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Abalone (board game), a board game in which white and black marbles try to knock each other into a gutter that lines the outside of the board; Aggravation (board game), a variation of Pachisi; B-Daman, a toy that fires marbles and can be played under several game rules; Battle B-Daman, a manga series about a game that is an enhanced version of ...
Wahoo: The Marble Board Game. The classic multi-player marble board game for fans of Parchisi, Aggravation®, Trouble®, Sorry®, and Ludo! By Masque Publishing. Advertisement.
This week's Game of the Week, Wahoo, is for fans of Parchisi, Aggravation®, Trouble®, Sorry®, and Ludo or any other classic marble board game. In Wahoo, your goal is to move all of ...
This category includes games that traditionally use marbles, even though other objects could be substituted without causing any difficulty, for example Chinese checkers. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Original 1966 edition of Avalanche illustrating inclined board and rocking gates.. Avalanche, also marketed as Lawine in the Netherlands, Avalancha in Spain, and Astroslide or Skill in Germany, is an abstract, mechanical strategy game published by Parker Brothers in 1966 that features colored marbles that roll down an inclined board.
Dr. Nim was based on a mathematical game called NIM, which similarly consisted of twelve marbles. A simple strategy will always win as long as the opponent goes first. This is the strategy for single-pile NIM: If the opponent takes 3 marbles, the first player should take 1. If the opponent takes 2 marbles, the first player should take 2.
Peg Solitaire, Solo Noble, Solo Goli, Marble Solitaire or simply Solitaire is a board game for one player involving movement of pegs on a board with holes. Some sets use marbles in a board with indentations. The game is known as solitaire in Britain and as peg solitaire in the US where 'solitaire' is now the common name for patience.
The origin of this traditional Cherokee game is unknown, and it is not mentioned in the works of ethnologist James Mooney. [1] Cherokee marbles is a game similar to rolley hole, [2] an Anglo-American game comprising at least two teams of marble players, although the dimensions are different and rolley hole uses three holes instead of five. [3]