Fist is a two-player abstract strategy game, in the same family as chess, tafl, and xiangqi. The game is described in detail in Alysa Wishingrad’s upper middle-grade novel, The Verdigris Pawn. Fist is an asymmetric strategy game, meaning that each side has different pieces and goals. The King’s forces are plentiful, but somewhat weak, while the...
In Fits it's all about speed. Every player gets a board which he needs to fill with colored tiles (Small and large triangles and squares in 4 colors). The die defines which tile to pick from the tile holder and the player needs to place this piece on his/her board. But the piece can't touch other pieces of the same color. The fun part is that the die can't...
FITS (Fill In The Spaces) is essentially a multi-player Tetris. Each player has an inclined board on which they place different polyominoes, with three, four, or five squares. Cards are drawn from a pile to tell the players which piece to take. The pieces may be rotated and reversed before they slide down the inclined area to dock to other gaming pieces...
Travel or Mini FITS is a smaller version of FITS. The differences are: There are only 52 cardboard vs 64 plastic game tiles There are only 13 vs 16 building cards There are only 4 vs 8 game boards printed on both sides The 2nd board allows players to score bonus points if three of the same symbols are exposed. The height of the board is 10 vs 12 rows....
Fitting & Proper is a puzzle game, one in a small line published by Springbok. There are 36 plastic pegs which are randomly placed in an 8x8 grid of holes, and 16 L-shaped plastic pieces with holes in various places into which the pegs fit. If played as a solitaire puzzle, the object is to fit all 16 pieces on the grid. In the two-player version, the...
A game of strategy and chance that you'll play again and again. You try to fill in a square with tiles of various shapes and sizes, but you must depend on the roll of the die to tell you which tiles you can use. Fit your tiles into your square as you receive them, or save them for later use. But be careful. Another player may steal a valuable tile from you...
Fivalath is a derivative of Yavalath (like Squava). It is recommended to be played on a 10x10 square board, although other sizes are allowed (no less than 8x8). 2 players (White and Black) alternate turns placing a pawn of their colour on an empty space of the board. Players strive to make a line of 5 pieces of their colour, but lose if they make a line of...