The 5 free browser games I enjoy
Superhex
Very popular, this game with a relatively simple concept is played in single rounds. You play for a few minutes before losing.
You control a circle on a 2D map that moves across a grid of hexagons. Behind our circle, a line forms; when it surrounds an area, that area takes our color and belongs to us. The more areas you win, the more points you earn.
If you or another player touches your trail, you lose. Conversely, if you touch another player's trail, you earn 500 points. If two players' circles touch, both are eliminated, unless one of them is inside their colored area.
Despite this basic environment, many techniques and tricks can develop.
I have always wondered what would happen if a player managed to cover the entire available area with their color.
In short, a short and simple little game that lets you relax for a few minutes.

Slither
This little game is also very popular, and the rounds are quite short.
You play as a snake that grows when it eats small shiny colored pellets. The vast area available to all players spreads the colored pellets somewhat randomly, and everyone plays for themselves. The color of the pellets swallowed does not matter; it is just for the design.
If your snake's head touches another player's body, you lose. If you cut off another snake and therefore force another player's head to touch your body, then they lose, and their body turns into big shiny pellets worth a lot of points. The more snakes you kill, the bigger and harder to control you become. Pretty fun, but watch out for frustration :)

Boulder Dash JO
This game is a very faithful reconstructed version of the original. I played it on my first computer, an Amstrad CPC 6128. The game itself is not the most interesting, but it reminds me of my childhood. In short, on a 2D map, you dig the earth in front of you in search of all the diamonds on the map.
However, there are rocks; if you dig under a rock, it falls, and if you stay underneath, you die.
Each level is quite short and follows one after another. The further you go, the more complicated the levels become. Later, there will be monsters that can make you lose as soon as they touch you.
Fun for nostalgic players :)

Grepolis
This MMORP (massively multiplayer online role playing) will require a lot of time if you get into it. You play as a kind of emperor who wants to own as many cities as possible. Each city provides resources, used to build armies and conquer other cities, and so on. However, this game is very social: you will need to communicate very often with other players, organize alliances, launch coordinated attacks on enemies, support allies, etc.
The world has a beginning and an end, but a game lasts several months. Each action takes time, so it is a game you open at least once a day for a few minutes depending on how much you want to invest.
Very absorbing, and quite frustrating when you permanently lose everything you have built.

Ogame
This MMORP game is in the same vein as Grepolis, but in a science-fiction universe. Here too, you own planets where you have to build factories, defenses, etc., in order to organize yourself and acquire more planets. You form alliances to destroy groups of players and expand through the universe.
This game also takes a lot of time, because the game does not really end, and when all your planets are lost, you can only start over from 0.

The 5 free browser games I enjoy
Superhex
Very popular, this game with a relatively simple concept is played in single rounds. You play for a few minutes before losing.
You control a circle on a 2D map that moves across a grid of hexagons. Behind our circle, a line forms; when it surrounds an area, that area takes our color and belongs to us. The more areas you win, the more points you earn.
If you or another player touches your trail, you lose. Conversely, if you touch another player's trail, you earn 500 points. If two players' circles touch, both are eliminated, unless one of them is inside their colored area.
Despite this basic environment, many techniques and tricks can develop.
I have always wondered what would happen if a player managed to cover the entire available area with their color.
In short, a short and simple little game that lets you relax for a few minutes.

Slither
This little game is also very popular, and the rounds are quite short.
You play as a snake that grows when it eats small shiny colored pellets. The vast area available to all players spreads the colored pellets somewhat randomly, and everyone plays for themselves. The color of the pellets swallowed does not matter; it is just for the design.
If your snake's head touches another player's body, you lose. If you cut off another snake and therefore force another player's head to touch your body, then they lose, and their body turns into big shiny pellets worth a lot of points. The more snakes you kill, the bigger and harder to control you become. Pretty fun, but watch out for frustration :)

Boulder Dash JO
This game is a very faithful reconstructed version of the original. I played it on my first computer, an Amstrad CPC 6128. The game itself is not the most interesting, but it reminds me of my childhood. In short, on a 2D map, you dig the earth in front of you in search of all the diamonds on the map.
However, there are rocks; if you dig under a rock, it falls, and if you stay underneath, you die.
Each level is quite short and follows one after another. The further you go, the more complicated the levels become. Later, there will be monsters that can make you lose as soon as they touch you.
Fun for nostalgic players :)

Grepolis
This MMORP (massively multiplayer online role playing) will require a lot of time if you get into it. You play as a kind of emperor who wants to own as many cities as possible. Each city provides resources, used to build armies and conquer other cities, and so on. However, this game is very social: you will need to communicate very often with other players, organize alliances, launch coordinated attacks on enemies, support allies, etc.
The world has a beginning and an end, but a game lasts several months. Each action takes time, so it is a game you open at least once a day for a few minutes depending on how much you want to invest.
Very absorbing, and quite frustrating when you permanently lose everything you have built.

Ogame
This MMORP game is in the same vein as Grepolis, but in a science-fiction universe. Here too, you own planets where you have to build factories, defenses, etc., in order to organize yourself and acquire more planets. You form alliances to destroy groups of players and expand through the universe.
This game also takes a lot of time, because the game does not really end, and when all your planets are lost, you can only start over from 0.

The 5 free browser games I enjoy
Superhex
Very popular, this game with a relatively simple concept is played in single rounds. You play for a few minutes before losing.
You control a circle on a 2D map that moves across a grid of hexagons. Behind our circle, a line forms; when it surrounds an area, that area takes our color and belongs to us. The more areas you win, the more points you earn.
If you or another player touches your trail, you lose. Conversely, if you touch another player's trail, you earn 500 points. If two players' circles touch, both are eliminated, unless one of them is inside their colored area.
Despite this basic environment, many techniques and tricks can develop.
I have always wondered what would happen if a player managed to cover the entire available area with their color.
In short, a short and simple little game that lets you relax for a few minutes.

Slither
This little game is also very popular, and the rounds are quite short.
You play as a snake that grows when it eats small shiny colored pellets. The vast area available to all players spreads the colored pellets somewhat randomly, and everyone plays for themselves. The color of the pellets swallowed does not matter; it is just for the design.
If your snake's head touches another player's body, you lose. If you cut off another snake and therefore force another player's head to touch your body, then they lose, and their body turns into big shiny pellets worth a lot of points. The more snakes you kill, the bigger and harder to control you become. Pretty fun, but watch out for frustration :)

Boulder Dash JO
This game is a very faithful reconstructed version of the original. I played it on my first computer, an Amstrad CPC 6128. The game itself is not the most interesting, but it reminds me of my childhood. In short, on a 2D map, you dig the earth in front of you in search of all the diamonds on the map.
However, there are rocks; if you dig under a rock, it falls, and if you stay underneath, you die.
Each level is quite short and follows one after another. The further you go, the more complicated the levels become. Later, there will be monsters that can make you lose as soon as they touch you.
Fun for nostalgic players :)

Grepolis
This MMORP (massively multiplayer online role playing) will require a lot of time if you get into it. You play as a kind of emperor who wants to own as many cities as possible. Each city provides resources, used to build armies and conquer other cities, and so on. However, this game is very social: you will need to communicate very often with other players, organize alliances, launch coordinated attacks on enemies, support allies, etc.
The world has a beginning and an end, but a game lasts several months. Each action takes time, so it is a game you open at least once a day for a few minutes depending on how much you want to invest.
Very absorbing, and quite frustrating when you permanently lose everything you have built.

Ogame
This MMORP game is in the same vein as Grepolis, but in a science-fiction universe. Here too, you own planets where you have to build factories, defenses, etc., in order to organize yourself and acquire more planets. You form alliances to destroy groups of players and expand through the universe.
This game also takes a lot of time, because the game does not really end, and when all your planets are lost, you can only start over from 0.

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