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Zoombinis is a series of educational puzzle computer games that were originally developed by TERC and published by Broderbund.In 1998, Broderbund was purchased by The Learning Company, (formerly SoftKey) who took responsibility for developing and publishing the series in 2001.
The US version of the game was expanded and republished as Zoombinis Logical Journey v2.0 by The Learning Company in September 2001.. A remake for modern devices, titled Zoombinis, was officially released on 6 August 2015 [3] for iPadOS, Android, Windows and MacOS, and for Fire OS on 28 October of the same year by TERC, FableVision, and Learning Games Network.
Tibia is a multiplayer online role-playing game released in 1997, [1] developed and published by CipSoft. It is one of the earliest and longest-running MMORPGs, reaching its peak popularity in 2007. It is one of the earliest and longest-running MMORPGs, reaching its peak popularity in 2007.
A centerpiece section contained a feature puzzle or puzzles, such as puzzles from the World Puzzle Championship or the annual Lt. Nodumbo puzzle mystery. Until the July 2009 issue it contained a contest in every issue, most often a variety crossword or trivia quiz, and the contest resumed upon the Games merger.
The puzzle is studied by D. E. Knuth in an article on estimating the running time of exhaustive search procedures with backtracking. [2] Every position of the puzzle can be solved in eight moves or less. [3] The first known patented version of the puzzle was created by Frederick Alvin Schossow in 1900, and marketed as the Katzenjammer puzzle. [4]
A sliding puzzle, sliding block puzzle, or sliding tile puzzle is a combination puzzle that challenges a player to slide (frequently flat) pieces along certain routes (usually on a board) to establish a certain end-configuration. The pieces to be moved may consist of simple shapes, or they may be imprinted with colours, patterns, sections of a ...
A Tatamibari puzzle is played on a rectangular grid with three different kinds of symbols in it: +, -. and |. The solver must partition the grid into rectangular or square regions according to the following rules: [1] Every partition must contain exactly one symbol in it. A + symbol must be contained in a square.
Takuzu, also known as Binairo, is a logic puzzle involving placement of two symbols, often 1s and 0s, on a rectangular grid. The objective is to fill the grid with 1s and 0s, where there is an equal number of 1s and 0s in each row and column and no more than two of either number adjacent to each other.