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  2. Leslie Scott (game designer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Scott_(game_designer)

    Leslie Scott (born 18 December 1955) is a Tanzanian-born British board game designer, author, and businesswoman, best known as the inventor of the game Jenga. Despite initial challenges, Scott transformed a family wooden block game into the classic Jenga, achieving worldwide success after licensing to Hasbro in 1986. Recognized for her ...

  3. Dread (role-playing game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dread_(role-playing_game)

    Before play begins, the Jenga tower is set up. During play, when a character attempts to do a difficult task, the player is required to pull out a Jenga block. Doing so successfully means the character was successful. Failure usually indicates that the character dies, and the player is out of the game.

  4. Jenga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenga

    Jenga XXL starts at over 4 feet (1.2 m) high and can reach 8 feet (2.4 m) or higher in play. Rules are the same as in classic Jenga, except that players may use two hands to move the eighteen-inch-long blocks. [14] Jenga Pass Challenge includes a handheld platform that the game is played on. Players remove a block while holding the platform ...

  5. Jenga World Tour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenga_World_Tour

    Jenga World Tour is a 2007 video game based on the popular Jenga game that was developed by Atomic Planet Entertainment and published by Atari, and released for the Nintendo DS and the Wii. It uses the standard gameplay of Jenga, but gives it slight tweaks in order to create different scenarios.

  6. Uno Stacko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uno_Stacko

    Later versions also include purple Wild blocks, which serve the same purpose as the Wild and Wild Draw Four cards in the parent game. Unlike Jenga blocks however, they look like hollow girders, making the tower more unstable as the game progresses. The earlier versions of Uno Stacko include a die, called the Uno Cube, the faces of which bear ...

  7. Talk:Jenga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Jenga

    Ta-ka-radi is a game that was created in the 1970's by L.L. Bean with a similar premise as Jenga, having to remove blocks and place them on the top of a tower. Ta-ka-radi is slightly different than Jenga in that the tower is built with gaps between each block, unlike Jenga in which each block is touching.

  8. 56 Leonard Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/56_Leonard_Street

    56 Leonard Street (known colloquially as the Jenga Building [2] or Jenga Tower [3]) is an 821 ft-tall (250 m), 57-story [1] skyscraper on Leonard Street in the neighborhood of Tribeca in Manhattan, New York City.

  9. Jaega - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaega

    Approximate territory of the Jaega chiefdom in the late 17th Century. The Jaega (also Jega, Xega, Geiga) were Native Americans living in a chiefdom of the same name, which included the coastal parts of present-day Martin County and northern Palm Beach County, Florida at the time of initial European contact, and until the 18th century.