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The Battle for Wesnoth, a hex grid based computer game. A hex map, hex board, or hex grid is a game board design commonly used in simulation games of all scales, including wargames, role-playing games, and strategy games in both board games and video games. A hex map is subdivided into a hexagonal tiling, small regular hexagons of identical size.
Hex (also called Nash) is a two player abstract strategy board game in which players attempt to connect opposite sides of a rhombus-shaped board made of hexagonal cells.Hex was invented by mathematician and poet Piet Hein in 1942 and later rediscovered and popularized by John Nash.
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Hex game may refer to: Hex, a strategy board game played on a hexagonal grid; Hex, a turn-based strategy game for Atari ST and Amiga; Hex: Shards of Fate, a massively multiplayer online trading card game; Hex-based game or hex map, a game board design commonly used in wargames
A commercially-sold Y board, featuring three pentagonal points within the hex grid, representing half of a geodesic sphere. Y is an abstract strategy board game, first described by John Milnor in the early 1950s. [1] [2] [3] The game was independently invented in 1953 by Craige Schensted and Charles Titus.
Hex, a hexagonal tile of a hex map, used in war and strategy board games; Hex (board game), a mathematical strategy game played on a hexagonal grid or rhombus; Hex (climbing), an item of rock climbing equipment used to arrest a fall; Hex, a 1985 computer game for the Amiga and Atari ST
Lewis Pulsipher reviewed Hexagonal and Grid Mapping System in The Space Gamer No. 50. [1] Pulsipher commented that "This is an impressive product. If you want to hex-map large areas of a role-playing world, I know of no better aid."
The Indonesian Wikipedia (Indonesian: Wikipedia bahasa Indonesia, WBI for short) is the Indonesian language edition of Wikipedia. It is the fifth-fastest-growing Asian-language Wikipedia after the Japanese, Chinese, Korean, and Turkish language Wikipedias. It ranks 25th in terms of depth among Wikipedias.