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:
“At the age of twelve I was finding the world too small: it appeared to me like a dull, trim back garden, in which only trivial games could be played.”
—Elizabeth Bowen (18991973)
“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?)
“Warren G. Harding invented the word normalcy,
And the lesser-known bloviate, meaning, one imagines,
To spout, to spew aimless verbiage.”
—John Ashbery (b. 1927)