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Lose Your Marbles (1997), a PC puzzle game where players line up marbles of the same color to add marbles to the other player's board and eventually block their board Marble Blast Gold (2003), a "get to the finish" first person game for the PC and Xbox ; a sequel, Marble Blast Ultra (2006), was released later for the Xbox 360
B-Daman (ビーダマン, Bīdaman) is a marble shooting toy franchise produced in Japan by Takara.It was originally based on the Bomberman series, but later expanded into other franchises and its own original designs.
The Marble Game Getter is a light, double-barrel (over-under), combination gun manufactured by the Marble's Arms & Manufacturing Company in Gladstone, Michigan. [3] The firearm features a skeleton folding stock and a rifled barrel over a smooth-bore shotgun barrel. A manually pivoted hammer striker is used to select the upper or lower barrel.
The player who gets rid of all of their marbles first is the winner. [1] In Expert Game II, the players start with three marbles of each color (nine marbles). On their turn, each player collects the marbles that drop to the bottom of the board. The player who is holding only five marbles of one color at the end of their turn is the winner. [1]
A marble gun is a type of an improvised caseless firearm that shoots marbles, through gas pressure from the ignition of denatured alcohol. They are mainly used to shoot birds or for home defense use. They are mainly used to shoot birds or for home defense use.
This category is for video games whose gameplay focuses on controlling the motion of a marble or ball, which is affected by physics, through a game level, often navigating a maze and/or avoiding hazards.
The game features a lower ring with marbles and an upper ring, where a tissue is placed to emulate thin ice. Marbles sit below in a pool of water. Marbles sit below in a pool of water. A large plastic tweezers are included to handle the marbles; the arms were covered by a sticker showing a happy Eskimo reaching out to "grab" the marbles.
The name Aggravation was trademarked by BERL Industries, which filed its application on April 10, 1959. [1] A contemporary patent filed by Howard P. Wilde, Sr. two months earlier, in February 1959, describes a game board "which may be played, with high interest, vexation and aggravation by two, three or four persons" but does not provide specific gameplay instructions for the cross-shaped ...