When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: learn japanese games online free play

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of traditional Japanese games - Wikipedia

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

    Learn to edit; Community portal ... This is a list of traditional Japanese games. Games. Children's games ... important rules change (free opening) in Japan; Renju ...

  3. Shiritori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiritori

    In episode 28 of Inazuma Eleven GO: Galaxy, four members of the Earth Eleven play the game together, with Maneuver forcibly ending the game early to avoid rousing suspicion over his strange answers. The Japanese ending theme of Pokémon Journeys is "Pokémon Shiritori", which features the game being played with names of Pokémon.

  4. Hana Ichi Monme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hana_Ichi_Monme

    Hana Ichi Monme (花一匁) is a traditional Japanese children's game. [1] The game is similar to the game Red Rover in the Western world, and is often played in kindergartens and elementary schools. The name "Hana Ichi Monme" means "a flower is one monme", where a monme is a historical Japanese coin with a value of 3.75 grams of silver.

  5. Kantai Collection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kantai_Collection

    Kantai Collection (Japanese: 艦隊これくしょん, Hepburn: Kantai Korekushon, lit. ' Fleet Collection '), [a] abbreviated as KanColle (艦これ, KanKore), is a Japanese free-to-play web browser game developed by Kadokawa Games and published by DMM.com.

  6. Sugoroku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugoroku

    Man and woman playing ban-sugoroku (from Hikone Screen) Sugoroku (雙六 or 双六) (literally 'double six') refers to two different forms of a Japanese board game: ban-sugoroku (盤双六, 'board-sugoroku') which is similar to western tables games like backgammon, and e-sugoroku (絵双六, 'picture-sugoroku') which is similar to Western snakes and ladders.

  7. Hanetsuki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanetsuki

    Hanetsuki Hanetsuki paddles (left) and shuttlecocks (right) being sold at a shop in a train station.. Hanetsuki (Japanese: 羽根突き or 羽子突き) is a Japanese traditional game, similar to racket games like badminton but without a net, played with a rectangular wooden paddle called a hagoita and a brightly coloured shuttlecock, called a hane. [1]