Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Derek Carver came up with the idea for Blood Royale as being built around a scenario with the potential to be the subject of a good game. [2]However the game was published near the end of the time when Games Workshop was interested in publishing board games outside what would become its core milieu of Warhammer and Warhammer 40,000, and it was quickly withdrawn.
These are board wargames set in the Middle Ages or medieval period, which in the history of Europe lasted approximately from the 5th to the late 15th centuries. Pages in category "Board wargames set in the Middle Ages"
Warheads: Medieval Tales: Urban Mammoth: A comically based tabletop roleplaying war game WARS Roleplaying Game: Mongoose Publishing: Waste World: Roleplaying in a Savage Future: Manticore 1997 Wayfarers: Ye Olde Gaming Companye: Weapons of the Gods: Eos Press: 2005 A wuxia-style game based on the manhua comic of the same name Weird Wars ...
Belegarth Medieval Combat Society is a sport where participants fight with foam padded safety equipment made to reflect medieval weaponry. The sport's combat is hard hitting and fast-paced, governed by a set of easy-to-learn rules Archived 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine, and requires a level of skill and aggression that challenges its participants to be physically fit.
Cathedral, also known as Cathedral: The Game of the Mediaeval City, is a two-player abstract strategy game designed by Robert Moore and first published in 1979, in which dark and light factions vie for territorial supremacy within the bounds of a medieval city. Players play pieces to capture territory on a game board, attempting to place all or ...
The Sword and the Stars is a board game for 1–5 players, each of whom controls an empire of star systems in the far future. [1] The rules system is largely taken from SPI's previous published medieval wargame Empires of the Middle Ages, with the setting changed from the Middle Ages to a science fiction milieu.
Chainmail is a medieval miniature wargame created by Gary Gygax and Jeff Perren.Gygax developed the core medieval system of the game by expanding on rules authored by his fellow Lake Geneva Tactical Studies Association (LGTSA) member Jeff Perren, a hobby-shop owner with whom he had become friendly.
Medieval illustration of tabula players from the 13th century Carmina Burana.. Tabula (Byzantine Greek: τάβλι), meaning a plank or board, [1] was a Greco-Roman board game for two players that has given its name to the tables family of games of which backgammon is a member.