Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A Sokoban puzzle being solved. Sokoban (倉庫番, Sōko-ban, lit. ' warehouse keeper ' [1]) is a puzzle video game in which the player pushes boxes around in a warehouse, trying to get them to storage locations. The game was designed in 1981 by Hiroyuki Imabayashi, and first published in December 1982.
Rocks'n'Diamonds is a puzzle video game with elements of Boulder Dash, Supaplex, Emerald Mine, Solomon's Key, and Sokoban. It is free software under the GNU GPL-2.0-only license created by Artsoft Entertainment and designed by Holger Schemel. [1]
Boxyboy, Sōkoban World in Japan, is a puzzle video game released for the Turbografx-16 home video game console, published by NEC in 1990. This game is an adaptation of Sokoban, released on several home computers in the United States and Japan in the 1980s, including the NEC PC-8801 and IBM-PC and compatibles. [1]
Discover the best free online games at AOL.com - Play board, card, casino, puzzle and many more online games while chatting with others in real-time.
Void Stranger was created by independent Finnish video game developer System Erasure, a collaboration between Eero Lahtinen and Antti Ukkola. Void Stranger is the second game by the studio, which was founded in 2008 and published its first title, ZeroRanger, in 2018. Development started in 2019 and the game was publicly revealed in October 2020.
Sokobond is a Sokoban-style puzzle video game themed around creating chemical compounds from atoms. [1] In each level, the player is presented with a 2D grid containing walls and atoms. The player controls one of the atoms, and moves it around the level.
In 1988, Sokoban was published in US by Spectrum HoloByte for the Commodore 64, MS-DOS, and Apple II as Soko-Ban. A version for the BBC Micro called Robol was published by a third party in 1993. [1] Sokoban was a hit in Japan, and had sold over 400,000 units in that country by the time Spectrum HoloByte imported it to the United States. [2]
Boxxle (倉庫番) is a puzzle video game released by Fujisankei Communications International for the Game Boy in 1989.. Its Japanese title is Soukoban.The gameplay is the same as in other games in the Sokoban series, with the plot being that the player must maneuver boxes in a warehouse in order to make enough money to woo his desired girlfriend.