2000 in Games - Games Released or Invented in 2000

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

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Famous quotes containing the words games, released and/or invented:

    Criticism occupies the lowest place in the literary hierarchy: as regards form, almost always; and as regards moral value, incontestably. It comes after rhyming games and acrostics, which at least require a certain inventiveness.
    Gustave Flaubert (1821–1880)

    the walk liberating, I was released from forms,
    from the perpendiculars,
    straight lines, blocks, boxes, binds
    of thought
    into the hues, shadings, rises, flowing bends and blends
    of sight:
    Archie Randolph Ammons (b. 1926)

    I invented the colors of the vowels!—A black, E white, I red, O blue, U green—I made rules for the form and movement of each consonant, and, and with instinctive rhythms, I flattered myself that I had created a poetic language accessible, some day, to all the senses.
    Arthur Rimbaud (1854–1891)