Tabletop game
Tabletop games or tabletops are games that are normally played on a table or other flat surface, such as board games, card games, dice games, miniature wargames, tabletop role-playing games, or tile-based games.
Classification according to equipment used
Tabletop games can be classified according to the general form, or equipment utilized:| Game category | Examples |
| Board | Adventure board games, adventure gamebooks, backgammon, chess, German-style board games, go, reversi, Mancala, Shogi, Gomoku, Four-in-a-row, Tic-tac-toe |
| Card | solitaire, collectible card games, hanafuda, tarot card games, poker |
| Dexterity | Jenga, Crokinole, Klask, Hungry Hungry Hippos, Loopin' Louie, Terror in Meeple City, Don't Break the Ice, Crossbows and Catapults, Knucklebones, PitchCar |
| Dice | bunco, craps, poker dice, sic bo, yahtzee |
| Paper and pencil | Battleship, Connect 5, dots and boxes, hangman, sprouts, sudoku |
| Tabletop role-playing | Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, List of tabletop role-playing games |
| Strategy | wargames, government simulation games, miniatures games |
| Tile based | 15 puzzle, anagrams, dominoes, mahjong, mahjong solitaire |
| Tabletop sports | See article. |
Games like chess and draughts are examples of games belonging to the board game category. Other games, however, use various attributes and cannot be classified unambiguously.
For several of these categories there are sub-categories and even sub-sub-categories or genres. For instance, German-style board games, board wargames, and roll-and-move games are all types of board games that differ markedly in style and general interest.
Tabletop game components
The various specialized parts, pieces, and tools used for playing tabletop games may include:- Stopwatch, clock, hourglass or egg timer
- , Miniature figures, pawn, or playing piece
- Gambling chips or play money
- Game board
- Game box or container
- Scoreboard or paper pad
- Cardboard Counter, Dial Counter, Marker or peg for keeping score/tally
- Pencil
- Rule manuals
- Ruler or measuring device
- Modelling clay
- Gamemaster's screen
- Bowls, trays, or component organizers
- Stickers often used in Legacy games
- Card sleeves used in games that have a "Card Crafting System"
- Randomizers such as:
- * Coins
- * Dice, which can include polyhedral dice
- * Dice tower or Dice cup
- * Playing cards, which can be collectible cards
- * Shuffling machine
- * Tiles
- * Tops, such as Teetotums or Dreidels
- * Drawstring bag
- * Spinners
- * Bones, Cowrie Shells, or Stick dice, used in ancient games
Classification according to elements of chance
As an alternative to classifying games by equipment, they can also be classified according to the elements of chance involved.In game theory, two fundamentally different elements of chance can play a role:
- Chance due to outcome uncertainty, e.g. due to dice rolls or due to unknown cards being dealt during the game. Games in which outcome uncertainty plays a role are referred to as stochastic games as opposed to deterministic games.
- Chance due to state uncertainty, e.g. due to the opponent's position or cards not being visible, or due to the simultaneous move character of the game. Games in which state uncertainty plays a role are referred to as partial or imperfect information games as opposed to full or perfect information games.
| Full/perfect information | Partial/imperfect information | |
| Deterministic |
| |
| Stochastic |
Organizations
List of organizations that sponsor events featuring tabletop games:- Board Game Geek organizes BGG.CON
- PAX hosts PAX Unplugged
- Geek & Sundry promotes an annual International TableTop Day
- The Organization of Gamers & Roleplaying Enthusiasts organizes tabletop events for OMGcon
- White Wolf Publishing's Camarilla
- Wizards of the Coast own RPGA
- The Historical Miniatures Gaming Society promotes historical miniatures wargaming and organizes wargaming events such as Historicon
- SaltCON LLC organizes SaltCON and the Ion Award competition for unpublished tabletop games