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  2. Slither.io - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slither.io

    An example of Slither.io gameplay, showing one player's snake eating the remains of another snake that has died. This is only a part of the map. The objective of the game is to control a snake, also known as "slithers", around a wide area and eat pellets, defeating and consuming other players to gain mass to grow the largest and longest in the game. [1]

  3. Snake.io - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake.io

    Snake.io is a multiplayer [1] mobile and web-based game originally developed by Amelos Interactive and currently published by Kooapps. It was inspired by the classic Snake game. It was released in 2016 by Kooapps for mobile platforms. The player controls a snake that grows longer and bigger by eating pellets on the arena.

  4. Snakebird (video game) - Wikipedia

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

    Snakebird received positive reviews, with critics citing its visual design, describing it as "cute" while contrasting that aspect with its difficulty. Comments included Kotaku's description of the game as a "wolf in sheep's clothing" [3] and Pocket Gamer stating that "If it wasn't totally passé to call things 'the Dark Souls of,' I'd call Snakebird the Dark Souls of puzzle games".

  5. Snake (video game genre) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake_(video_game_genre)

    In the most common single-player game, the player's snake is of a certain length, so when the head moves the tail does too. Each item eaten by the snake causes the snake to get longer. Snake Byte has the snake eating apples. Nibbler has the snake eating abstract objects in a maze.

  6. Nuts & Milk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuts_&_Milk

    Nuts & Milk (ナッツ&ミルク, Nattsu to Miruku) is a puzzle-platform game developed and published by Japanese software developer Hudson Soft in 1983. The game was first released on Japanese home computers such as the MSX, [3] NEC PC-6001mkII, [3] Sharp X1, [3] Fujitsu FM-7, [3] Hitachi S1 [4] and later to the Family Computer in Japan.

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  8. Nibbles (video game) - Wikipedia

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

    Nibbles, also known by the source code's file name NIBBLES.BAS, is a variant of the snake video game concept used to demonstrate the QBasic programming language. Nibbles was written in QBasic by Rick Raddatz, who later went on to create small businesses such as Xiosoft and Bizpad. [citation needed]

  9. WildSnake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WildSnake

    WildSnake [a] is a puzzle video game inspired by Tetris. Snakes of varying colors and lengths fall from the top of the screen and slither to the bottom. The goal is to clear out the snakes by touching two of the same color. WildSnake was designed by Alexey Lysogorov and presented by Alexey Pajitnov. [1]