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A covert listening device, more commonly known as a bug or a wire, is usually a combination of a miniature radio transmitter with a microphone. The use of bugs, called bugging, or wiretapping is a common technique in surveillance , espionage and police investigations.
Mock-up image of opening a loot box in a video game. In video game terminology, a loot box (also called a loot crate or prize crate) is a consumable virtual item which can be redeemed to receive a randomised selection of further virtual items, or loot, ranging from simple customisation options for a player's avatar or character to game-changing equipment such as weapons and armour.
Hive is a bug-themed tabletop abstract strategy game, designed by John Yianni [2] and published in 2001 by Gen42 Games. The object of Hive is to capture the opponent's queen bee by having it completely surrounded by other pieces (belonging to either player), while avoiding the capture of one's own queen. [3]
Alternative game objectives: Several variants feature different objectives from the traditional Sokoban gameplay. For instance, in Interlock and Sokolor , the boxes have different colours, but the objective is to move them so that similarly coloured boxes are adjacent.
The Box, a British television game show; Box-making game, a biased positional game where two players alternately pick elements from a family of pairwise-disjoint sets ("boxes") Candy Box!, a 2013 video game; Dots and boxes, a pencil-and-paper game for two players who take turns adding a single horizontal or vertical line between two unjoined ...
The first player - called BoxMaker - tries to pick all elements of a single box. The second player - called BoxBreaker - tries to pick at least one element of all boxes. The box game was first presented by Paul ErdÅ‘s and Václav Chvátal. [1] It was solved later by Hamidoune and Las-Vergnas. [2]
Candy Box! is an incremental online text-based role-playing game that runs in web browser. It was developed by a 19-year-old French student using the pseudonym "aniwey" and released in April 2013. Candy Box! uses ASCII art for the visuals. A sequel, Candy Box 2 was released on October 24, 2013.