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Topic: Games played


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In the News (Fri 13 Nov 09)

  
  Games played - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Games played (denoted by G or GP) is a sports statistical category that indicates the total number of games in which a player has participated (in any capacity).
Using baseball as an example: if player A plays the whole game until there are two out in the bottom of the ninth inning, and then is replaced by player B as a pinch-runner for the final third of an inning, then A and B are each credited with one game played.
Players are credited with a game played if they are listed on the lineup card or if they are announced as a substitute, even if they are subsequently replaced before taking part in the game.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Games_played   (202 words)

  
 Game - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Games are played primarily for entertainment or enjoyment, but may also serve as exercise or in an educational, simulational or psychological role.
Games were important to Wittgenstein's later thought; he held that language was itself a game, consisting of tokens governed by rough-and-ready rules that arise by convention and are not strict.
Games of pure skill are likely the oldest sort of game, and are found in all cultures, regardless of their level of material culture.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Games   (1751 words)

  
 Games
Game rules changed from tribe to tribe and the materials that the games were made of varied from region to region, reflecting the differences in available resources.
Games of dexterity usually involved some type of physical skill while games of chance sometimes included "dice-like" objects or are games with a component centered around guessing.
Games of chance use dice displaying a variety of decorations and made from materials such as bone, walnut shells, peach and plum stones, grains of corn, shell, and pottery disks.
www.uwlax.edu /mvac/Knowledge/NAGames.htm   (1736 words)

  
 Recreation and Games - Indian Country Wisconsin   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Games were played by men, by women, and by the children, but only rarely did the two sexes, as adults, play together.
The game was sponsored by a woman to honor her guardian spirit, and the ceremonial preliminaries were similar to those of double ball and lacrosse.
They played a game similar to cup and pin which required less dexterity, using a pointed stick and a bunch of grass tied to an end of a short string or cord.
www.mpm.edu /wirp/ICW-49.html   (1591 words)

  
 Card Games: Classification   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
These abstract classifications are useful in understanding the evolution of card games and the relationships between them, but in a practical situation of deciding what card game to play, other types of classification might be more useful, and will be progressively added to this page in future.
There are Plain Trick Games in which only the tricks themselves are important, and Point Trick Games in which the value of tricks is affected by which cards they contain.
These are games in which the object is typically sort the pack of cards into order, by moving cards on a layout according to specific rules.
www.pagat.com /class   (2283 words)

  
 Regia Anglorum - Games of the Viking and Anglo-Saxon Age
The nature of the games played with dice are unknown, but simple games such as 'who can get the highest (or lowest) number were probably common (and are suggested by some of the sagas), as were games similar to 'liar dice' or 'yahtzee'.
This game is a development of the popular Roman game of duodecim scripta, also known as tabula or alea, which was also played in Germany and Scandinavia in the Roman Iron Age, where it appears to have been known as katrutafl.
It is played in the same way as nine mens morris, except the board is made up of three lines of three positions (or on the intersections of a 2x2 section of a larger squared board).
www.regia.org /games.htm   (3312 words)

  
 Traditional Children's Games Played Around the World: Paper Dolls, Paper and Card Games - TOPICS Online Magazine
It was fun to play this game, and at the same time we developed hand-eye coordination when we played it.
At the end of the sheet, the game ended and the winner was the one with the highest score.
This game was really fun for us, and we loved to play it often, so I hope you enjoy it the way I did.
www.topics-mag.com /edition11/games-paper-cards.htm   (820 words)

  
 Games   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Many of the fitness type games depicted in paintings are of common games such as hockey, which used long palm tree branches for sticks and a puck made from stuffed papyrus in between two pieces of leather.
During the New Kingdom, the game of Senet had acquired a religious and magical meaning which symbolized the passage of the deceased through the netherworld with his resurrection dependant upon his/her ability to win the game.
Since boards games of all quality have been discovered it is needless to say that the games were played by all classes of people in Ancient Egypt.
www.mnsu.edu /emuseum/prehistory/egypt/dailylife/games.html   (409 words)

  
 Roman Ball Games   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
This game was also played by girls and C. Robert said, in 1879, that this game was still being played in parts of Northern Greece.
The same game was played in Egypt in 2500 BCE as evidenced by the image at left from the tomb of Beni-Hasan.
The ancient Egyptians actually played a game in which a ball was struck with a bat and two players would attempt to catch it, but this game either faded or became the cricket-like game of the Romans.
www.personal.psu.edu /users/w/x/wxk116/romeball.html   (1325 words)

  
 Open Directory - Games:Video Games:Sports   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
A simulated video game that is played with a bat and ball between two teams of nine players each, on a large field which has four bases which a player must touch in order to make a run
Skateboarding (and Games about it) are defined by the ODP as related to (instead of being a style of) Skating and sites about it should be submitted to the Skateboarding category.
A simulated video game that depicts a sport that's played in snow using skis with the objective to stay on the skis as long as possible when going through an obstacle or run.
dmoz.org /Games/Video_Games/Sports/desc.html   (658 words)

  
 DeepFUN | The Well-Played Game
His notion of a game Well-Played is clever and sensible, and the drills, principles, exercises and varied applications of this concept may help a lot of folks in long-term effective self-management.
Throughout human history, playing all manner of games has been and continues to be one of the human race's defining characteristics.
The well-played game is a celebration of their potential fulfilled...whatever the final "score" may prove to be.
www.deepfun.com /WPG.htm   (1227 words)

  
 Open Directory - Games:Online:Roleplaying   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Online roleplaying games are games played via message board, email, or other electronic medium that do not emulate an actual world within the computer (See Games: Video Games: Roleplaying for these types of games).
Games which are played through message boards and sites containing only character information or fiction of a game will not be accepted.
Roleplaying games are those in which players invent characters and describe their actions in a fictional setting under the guidance of a gamemaster who directs the plot.
dmoz.org /Games/Online/Roleplaying/desc.html   (501 words)

  
 Rules to Period Games   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
There are many period games for which we have rules, or at least are capable of guessing at the rules.
Five-card Cribbage at the Card Games Homepage; this is the modern five-card game, which is essentially the same as the early version.
A detailed reconstruction of my personal favorite variation of the game (a 16th century variant), which is less common, but IMO more consistent and easier to learn and play than most versions.
jducoeur.org /game-hist/game-rules.html   (3940 words)

  
 Indonesian Children's Traditional Games   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
In this age of electronic games and hi tech toys, we often forget that it is often the simplest of inventions that can entertain a child for a long period of time.
The game is played with 98 small markers such as shells or beads, which are divided evenly between all the indentations.
Songs are played with one person standing up behind a group of hanging angklung or by a group of people holding one angklung and playing their chord at the appropriate time within the song - much like a group of people would play bells in the west.
www.expat.or.id /info/games.html   (2526 words)

  
 Games   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The game was played on a board of 30 squares; the object being to get one's pieces on the board, then around the board in an S-shaped pattern, and finally off again at the far end.
Senet is a two player game but during the New Kingdom period a game in progress would often appear painted on tomb walls as a 'one' player game, the opponent being a spirit from the afterlife.
The game is a race game between a team of five Jackals and a team of five Hounds around a palm tree or oasis and along a peculiar shaped 'Track' (originally a series of peg holes in a playing board).
www.eyelid.co.uk /games.htm   (1999 words)

  
 Games
Then he suggests "simplifying" the game having a single board with pieces whose position determine the rules with which these pieces are allowed to move.
Hofstadter uses this game to illustrate what happens when a complex system makes statements about itself, an idea that is one of the red threads of his book.
This game was designed by a group of people I played games with in Stony Brook.
www.people.umass.edu /ktheis/.karsten/games.html   (1194 words)

  
 Medieval & Renaissance Games   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The Playing Cards Home Page, including rules to a variety of games, a very useful FAQ on playing cards, and other stuff on the topic (some of it period-related).
A very large collection of DOS Shareware games can be found at Tommy's Toys, with several period games scattered throughout (including the only computer versions of Piquet, Gleek and Primero I am aware of, and a brand-new implementation of Rythmomachy).
A variety of period games, mostly with Celtic-inspired artwork, are available from Rose and Pentagram Design, including inexpensive period-style cards and several printed-fabric board games.
jducoeur.org /game-hist   (1991 words)

  
 Historic Moments: Ten of the Best Games Played by Black Masters   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
At the time, this game caused quite a buzz in chess circles and gave testament to Tate's incredible attacking skill which was already widely-known.
In this exciting game (during the 1952 Cuban Championship), Ortega employs the Dutch Defense and the battle switched sides of the board throughout.
This game was played between two gladiators and demonstrated the ebb and flows of chess battles.
www.thechessdrum.net /historicmoments/HM_TenBest   (1233 words)

  
 Hawaiian Recreation - Games People Played   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Some games were played for pure amusement, others made opponents match wits and helped develop strategic thinking skills.
Courses for 'ulumaika, played with circular stone disks that are pitched through two stakes spaced about six inches apart, are at Waimea Falls Park on O'ahu, and at Pu'uhonua O Honuaunau on the Big Island.
In today's world, the games are played not only to develop skills and quick thinking, they are played to instill pride in the Hawaiian culture and to keep that culture alive for generations to come.
www.coffeetimes.com /games.htm   (846 words)

  
 4Games:   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Play your way through a selection of adventure games, with a romantic twist.
Plus, feel the cyber lurve with a pick of games that are bound to get you in the Valentine's spirit.
We interview Jakub, the genius author of one of the top rated games in the chart: the out of this world adventures of Samorost.
www.channel4.com /games   (212 words)

  
 Streetplay.com: The Games
A man calls his shot playing stoopball at the 2001 Smithsonian Folklife Festival.
Using whatever is at hand--bottlecaps, a stick, or the ubiquitous spaldeen--city kids though the ages create games that are the envy of any sportsman or marketeer.
If we've missed your favorite game, or your memory of any game is particularly vivid--or differs from ours--please let us know and we just might add your story to the collective streetgame consciousness!
streetplay.com /thegames   (128 words)

  
 Games played with Flower Cards
At the start of the game, some cards are face up on the table, half of the remaining cards are dealt out to the players and the rest are in a face down stock.
If either the card you play or the card you turn up from the stock does not match anything, it is left face up on the table to be captured in future.
In Kabu games the months January to October take on the values 1 to 9, and the November and December cards are not used.
www.pagat.com /class/flower.html   (594 words)

  
 Games Played - Idle Forums
Planescape was amazing, but I can't help from feeling sad while playing it because of all of the missed cinematic opportunities.
Which is why am I really looking forward to that restoration project which will make the game a whole lot more coherent and a whole lot more awesome.
Though I haven't played any DS games in like three weeks and even then MK DS was pretty much the only DS game I did play.
forums.idlethumbs.net /showthread.php?t=3824   (1779 words)

  
 Carcassonne
However, farmers are not returned and will score points at the game end (there are several rules variations for the farmer scoring).
Therefore, it's possible to have all of your control markers locked on the board on incomplete objects, and not be able to convert them into farmers later in the game.
The goal is to have the most points at the end, which can be tricky to control considering your choice for each turn isn't the tile itself, but rather the placement of the tile that you drew.
www.boardgamegeek.com /game/822   (573 words)

  
 Kids Games</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> However, most have been <b>played</b> by children for many years, and in my opinion, minor injuries are part of growing up. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Keeping in mind one of the purposes of the site is to be a historical record, I will keep them on the site, but will be going through the list and adding a notation that the words used are no longer appropriate. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Please keep in mind that originally in these <b>games</b> no harm was intended to any group, but our awareness level has improved significantly in recent years.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.gameskidsplay.net</font>   (525 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://world.std.com/~pgw/Deadball/games.by.position.html">Deadball - Games Played by Position</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> See also the Deadball Era leaders in All <b>Games</b> <b>Played</b>, in Outfield <b>Games</b>, and in Total Baseball Ratings by Position. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> For example, the first three pitchers by 1901-19 <b>games</b> are Christy Mathewson, Eddie Plank, and Walter Johnson, who rank 23d, 27th, and 10th in <b>games</b> started, all time; 4th, 5th, and 2d in <b>games</b> started, among pitchers commonly associated with the Deadball Era. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Cy Young is 1st in <b>games</b> started, all time, but he ranks only 13th here because he pitched half-time in the 1890s.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>world.std.com /~pgw/Deadball/games.by.position.html</font>   (415 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Traditional Games</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Hnefatafl: The Viking <b>Game</b> - a history and explanation of the <b>game</b> with variants </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> <b>Games</b> of the Vikings and Anglo Saxons - board, dice, word, and agility <b>games</b> </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This series of articles by Catherine Soubeyrand describes some of the earliest board <b>games</b> ever <b>played</b>.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.gamecabinet.com /deeperDrawers/Traditional.html</font>   (435 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>A History of Games Played with the Tarot Pack</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This two-volume book gives as comprehensive a history as can be achieved at the present time of a family of card <b>games</b> that originated in the first quarter of the XV century, and is therefore one of the very oldest still practiced. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> It is the family of <b>games</b> <b>played</b> with the Tarot pack. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> It was invented to <b>play</b> a new kind of card <b>game</b>: its great contribution was to introduce the idea of trumps into card <b>play</b>.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.mellenpress.com /mellenpress.cfm?bookid=5804&pc=9</font>   (541 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Robert Abbott’s Games</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Ludoteka.com now includes my <b>game</b> Epaminondas as one of their <b>games</b> you can <b>play</b> on-line with other humans. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> I myself have never <b>played</b> <b>games</b> on-line with other people, and I’m still trying to figure out how the whole thing works. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> I have a <b>game</b> booklet and a maze book you can order from me. See my mail-order page.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.logicmazes.com /games</font>   (500 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Bungie.net : Top Story</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> But a <b>game</b> can (and usually does) include more than one player, and you could absolutely argue that each player has a different experience. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Personally speaking though, this is the most horrifying statistic: The Halo player who has <b>played</b> the most <b>games</b> to date (his identity will remain secret in order to protect his job) has <b>played</b> a staggering, mind-boggling 14,919 <b>games</b>, spending an average of six hours per day, and <b>playing</b> around 71 <b>games</b>. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> There are some oddities in the type of custom <b>games</b> folks pick, but it's less strange, and more predictable than other aspects of the <b>game</b>.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>bungie.net /News/TopStory.aspx?story=halo2numbers&p=5077337</font>   (1207 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.coolhunting.com/archives/2006/02/games_for_women.php">Cool Hunting: Games for Women, Games by Women</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The Women in <b>Games</b> International held a half day event this past Saturday entitled <b>Games</b> for Women, <b>Games</b> by Women at the Fort Mason Convention Center. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The event was composed primarily of panelist discussions about the types of <b>games</b> currently <b>played</b> by women and the types of <b>games</b> that appeal to women. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> As an example, there was mention of the significant number of female players in the virtual worlds World of Warcraft as well as Second Life.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.coolhunting.com /archives/2006/02/games_for_women.php</font>   (243 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><script language="JavaScript"> <!-- // This function displays the ad results. // It must be defined above the script that calls show_ads.js // to guarantee that it is defined when show_ads.js makes the call-back. function google_ad_request_done(google_ads) { // Proceed only if we have ads to display! if (google_ads.length < 1 ) return; var s = ''; // For text ads, display each ad in turn. // In this example, each ad goes in a new row in the table. if (google_ads[0].type == 'text') { for(i = 0; i < 1; ++i) { s = '<body face="Arial"><br><table cellpadding=0><tr><td>  </td><td><table ><tr><td> </td><td colspan=2>' + '<a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '">' + google_ads[i].line1 + '</a>  <span style="font-size:10pt">'; if (google_info.feedback_url) { s += '<a href="' + google_info.feedback_url + '" style="color:#7070F0;text-decoration:none">(Ads by Google)</a>'; } else { s += '(Ads by Google)'; } s += '</span></td></tr>' + '<tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td>' + '<a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '" style="text-decoration:none;">' + google_ads[i].line2 + ' ' + google_ads[i].line3 + '</a></td></tr>' + '<tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>' + '<a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '" style="text-decoration:none; color:gray;">' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '</a></font></td></tr></table></td></tr></table>'; d = document.getElementById('ad' + (i + 1)); d.innerHTML = s; d.style.display = 'block'; } s = ''; for(i = 1; i < google_ads.length; i++) { s += '<div class="r" style="margin-left: 14px"><table cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0><tr>' + // '<td valign=top><img src="/images/a.gif"/ style="padding-top: 3px; padding-right: 3px"></td>' + '<td ><a href="' + google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '">' + google_ads[i].line1 + '<div style="text-decoration: none; ">' + google_ads[i].line2 + ' ' + google_ads[i].line3 + '</div></a>' + '<font color="gray"><a href="'+ google_ads[i].url + '" title="' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '" style="text-decoration:none; color:gray;">' + google_ads[i].visible_url + '</a></font>' + '</td></tr></table></div>' } d = document.getElementById('sky1'); d.innerHTML = s; if(s.length > 0) { document.getElementById('sky').style.display = 'block'; } } /* <body face="Arial"><br><table cellpadding=0><tr><td>  </td><td><table ><tr><td> </td><td colspan=2> <a href=" ### GOOGLE ADS[i] URL ### "> ### GOOGLE ADS[i] VISIBLE URL ### </a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> ### LINE 2 ###   ### LINE 3 ###</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray> ### link ### </font>  (sponsored link)</td></tr> </table></td></tr></table> */ /* // For an image ad, display the image; 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