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  2. The Stone (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Stone_(video_game)

    The Stone is an online game developed by web company Abject Modernity Internet Creations Inc. in 1995. [1] The mystery game was created in 1996 but launched as a consumer product in 1997. People had to buy a physical stone containing the login credentials to the website, which was unheard of at the time.

  3. Pentalpha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentalpha

    Solution. Pentalpha is a puzzle where the goal is to place nine stones on the ten intersections of a pentagram. The puzzle is used as a confidence trick in Mexico, where it is known as estrella mágica. [1] The following rules need to be obeyed when placing the stones: The stone has to visit two other points before reaching its final point.

  4. 15 puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/15_puzzle

    [2] [3] For the 15 puzzle, lengths of optimal solutions range from 0 to 80 single-tile moves (there are 17 configurations requiring 80 moves) [4] [5] or 43 multi-tile moves; [6] the 8 Puzzle always can be solved in no more than 31 single-tile moves or 24 multi-tile moves (integer sequence A087725). The multi-tile metric counts subsequent moves ...

  5. Gonggi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonggi

    However, unlike the original game, where the player can choose which stone to throw up first, in crisis, other players choose the first stone for the player. The steps that follow after are the same. While the first stone is airborne, the player picks up another stone on the playing surface. Then, the player catches the stone.

  6. Nim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nim

    Building nim is a variant of nim wherein the two players first construct the game of nim. Given n stones and s empty piles, the players, alternating turns, place exactly one stone into a pile of their choice. [13] Once all the stones are placed, a game of Nim begins, starting with the next player that would move. This game is denoted BN(n,s).

  7. Tower of Hanoi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_of_Hanoi

    Although the three-peg version has a simple recursive solution long been known, the optimal solution for the Tower of Hanoi problem with four pegs (called Reve's puzzle) was not verified until 2014, by Bousch. [20] However, in case of four or more pegs, the Frame–Stewart algorithm is known without proof of optimality since 1941. [21]

  8. Gomoku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gomoku

    The rule of "swap after 1st move" is a variant of the freestyle gomoku rule, and is mostly played in China. The game can be played on a 19×19 or 15×15 board. As per the rule, once the first player places a black stone on the board, the second player has the right to swap colors. The rest of the game proceeds as freestyle gomoku.

  9. The Omega Stone: Riddle of the Sphinx II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Omega_Stone:_Riddle_of...

    The Omega Stone is a Microsoft Windows puzzle adventure game developed by American studio Omni World Studios. It was the sequel to the game Riddle of the Sphinx: An Egyptian Adventure and was released by DreamCatcher Interactive on March 18, 2003.