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  2. Cole Wehrle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cole_Wehrle

    Website. wehrlegig.com. Cole Wehrle is an American board game designer and academic. He has designed the board games Root, Oath: Chronicles of Empire and Exile, and the upcoming Arcs at Leder Games, and he co-owns Wehrlegig Games with his brother, designing the historical games Pax Pamir, John Company and co-designing Molly House.

  3. List of Game of the Year awards (board games) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Game_of_the_Year...

    Game of the Year (abbreviated GotY) is a title awarded annually by various magazines, websites, and game critics to deserving tabletop games, including board games and card games. Many publications award a single "Game of the Year" award to a single title published in the previous year that they feel represents the pinnacle of gaming ...

  4. Langton's ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Langton's_ant

    A red pixel shows the ant's location. Langton's ant is a two-dimensional Turing machine with a very simple set of rules but complex emergent behavior. It was invented by Chris Langton in 1986 and runs on a square lattice of black and white cells. [1] The idea has been generalized in several different ways, such as turmites which add more colors ...

  5. Demis Hassabis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demis_Hassabis

    The final game was reduced from its original vision and greeted with lukewarm reviews, receiving a Metacritic score of 62/100. [38] Evil Genius, a tongue-in-cheek Bond villain simulator, fared much better with a score of 75/100. [39] In April 2005 the intellectual property and technology rights were sold to various publishers and the studio was ...

  6. Turing machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_machine

    An oracle machine or o-machine is a Turing a-machine that pauses its computation at state "o" while, to complete its calculation, it "awaits the decision" of "the oracle"—an entity unspecified by Turing "apart from saying that it cannot be a machine" (Turing (1939), The Undecidable, p. 166–168).

  7. BoardGameGeek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BoardGameGeek

    BoardGameGeek (BGG) is an online forum for board gaming hobbyists and a game database that holds reviews, images and videos for over 125,600 different tabletop games, including European-style board games, wargames, and card games. [1][2] In addition to the game database, the site allows users to rate games on a 1–10 scale and publishes a ...

  8. The Imitation Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Imitation_Game

    The naming of the Enigma-breaking machine "Christopher" after Turing's childhood friend, with Turing the only cryptographer working on it while others either did not help or outright opposed it. In reality, this electromechanical machine was named "Victory" and it was a collaborative, not individual, effort.

  9. Board game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Board_game

    Board games are tabletop games that typically use pieces. These pieces are moved or placed on a pre-marked game board (playing surface) and often include elements of table, card, role-playing, and miniatures games as well. Many board games feature a competition between two or more players.