories, do not depict the actual game of mahjong but rather mahjong solitaire.

Hoyle's Official Book of Games is a series of games produced by Sierra Entertainment. Volume 1, released in 1989, featured multi-player card games. Volume 2, released in 1990, featured 28 varieties of Solitaire. Volume 3, released in 1991, featured board games. Volume 4, was a remake of Volume 1, with two additional games. Sierra continued to publish more games to the series up to its demise. Encore Software has continued publishing entries to the series since then. According to Hoyle 1 it was essentially a spiritual sequel to Sierra's Hi-Res Cribbage (1981).

<i>Clubhouse Games</i> video game

Clubhouse Games, known in parts of Europe as 42 All-Time Classics and in Japan as Daredemo Asobi Taizen, is a compilation video game consisting of card, board, and parlor games developed by Agenda and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS handheld video game console. It was first released in Japan on November 3, 2005, in Europe on September 29, 2006, in North America on October 9, 2006, and in Australia on October 26, 2006.

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to games and gaming:

Game Structured form of play, for entertainment

A game is a structured form of play, usually undertaken for enjoyment and sometimes used as an educational tool. Games are distinct from work, which is usually carried out for remuneration, and from art, which is more often an expression of aesthetic or ideological elements. However, the distinction is not clear-cut, and many games are also considered to be work or art.

Zillions of Games commercial general game playing system

Zillions of Games is a commercial general game playing system developed by Jeff Mallett and Mark Lefler in 1998. The game rules are specified with S-expressions, Zillions rule language. It was designed to handle mostly abstract strategy board games or puzzles. After parsing the rules of the game, the system's artificial intelligence can automatically play one or more players. It treats puzzles as solitaire games and its AI can be used to solve them.

History of games

The history of games dates to the ancient human past. Games are an integral part of all cultures and are one of the oldest forms of human social interaction. Games are formalized expressions of play which allow people to go beyond immediate imagination and direct physical activity. Common features of games include uncertainty of outcome, agreed upon rules, competition, separate place and time, elements of fiction, elements of chance, prescribed goals and personal enjoyment.

Telegames, Inc. is an American video game company based in Mabank, Texas, with a sister operation based in England.

Game design game development process of designing the content and rules of a game

Game design is the art of applying design and aesthetics to create a game for entertainment or for educational, exercise, or experimental purposes. Increasingly, elements and principles of game design are also applied to other interactions, in the form of gamification.

This page explains commonly used terms in board games in alphabetical order. For a list of board games, see List of board games. For terms specific to chess, see Glossary of chess. For terms related to chess problems, see Glossary of chess problems.

References