Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abstract strategy games.
An abstract strategy game is a board game with perfect information, no chance, and (usually) two players. Many of the world's classic board games, including chess, go, and mancala, fit into this category. Play is sometimes said to resemble a series of puzzles the players pose to each other. A purist's definition of an abstract strategy game requires that it cannot have random elements or hidden information. In practice, however, many games are commonly classed as abstract strategy games which do not strictly meet these criteria.
Subcategories
This category has the following 15 subcategories, out of 15 total.
B
C
D
G
I
- Indian war games (6 P)
J
- Janggi (6 P)
M
- Morris games (4 P)
P
- Partially solved games (5 P)
S
- Solved games (30 P)
X
Pages in category "Abstract strategy games"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 305 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
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A
B
- Bagh bandi
- Bagh-chal
- Battle Sheep
- Battleship (game)
- Bear games
- Bizingo
- Black Box (game)
- Black Path Game
- Blockade (board game)
- Blockbusting (game)
- Blokus
- Blokus Duo
- Blokus Trigon
- Blue and Gray (board game)
- Bōku
- Brax (game)
- Breakthrough (board game)
- Breakthru (board game)
- Buga-shadara
- Bul (game)
- Butterfly (game)
C
- Camelot (board game)
- Canadian checkers
- Capture go
- Carat (board game)
- Catch the hare
- Cathedral (board game)
- Chaturanga
- Checkers
- Chess
- Chessplus
- Chinese checkers
- Choko (game)
- Chomp
- Chopsticks (hand game)
- Cinc camins
- Circular chess
- CirKis
- Clans (board game)
- Clobber
- Computer Olympiad
- Computer Othello
- Connect 4x4
- Connect Four
- Connect6
- Connection game
- Conquest (board game)
- Conspirateurs
- Contigo (board game)
- Continuo (game)
- Courier chess
- Cram (game)
- Crossings (game)
- Crosstrack