Portal:Games/Did you know
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Did you know 1
- ...that Tom Hanks was in a 1982 TV movie called Mazes and Monsters about a group of college students and their interest in the eponymous role-playing game?
- ...that the golden age of arcade video games began with the release of Space Invaders in 1978?
- ...that the most famous boardwalk in the United States is probably the one in Atlantic City, New Jersey, thanks to its association with the Monopoly board game?
- ...that Pepsi offered a Harrier fighter jet in their Pepsi Billion Dollar Sweepstakes game and the Pepsi Stuff game?
- ...that 1956 was the first time when a computer was able to play a chess-like game, Los Alamos chess (pictured)?
Did you know 2
- ...that Barbarossa is an award-winning German-style board game by Klaus Teuber from 1988 in which the players have to sculpt plasticine to earn points?
- ...that in the video game The Splatters (pictured) players detonate bombs by flinging anthropomorphized globs of goo at them?
- ...that Israeli chess Grandmaster Ronen Har-Zvi first met his wife playing online chess at the Internet Chess Club?
- ...that Skyfox was one of the first games to popularize the cockpit view for flight action games?
- ...that professional poker player Ilari Sahamies lost over US$3 million playing online poker while drunk, including more than $700,000 in a single day?
Did you know 3
- ...that the internet casino GoldenPalace.com won a bid to name a type of New World monkey: the GoldenPalace.com Monkey?
- ...that the F-Zero series of video games is renowned for its sheer visceral impression of speed?
- ...that Eduardo Iturrizaga became Venezuela's first and only chess grandmaster, at the age of 19?
- ...that the Pacific Pinball Museum (pictured) has 800 pinball machines in storage in a secret location?
- ...that in the computer game Crush, Crumble and Chomp! the player controls a disaster movie monster and destroys cities?
Did you know 4
- ...that the virtual economy of massively multiplayer online games sometimes attracts virtual crime, which is punishable by real laws in some countries?
- ...that since 1998 All Nippon Airways has operated Pokémon Jets (pictured)?
- ...that the World Chess Hall of Fame originally used cardboard plaques to honor past grandmasters, and was located in the basement of a New Windsor, New York, building?
- ...that the Japanese role-playing game Night Wizard! was adapted into an animated television series consisting of thirteen episodes?
- ...that a 2009 Pennsylvania court case ruled that poker is a game of skill, thus not subject to the state laws related to gambling?
Did you know 5
- ...that the 2005 World Series of Poker Ladies Champion (pictured) had been nominated for an Academy Award in 1994?
- ...that Bruce Webster was so burned out from writing the computer game SunDog: Frozen Legacy for the Apple II, that he gave up programming for four years?
- ...that the chess Grandmaster Wolfgang Uhlmann is one of the world's leading experts on the French Defence?
- ...that Dungeons & Dragons, an album by Midnight Syndicate, is the only official soundtrack to the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game?
- ...that the video game Scarygirl puts players in control of a young girl with an eye patch, a sewn-shut mouth, and a hook-capped tentacle for one arm?
Did you know 6
- ...that in 1967, Mac Hack became the first computer chess program to defeat a person in tournament play?
- ...that a reviewer called the narrator in the game Defenders of Ardania (pictured) "booze-obsessed", with a voice that sounds like "a Dalek doing an impression of Sean Connery"?
- ...that snooker player Stephen Maguire won his first ranking tournament at the 2004 European Open in Malta?
- ...that the Crawford-Gilpin House is alleged to have once changed owners due to being lost as a wager in a poker game?
- ...that The Big Bang Theory episode "The Santa Simulation" features a Christmas-themed Dungeons & Dragons game?