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  2. List of historical video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historical_video_games

    A turn-based grand strategy video game that allows players to build and lead a nation through an alternate history from Stone Age to Singularity Age. Millennia (video game) 2024: 10,000 BC – 2100s AD: A 4X turn-based strategy video game in which players lead their nation through 10 different ages, from Age of Stone to Age of Transcendence.

  3. Kōnane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kōnane

    Kōnane is a two-player strategy board game from Hawaii which was invented by the ancient Hawaiian Polynesians. The game is played on a rectangular board and begins with black and white counters filling the board in an alternating pattern. Players then hop over one another's pieces, capturing them similar to checkers. The first player unable to ...

  4. Fangqi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fangqi

    Board size varies from region to region. [1] In Ningxia, the game is played on a 7×8 gridded board using black and white Go stones, 28 stones per player.The game is popular in agricultural communities in Northwestern China, and often played on a board traced out on the ground.

  5. Mancala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mancala

    Mancala (Arabic: منقلة manqalah) is a family of two-player turn-based strategy board games played with small stones, beans, or seeds and rows of holes or pits in the earth, a board or other playing surface. The objective is usually to capture all or some set of the opponent's pieces.

  6. Bul (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bul_(game)

    When a stone captures an enemy stone, it immediately reverses direction and begins heading back to the home base. Once a stone and its prisoners reach home, any enemy stones are removed from the game, or killed. Friendly stones are liberated or returned to the set of stones that can be played. A player wins once they kill every enemy stone.

  7. Morabaraba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morabaraba

    Morabaraba is accessible and easy to learn, and games can be played quickly, but the strategic and tactical aspects of the game run deep. While it may be played on specially produced boards (or simulated by computer software as a video game), it is simple enough that a board can easily be scratched on a stone or into sand, with coins or pebbles (or whatever comes to hand) used as the pieces.

  8. Chaturanga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaturanga

    The time of the rains played its game with frogs for pieces [nayadyutair] yellow and green in colour, as if mottled by lac, leapt up on the black field squares. The colours are not those of the two camps, but mean that the frogs have two colours, yellow and green. Chaturanga may also have much older roots, dating back 5,000 years.

  9. Four arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_arts

    The qi (棋) was defined as the board game now called weiqi (圍棋) in Chinese (Go in Japan and the West), literally meaning "surrounding game". Current definitions of qi cover a wide range of board games, and given that in classical Chinese qí could also refer to other games, some argue that the qí in the four arts could refer to xiangqi. [1]