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  2. Honor of the Samurai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honor_of_the_Samurai

    Card actions can include drawing a card, playing a card from their hand to their face-up collection, or discarding a card. Cards are played beside the Daimyo or the Samurai, each representing the two different houses. Making a declaration: The player may make one of four declarations: Declare their Daimyo to be Shogun (if the post is empty)

  3. List of traditional Japanese games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_traditional...

    This is a list of traditional Japanese games. Games. Children's games. Beigoma; Bīdama; Daruma-san ... Two-ten-jack (Tsū-ten-jakku) - a Japanese trick-taking card game.

  4. List of Japanese artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_artists

    Potter and a key figure in mingei (Japanese folk art) and studio pottery movements Yasuo Kuniyoshi: 1893–1953 Migrated to New York from Japan in 1906. Well known for his paintings related to Social Realism: Kanpū Ōmata: 1894–1947 Painter and waka poet Haruko Hasegawa: 1895–1967 Painter, illustrator, writer; she specialized in war painting

  5. Musha-e - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musha-e

    Musha-e (武者絵) is a type a Japanese art that was developed in the late 18th century. It is a genre of the ukiyo-e woodblock printing technique, and represents images of warriors and samurai from Japanese history and mythology. [1] [2]

  6. Shogun (1986 board game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shogun_(1986_board_game)

    Shogun, designed by Michael Gray, [1] was first released in 1986 by Milton Bradley as part of their Gamemaster series. It was renamed to Samurai Swords in its first re-release (1995) to disambiguate it from other games with the same name (in particular, James Clavell's Shogun, a wargame with a similar theme, released in 1983), and renamed again to Ikusa in its 2011 re-release under Hasbro's ...

  7. Japanese painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_painting

    The common people developed a separate type of art, the fūzokuga (風俗画, Genre art), in which painting depicting scenes from common, everyday life, especially that of the common people, kabuki theatre, prostitutes and landscapes were popular. These paintings in the 16th century gave rise to the paintings and woodcut prints of ukiyo-e.