Reiner Knizia - Games

Games

See also category: Reiner Knizia games

Some of Knizia's games are:

  • Abandon Ship
  • Amun-Re
    • Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 2003
  • Auf Heller und Pfennig (released in English as Kingdoms)
    • Winner, Origins Award for Best Abstract Board Game of 2002
  • Battle Line
  • Beowulf: The Legend
  • Blue Moon
  • Blue Moon City
  • Drahtseilakt (released as Tightrope and Relationship Tightrope in the US)
  • Einfach Genial (released as Ingenious in the US and Mensa Connections in the UK)
    • Winner, Schweizer Spielepreis best strategy game 2004
  • Keltis
    • Spiel des Jahres 2008
  • LEGO Ramses Pyramid
  • Lord of the Rings
    • Winner, Spiel des Jahres 2001 special prize for best use of literature in a game
  • Lost Cities
    • Winner, International Gamers Award 2000 for Best 2-player strategy game
  • Medici
  • Modern Art
    • Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 1993
    • Winner, Finnish Game of the Year 2008
  • Ra
  • Samurai
  • Star Trek: Expeditions
  • Taj Mahal
    • Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 2000
    • Winner, Essen Feather 2000
  • Through the Desert
  • Tigris and Euphrates
    • Winner, Deutscher Spiele Preis 1998
  • Tower of Babel
    • Winner, Schweizer Spielepreis best strategy game 2005
  • Vampire
  • Wer war's
    • Winner, Kinderspiel des Jahres 2008
    • Winner, Deutscher Kinderspiele Preis 2008

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Famous quotes containing the word games:

    Intelligence and war are games, perhaps the only meaningful games left. If any player becomes too proficient, the game is threatened with termination.
    William Burroughs (b. 1914)

    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)

    Whatever games are played with us, we must play no games with ourselves, but deal in our privacy with the last honesty and truth.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)