List of Japanese games
Encyclopedia

Children's games

  • Ayatori
  • Beigoma
    Beigoma
    -Description:A small but heavy disk shaped toy of approximately 3cm in diameter, it is spun by wrapping a thin 60 cm cord around it, then throwing it while releasing the cord to spin it onto a surface such as matting spread across the top of a barrel. The thrower aims it at another beigoma that is...

  • Bīdama
    Marble (toy)
    A marble is a small spherical toy usually made from glass, clay, steel, or agate. These balls vary in size. Most commonly, they are about ½ inch in diameter, but they may range from less than ¼ inch to over 3 inches , while some art glass marbles fordisplay purposes are over 12 inches ...

  • Darumasan ga koronda
  • Fukuwarai
    Fukuwarai
    , or in English, "Lucky Laugh", is a Japanese game played around New Year's . The game is usually played by children, but adults may sometimes play also...

  • Hana Ichi Monme
  • Hanetsuki
    Hanetsuki
    Hanetsuki is a Japanese traditional game, similar to badminton without a net, played with a rectangular wooden paddle called a hagoita and a brightly-coloured shuttlecock. Often played by girls at the New Year, the game can be played in two fashions: by one person attempting to keep the...

  • Kagome Kajjgome
  • Kakurenbo
  • Kankeri
  • Kendama
    Kendama
    A is a traditional Japanese toy which consists of a wooden, hammer-like object with a ball connected to it by a string. In English, kendama may be referred to as ring and pin and bears similarities to the classic cup-and-ball game, known in the Latin American world as balero...

  • Ken Ken Pa
  • Nawatobi
    Jump rope
    Jump rope or skipping rope is the primary tool used in the game of skipping played by children and many young adults, where one or more participants jump over a rope swung so that it passes under their feet and over their heads...

  • Ohajiki http://web-japan.org/nipponia/nipponia26/en/topic/index.html
  • Onigokko
  • Oshikura Manjū
    Oshikura Manju
    is a very simple Japanese game that is played on cold days in order to get warm.The game is played with at least three players, but it is better if there are more. The players first gather around in a circle, as close to each other as possible. They face the outside, standing back to back with each...

  • Otedama
    Otedama
    is a traditional Japanese children's game. Small bean bags are tossed and juggled in a game similar to jacks. Although it is generally a social game, Otedama can also be played alone. It is rarely competitive and often accompanied by singing...


Board games

  • Go
    Go (board game)
    Go , is an ancient board game for two players that originated in China more than 2,000 years ago...

  • Irensei
    Irensei
    Irensei is an abstract strategy board game. It is traditionally played with Go pieces on a Go board , but any equipment with which Go can be played is also suitable for Irensei....

  • Renju
    Renju
    Renju is the professional variant of Gomoku, a board game originated from Japan in Heian Period. It was named Renju by Japanese journalist Ruikou Kuroiwa on December 6, 1899 in a Japanese newspaper Yorozu chouhou . It is played with black and white stones on a 15x15 intersection Go board...

  • Shogi
    Shogi
    , also known as Japanese chess, is a two-player board game in the same family as Western chess, chaturanga, and Chinese Xiangqi, and is the most popular of a family of chess variants native to Japan...

  • Sugoroku
    Sugoroku
    refers to two different forms of Japanese board game, one similar to western backgammon and the other similar to western Snakes and ladders.Sugoroku plays identically to backgammon , except for the following differences:...

  • Sugoroku (another type)
  • Ninuki-renju

Card games

  • Buta no shippo
  • Daifugō (another name: Daihinmin)
  • Hanafuda
    Hanafuda
    are playing cards of Japanese origin that are used to play a number of games. The name literally translates as "flower cards". The name also refers to games played with those cards.-History:...

  • Karuta
    Karuta
    is a Japanese card game.The basic idea of any karuta game is to be able to quickly determine which card out of an array of cards is required and then to grab the card before it is grabbed by an opponent. There are various types of cards which can be used to play karuta...

  • Menko
    Menko
    Menko is a Japanese card game played by two or more players. It is also the name of the type of cards used to play this game. Each player uses Menko cards made from thick paper or cardboard, with one or both side printed with images from anime, manga, etc...

  • Oicho-kabu
    Oicho-Kabu
    Oicho-Kabu is a traditional Japanese game that is similar to the Western games, blackjack and baccarat. It is typically played with special kabufuda cards. A hanafuda deck can also be used, if the last two months are discarded...

  • Two-ten-jack
    Two-ten-jack
    Two-ten-jack is a Japanese trick-taking card game for two players that takes its name from the three highest-scoring cards in the game: the 2, 10 and Jack in three different suits.-Preliminaries:...

     (Tsū-ten-jakku) - a Japanese
    Japan
    Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...

     trick-taking card game.
  • Uta-garuta
    Uta-garuta
    are a kind of karuta, Japanese traditional playing cards. It is also the name of the game in which they are used. The game is played mostly on Japanese New Year's holidays. On each card, a poem is written, and there are a total of 100 poems. The standard collection of the poems used is called...

     - a kind of karuta (another name: Hyakunin Isshu
    Hyakunin Isshu
    is a traditional anthology style of compiling Japanese waka poetry where each contributor writes one poem for the anthology. Literally, it translates to "one hundred people, one poem [each]"...

    )
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