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Participating in Two Player Board Games
Participating in Two Player Board Games

Some board games are designed entirely for only two players to enjoy and can never be played by more than two people. These board games are suitably created for playing together with your wife, friend, or companion. One of these games is the Abalone, which is a strategy game played using fourteen marbles for each player and set in a hexagonal board with 61 spaces. The games objective is to shove the opponents marbles out of the board. The Chinese Checkers, played on a star shaped game board, has an objective of moving ones pieces across the opposite side of the game board. The Othello is a game played on an 8 row and 8 column board also with two sets of pieces and its goal of retaining the most number of pieces at the end of the game. Alternatives of games that can be played by two players are Suguroku, Stratego, Kamisado, Obsession, Backgammon, Plateau, Cross and Circle, Downfall, and Checkers.

Smart Deduction Board Games

Deductive board games involve logical thinking and intelligence in making judgments from a premise or set of premises. To win the game, the main mechanic is using deductive reasoning. Two broad categories which fall under deductive board games include abstract deductive games which are non-themed and investigation deductive games where players portray characters. The mastermind, an abstract deductive game, is played by two which one makes the code while the other breaks it. The code maker pins up pegs on the game board in a specific pattern and the objective of the game is for the code breaker to guess the pattern of the colored pegs. The Cluedo is a definite example of an investigation deductive game with a murder scene setting where players get the role of a certain character and use logical reasoning to identify the person responsible for the crime. Other games that have the same genre include Black Box, Codam and Mystery Mansion.

Proficiently Playing in Trivia Board Games

A person who loves to read books would find it interesting and amusing to play trivia board games. It is all based upon the questions posed and follows no particular order. It is often a collection of knowledge from different genres and subjects. The Trivial Pursuit is the first trivial board game which was started on 1979 and released on 1981 by inventors Chris Haney and Scott Abbot. The game, designed for 2 to 24 players, comprises of question cards. Box, board, and playing pieces with wedges made of plastic that fits the board. Subjects used in the trivia have equivalent colors such as green for Science and Nature, blue for Geography, orange for Sports, yellow for History, brown for Art and Literature, and pink for Entertainment. The goal of the game is to move along the circular path, gain the colored wedges for correct answers and be the first to return to the hexagonal hub. Other versions of the primary Trivial Pursuit Genus I are Pursuit Genus IV, V, and VI, Trivial Pursuit Junior, and Warner Brothers Edition.

Helping out in Cooperative Board Games

Games that encourage players to go for certain objectives such as to go against some players or against the game itself are classified as cooperative board games. These games emphasizes on team cooperation, which means winning or losing as a team, rather than individual competition. To make it more challenging, events in the game do not come in succession but at random as the game goes on. The Arkham The Scotland Yard, released in the 1980s, is a good example of these games. This game where players are portrayed as detectives, cooperate to track down another player depicting as a criminal in the streets of London. Arkham Horror, another game in the 1980s is about players who act as investigators who works together to protect H. P. Lovecraft's Massachusetts town of Arkham against aliens and monsters to enter through the gates and eventually close these portals. In 2000 other cooperative board games have been published like The Lord of the Rings, Shadows over Camelot, and Pandemic.

by: Jesse Temes




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