Board game
Appearance
- Strategy Games: where the object is to capture or remove the other players pieces, make it impossible for the other player to move. or to control the largest area at the end of the game.
- Abalone - Backgammon - Checkers - Chess - Chinese Checkers - Go - Hex - Lines of Action - Mancala - Nine Mens Morris - Ninuki-renju - Othello - Pente - Reversi - Shogi - Stratego - Phutball
- Wargames: Where strategy games are abstract, a wargame usually portrays a specific battle, war or other historical situation. The game board is usually a map of the historical location, and the pieces usually represent the actual military units involved. Wargame rules are usually far more intricate than the rules of, say, Chess, in an effort to accurately simulate the situation in question. Risk is perhaps the most widely known wargame; some wargame aficionados would say that it is too simple to be included in the category. I often explain wargames to the uninitiated as "Risk on steroids".
- Track Games: where the players move pieces along a track, usually a distance randomly set by the throw of dice. The winner is usually the first to reach some specific location on the board.
- Ludo - Monopoly - Snakes and Ladders
- German-style board game
- Settlers of Catan - Euphrat und Tigris - Lost Cities - El Grande - Tikal - Java - Torres - Carcassonne - Bohnanza - Elfenland
- Proprietary Games
- Acquire - Battleship - Boggle - Clue - Crokinole - Diplomacy - The Game of Life - Scrabble - Upwords
See also: Card game
External Links
- Funagain Games - includes short profiles of many propriety games
- Zillions of Games - more than 600 freeware board games (classcial ones and new ones), written in the special boardgame language Zillions.