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  2. Madeline (video game series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madeline_(video_game_series)

    Madeline Classroom Companion: 1st and 2nd Grade was part of the Madeline Classroom Companion series, with games designed for children aged four to eight. [8] The story follows Madeline on a tour of her Paris neighborhood. Madeline Thinking Games Deluxe was a combination of Madeline Thinking Games and Madeline European Adventures.

  3. Hanabi (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanabi_(card_game)

    Hanabi (from Japanese 花火, fireworks) is a cooperative card game created by French game designer Antoine Bauza and published in 2010. [1] Players are aware of other players' cards but not their own, and attempt to play a series of cards in a specific order to set off a simulated fireworks show. The types of information that players may give ...

  4. Dixit (board game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dixit_(board_game)

    Dixit (Latin: dixit, Latin pronunciation:, "he/she/it said"), is a French board game created by Jean-Louis Roubira , illustrated by Marie Cardouat, and published by Libellud . Using a set of cards illustrated with dreamlike images, players select cards that match a title suggested by the designated storyteller player, and attempt to guess which ...

  5. Belote - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belote

    Belote (French pronunciation:) is a 32-card, trick-taking, ace–ten game played primarily in France and certain European countries, namely Armenia, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Georgia (mainly Guria), Greece, Luxembourg, Moldova, North Macedonia (mainly Bitola), Bosnia and Herzegovina and also in Saudi Arabia and Tunisia.

  6. Tontine (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tontine_(card_game)

    Tontine is an historical French gambling game for five to twelve players using playing cards.It is a social game of pure chance in which the chips (jetons) circulate between the players and the pool until one player wins all the chips in play.

  7. Nain Jaune - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nain_Jaune

    The name goes back to a fairy tale by French noblewoman Baroness d'Aulnoy, published in 1698. Le Nain Jaune (the yellow dwarf) is a cruel story about an ugly, jealous and evil villain. [5] The game of Nain Jaune first appeared around 1760 in the French region of Lorraine under the name of jeu du Nain (Dwarf) or jeu du Nain-Bébé (Baby Dwarf

  8. French Tarot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Tarot

    For ease of play, the late 19th century French-suited "Tarot Nouveau" or "Bourgeois Tarot" supplanted the Marseilles Tarot with depictions of typical fin de siècle genre scenes of French life and leisure. In English, the game is referred to as French Tarot or sometimes as French tarot, however, the latter usually refers to tarot cards of ...

  9. Pichenotte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pichenotte

    The game community site Knipsbrat.com states that, like the German name Knipsbrat ('flicking-board'), "pichenotte is another name for crokinole" [4] [5] The Canadian game board collection at the Quebec Museum of Civilization in Quebec City includes both the square carrom-type board [6] and the round crokinole-type game [7] Crokinole is also ...