Parker Brothers: Card Games is a collection of card games licensed by Parker Brothers. The player can create a profile and go head-to-head with animated computer-controlled characters in one of nine classic card games:
- Free Parking
- Millie Bornes
- Cribbage
- Gin Rummy
- Hearts
- Racko
- Rook
- Solitaire
- Spades
Although the servers have long since been shut down, it was also possible to play a game online on Microsoft's Zone.com online gaming service (now MSN Games).
Master of Syougi Color is a Japanese style chess game. In single player mode the player must compete against computerized opponents (represented by a digitized photograph) to win the tournament. In two player mode, each player competes against each another.
The Candy Land computer game is a version of the classic board game brought to life and enhanced.
One player can play against a computer opponent, or up to 4 people can take turns. To advance, a player clicks on a machine which produces a piece of colored candy. The player is allowed to move to the next space that shares the same color as the candy which was just drawn. Some spaces are sticky and if a player lands on one, they will lose one or more turns. Some pieces contain special candies which will cause a player to warp to different areas on the board, which may be either ahead or behind of the player's current space.
In addition to playing the classic board game, this game offers the player side trips to explore 8 different areas, each with fun activities:
Gingerbread Plum Trees: Help Plumpy (the last of the Plumpa trolls) collect plums for pies. Do this by clicking on him to tickle him so he'll surrender a plum.
Licorice Castle: Lord Licorice has a telescope mounted atop his castle through which y
Tower Dream 2 is the sequel to the SNES game that features 13 different selectable characters and 13 different boards to play, and up to 4 human players can play at the same time using the multitap function.
Yoshimoto Mahjong Club is a comedy-themed mahjong game featuring 26 real-life comedians from talent agency Yoshimoto Kogyo, based on a TV show that ran on SUN-TV between 1997 and 1999. The featured stars are all represented both in live-action video clips and fully-3D in-game models, including voice clips of their signature quips. There is a standard free battle mode, as well as a tournament mode with 16 different titles to win. Winning tournaments will earn money, which is needed to enter and participate in the more advanced tournaments. The PlayStation Deluxe version adds a video gallery mode but is otherwise the same game.
Full-scale Go games popularity of female professional go player, Yukari Umezawa was supervised. Introduction that explains the basics of the game of go, medium further level tactics strategy ed for up from senior, PvP and free to enjoy-to-CPU game you set the Kiryoku combat opposite station, eds., Was recorded a selection of classic name stations game record file equipped with a 4 mode of name stations appreciation ed, you can enjoy a wide range from beginner to advanced.
Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters is the second Yu-Gi-Oh! video game, following Yu-Gi-Oh! Monster Capsule: Breed and Battle. It is the first game in the Duel Monsters series and the only game released for the Game Boy. It was published in Japan by Konami on December 16, 1998.
Reversi (also marketed by Pressman under the trade name Othello) is a board game involving abstract strategy and played by two players on a board with 8 rows and 8 columns and a set of distinct pieces for each side. Pieces typically are disks with a light and a dark face, each side belonging to one player. The player's goal is to have a majority of their colored pieces showing at the end of the game, turning over as many of their opponent's pieces as possible.