enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Computer Othello - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_othello

    Computer Othello programs search for any possible legal moves using a game tree. In theory, they examine all positions / nodes, where each move by one player is called a "ply". This search continues until a certain maximum search depth or the program determines that a final "leaf" position has been reached.

  3. Reversi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reversi

    A player may choose to not play both pieces on the same diagonal, different from the standard Othello opening. It is also possible to play variants of Reversi and Othello where the second player's second move may or must flip one of the opposite-colored disks (as variants closest to the normal games).

  4. Abalone (board game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abalone_(board_game)

    Strategy, tactics Abalone is a two-player abstract strategy board game designed by Michel Lalet and Laurent Lévi in 1987. Players are represented by opposing black and white marbles [ 1 ] on a hexagonal board with the objective of pushing six of the opponent's marbles off the edge of the board.

  5. List of abstract strategy games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_abstract_strategy...

    An abstract strategy game is a board, card or other game where game play does not simulate a real world theme, and a player's decisions affect the outcome.Many abstract strategy games are also combinatorial, i.e. they provide perfect information, and rely on neither physical dexterity nor random elements such as rolling dice or drawing cards or tiles.

  6. Chinese checkers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_checkers

    Chinese checkers (US) or Chinese chequers (UK), [1] known as Sternhalma in German, is a strategy board game of German origin that can be played by two, three, four, or six people, playing individually or with partners. [2]

  7. Abstract strategy game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_strategy_game

    [1] [2] For example, Go is a pure abstract strategy game since it fulfills all three criteria; chess and related games are nearly so but feature a recognizable theme of ancient warfare; and Stratego is borderline since it is deterministic, loosely based on 19th-century Napoleonic warfare, and features concealed information.

  8. Tactics (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tactics_(game)

    Tactics is a board wargame published in 1954 by Avalon Hill as the company's first product. [2] Although primitive by modern standards, it and its sequel, Tactics II, signalled the birth of modern board wargaming for the commercial market. Tactics is generally credited as being the first commercially successful board wargame.

  9. Auto battler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto_battler

    An auto battler, also known as auto chess, is a subgenre of strategy video games that typically feature chess-like elements where players place characters on a grid-shaped battlefield during a preparation phase, who then fight the opposing team's characters without any further direct input from the player.