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  2. Liubo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liubo

    This Liubo set comprises the following items (the Chinese description of the items in the inventory of grave goods that was found in the tomb are given in brackets): [9] 1 lacquered wooden game box (45.0 × 45.0 × 17.0 cm.) [博一具] 1 lacquered wooden game board (45.0 × 45.0 × 1.2 cm.) [博局一]

  3. List of licensed and localized editions of Monopoly : USA

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_licensed_and...

    Game description: This is a reproduction of a 1957 board and Monopoly set. It uses the standard U.S. Atlantic City properties. The set comes in a wooden case, with a lid that slides off, and holds the board, with compartments for the cards, tokens and paper money. A brief history of the game is reprinted inside the lid.

  4. Pitchnut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitchnut

    Pitchnut board. Pitchnut is a wooden tabletop game of French Canadian origins, similar to carrom, crokinole and pichenotte, with mechanics that lie somewhere between pocket billiards and air hockey. [1] Unlike with other wooden board games, there are no records of pitchnut being mass-produced; all existing boards are handmade.

  5. Stratego - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratego

    The game box contents are a set of 40 gold-embossed red playing pieces, a set of silver-embossed blue playing pieces, and a folding 15 + 1 ⁄ 2 in × 18 + 1 ⁄ 2 in (39 cm × 47 cm) rectangular cardboard playing board imprinted with a 10×10 grid of spaces. The early sets featured painted wood pieces, later sets colored plastic.

  6. Go equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_equipment

    An empty Go board, with the 19×19 intersecting lines. The Go board, called the goban 碁盤 in Japanese, is the playing surface on which to place the stones. The standard board is marked with a 19×19 grid. Smaller boards include a 13×13 grid and a 9×9 grid used for shorter games that are often used to teach beginners.

  7. Jenga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenga

    Jenga was created by Leslie Scott, [3] the co-founder of Oxford Games Ltd, based on a game that evolved within her family in the early 1970s using children's wooden building blocks [4] the family purchased from a sawmill in Takoradi, Ghana. The name Jenga is derived from kujenga, a Swahili word which means "to build". [4]

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