Games Released or Invented in 2000
- 1898: The Spanish American War
- Aladdin's Dragons
- Apples to Apples Expansion Set #2
- Battle Cry
- Battleline
- Bible Tribond
- Blokus
- Blue Planet 2nd Edition (role-playing game)
- Carcassonne
- Cartagena
- Castle
- Chez Geek 2: Slack Attack
- Chrononauts
- Citadels
- Confrontation
- Cranium Booster Box 2
- Deadwood: Another Day, Another Dollar: Horror
- Deadwood: Another Day, Another Dollar: Kung Fu
- Deadwood: Another Day, Another Dollar: Musicals
- Deadwood: Another Day, Another Dollar: Space
- Diomin (role-playing game)
- Dragonball Z Collectible Card Game
- The El Grande Expansions
- Fairy Meat
- Full Thrust Fleet Book: Volume 2 (The Xeno Files)
- Gother Than Thou
- The Great Brain Robbery
- High Bohn
- Java
- Jenga Truth or Dare
- Lord of the Rings (board game)
- Magi-Nation Duel
- MLB Showdown
- Myths and Legends
- Pantheon (role-playing game)
- Pez Card Game
- The Pokéthulhu Adventure Game (1st edition)
- The Princes of Florence
- Raw Deal (collectible card game)
- Rome at War I: Hannibal at Bay
- Sailor Moon Collectible Card Game
- The Star Wars Roleplaying game (Wizards of the Coast version)
- Thunder on South Mountain
- Warangel
- The Sims
- X-Men Trading Card Game
Read more about this topic: 2000 In Games
Famous quotes containing the words games, released and/or invented:
“In the past, it seemed to make sense for a sportswriter on sabbatical from the playpen to attend the quadrennial hawgkilling when Presidential candidates are chosen, to observe and report upon politicians at play. After all, national conventions are games of a sort, and sports offers few spectacles richer in low comedy.”
—Walter Wellesley (Red)
“Women are to be lifted up to a physical equality with man by placing upon their shoulders equal burdens of labor, equal responsibilities of state-craft; they are to be brought down from their altruistic heights by being released from all obligations of purity, loyalty, self-sacrifice, and made free of the world of passion and self-indulgence, after the model set them by men of low and materialistic ideals.”
—Caroline Fairfield Corbin (b. c. 1835?)
“The way in which modern German poetry follows theories reminds me of pupils who, scolded by their teacher for their insubordination, justify themselves by saying that they invented new rules of propriety according to which they are quite well- behaved.”
—Franz Grillparzer (17911872)