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Mickey Mouse Spin-A-Round Game; Mickey's Stuff For Kids Hoppin' Checkers (1993) Pinocchio Game (1992) Pocahontas Game (1994) Spinning Wishes (2002) Walt Disney Productions' Robin Hood Game (1973) Walt Disney Rescue Rangers; Walt Disney World Magic Kingdom Game (1972) Walt Disney's Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs Game (1992)
Diamond game (Japanese: ダイヤモンドゲーム) is a variant of Chinese checkers played in South Korea and Japan. It uses the same jump rule as in Chinese checkers. The aim of the game is to enter all one's pieces into the star corner on the opposite side of the board, before opponents do the same. Each player has ten or fifteen pieces.
Checkers [note 1] (American English), also known as draughts (/ d r ɑː f t s, d r æ f t s /; British English), is a group of strategy board games for two players which involve forward movements of uniform game pieces and mandatory captures by jumping over opponent pieces.
The gameboard is checkered and divided into 16×16 squares. Pieces may be small checkers or counters, or wooden or plastic cones or men resembling small chess pawns. [3] Piece colors are typically black and white for two-player games, and various colors or other distinction in games for four players.
English draughts (British English) or checkers (American English), also called straight checkers or simply draughts, [note 1] is a form of the strategy board game checkers (or draughts). It is played on an 8×8 checkerboard with 12 pieces per side. The pieces move and capture diagonally forward, until they reach the opposite end of the board ...
International draughts (also called international checkers or Polish draughts) is a strategy board game for two players, one of the variants of draughts.The gameboard comprises 10×10 squares in alternating dark and light colours, of which only the 50 dark squares are used.
Checkers: Casual Style. Checkers the fast way! Move where you want to, jump where you want to. You asked for it and Games.com listened! By Masque Publishing
The game is also known as nine-man morris, mill, mills, the mill game, merels, merrills, merelles, marelles, morelles, and ninepenny marl [2] in English. In North America, the game has also been called cowboy checkers , and its board is sometimes printed on the back of checkerboards .