Throughout the centuries people have enjoyed games. From simple ones to pass the time to more complex ones that use strategy and challenge the participants to compete intellectually and have been called mental sports. Man’s love of competition and play has evolved over recent decades and there are far more choices now than ever before. For the list I have skipped video and online games, sticking with those that have actual physical pieces. No exclusions were made based on whether they are better with 2 or multiple players. In the 17th and 18th century, being a great gamer was admired as often top military leaders played wargames to determine different scenarios and plan attacks.
Today gaming is simultaneously more popular yet often considered as nerdy. Hopefully this list will inspire some people to try out new games or dig their old ones out of the closet.
The game features bones (tiles) with a number of pips on them. Players match them up trying to empty their hands by matching one of the numbers with one of the free numbers on the table. Dominoes are also noted for being able to stand on end in long rows so that when one is knocked over they all fall in a row. A popular pasttime is lining up hundreds or thousands of dominoes to make designs when they fall.
This popular game among children features discs which move along an 8×8 grid jumping opponent’s pieces to remove them from the game. It does feature pure strategy and no luck (outside of tournament play) but tends to be simplistic by today’s standards. In the 1930s Tournament play began reducing the number of draws by introducing random starting moves.
The world’s most popular and imitated boardgame features players as landlords trying to buy properties, build houses and hotels, and monopolize areas for higher prices. A trading aspect is popular. The game has undergone criticism as being too simplistic but is still considered a classic by many and is a great game for kids. The economic aspects are highly balanced however and common rules variants such as collecting money while landing on free parking tend to remove the strategy turning it into a luck based game.
The game played on a 15×15 grid features players spelling out words for points. The game features areas with double or triple letter or word score and letters have more points if they are less commonly used. Fanatical players have actually gone as far as memorizing all the acceptable words from the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary. Be warned, if someone you don’t know offers to play you for 10 cents a point as they might be able to win by many hundreds of points.

This game has undeservedly remained relatively obscure since its creation but is on par with the best in the world. The game is played on an unusually designed board of 7 interconnecting rings made of triangles, squares and hexagons. One of those games that takes minutes to learn and a lifetime to master. You place pieces each round trying to control areas and you do have the option of moving opponents pieces to areas of your choosing.
Versions of this game have been popular ranging as far back as 3000 BCE in Egypt, Persia, and Rome. The game involves some luck with dice rolling and some strategy with planning moves. It has been very popular since the 1700s as a strategy/gambling game. Today there are a number of clubs devoted to it and a world championship held each year in Monte Carlo.

The original mass produced world conquest game has each player send their armies into battle to take over continents and finally the world. Play has a large random element with dice rolls, a good amount of strategy, and is fun for the making of alliances and the
eventual backstabbing when they no longer suit you.

Similar in some ways to Risk this world conquest game has a unique twist. Before each round players go off in pairs with each other making deals. “If you send troops to attack him here I will attack him here”. They negotiate this way with each other. “He is planning to move to attack you here so fortify it and he will be weak here so I will attack him there” After everyone has made plans this way they write down on paper what they actually do which can range from anticlimactic to shockingly unexpected.
Developed about 2500 years ago in ancient China this game (not to be confused with the Mah Jong solitaire game which has been a popular video game in different versions) caused a sensation when introduced into the west around 1920. It became a fad among the middle and upper classes and today vintage sets from that era are sought after collectibles, however be warned many had tiles made of ivory and ownership can be illegal in some areas.
The original Tactics published in 1954 was a predecessor to this classic. Avalon Hill was known as THE wargame company and produced strategy “chit based” games on virtually every major battle in history. This was the one that started the entire wargame genre and without it there likely wouldn’t have been many of the newer games on the list.
19th century developed from earlier games. This is the king of trick taking card games. Teams work together to try and make books after bidding on how many they expect to take and the suit to be considered trump. Not as popular as it once was, there are still a number of fans and newspaper columns devoted to the strategy of the game appear in many newspapers on a regular basis.

The opposite of the conquer the world type games this is about developing societies through trade and cooperation with other players. You need to help your fellow players in order to advance your own societies and the game has a good moral lesson as well as being highly fun to play. An online version of the game has been remarkably successful as well.
While this one barely qualifies on the physical pieces requirement it has to make the list based on originality and long lasting appeal. In 1974 Tactical Studies Rules (TSR) a small company that produced wargames produced this based on their chainmail game of wargame rules. The longest lasting and most popular of the RPG (Role playing game) genre has each player create a fantasy (typically middle ages style) character while a DM (Dungeon Master) creates a story scenario. The players then work as a team to solve the created problems such as battling monsters, negotiating with NPCs(Non player characters run by the DM), disarming traps, and rescuing damsels in distress. The role playing part can range from minor bad acting out of fantasies to seriously talented (I’ve seen a few people who could be on the stage with their skill) but the strategic part is what interests many players. There have been several editions over the years with different rules so be sure your group uses the same set that you do. The game suffered a bad reputation in 1982 when an exploitive TV movie was made about a teenage player using the game as a way to plan the murder of his stepfather.
The game that established Germany as the most innovative game nation of the last decade has had tremendous worldwide popularity with many different versions (Seafarers of Catan/Starfarers of Catan). One of the cooperation/resource trading games genre it features gathering of the resources you have access to such as wood, grain, wool, and brick and trading extras to other players so that you can each build your areas. Played on a board of interconnecting hexagons, it can be rearranged for each new game creating different strategies each time.
This German game won the 2001 game of the year award and has been extremely popular worldwide with a number of optional expansion sets. Square tiles are drawn and feature a puzzle like design. Placed together in different ways the game board is built as you play as you try to build cities, roads, fields, and cloisters scoring points both along the way and at the end. One of the fun aspects in multiplayer is that no one gets eliminated along the way and has to sit and watch the surviving players.
The ultimate world conquest game has been called “Risk on steroids”. Highly in depth rulebook and attractive playing pieces have made this THE World War II game. It features in depth strategy and even though it is dice based a minimal luck factor. Some players even eliminate the dice and just determine results of attacks based on odds. The original features the entire world war while later versions have been produced concentrating on Europe or the Pacific. A highly addictive game for many be warned to have enough time as games can take quite a while. I once played from 7pm to 6am, although 4 hours is usually enough time. Optional expansions both licensed and unlicensed have been produced.

The ultimate game for conspiracy theorists and just silly fun for others. This game features cards for various groups and players work to each build their own conspiracies through them. Perhaps the FBI is controlling the Ford Motor Company, or the Semiconscious Liberation Army has secret plans regarding the IRS and Cattle Mutilators. Do South American Nazis really run the Nanotech Companies? Along with a traditional method of winning each player also has an individual victory goal which makes the game highly challenging. Special rule… cheating is both allowed and encouraged (other than stealing from the bank while collecting your normal income) as long as you don’t get caught.
Former world chess champion Emanuel Lasker once said “although chess is probably confined to Earth, if there is intelligent life on other planets, surely they know Go.” Each player has stones of either white or black and take turns laying them on intersections of a 19×19 grid. Simple rules and infinitely complex strategies make this one of the greatest games ever.
(Predecessors from 600 BCE) India. What can be written about chess that hasn’t been? One of the most popular games worldwide for over 500 years this game has had more clubs devoted to it, more books written about it, more computer versions (one theory suggests computers were invented mainly to create chess programs) than any other game. The game masters the art of removing luck and leaving it purely at skill.

The origins of the game are lost to history today but variants such as the French Poque have been around for 300 years. The most popular strategy game in the US and probably the world today is played regularly by tens of millions in the US alone. The game is about mastering luck in which the random element of the cards dealt is compensated for by the skills involved in betting, bluffing, calculating odds, and trying to figure out what your opponent has and will do. Poker has experienced an explosive growth in popularity over the last 6 years as televised matches among the top players have been very popular. Although there are many variants such as 7 card stud and Omaha High-Low, one of the lesser known ones worldwide, No Limit Texas Hold-em has been the most televised and seen the biggest boost. The World Championship held each year in Las Vegas is open to anyone with $10,000 to enter and often features celebrities (Don’t underestimate them! some like Gabe Kaplan, Sully Erna, Jennifer Tilly, and Montel Williams have had some notable results) and poker professionals, online players, and amateurs.
Contributor: Clantargh


































Nice. But a pic of Civilization(PC)…..lol just kidding.
I agree,…. no starcraft?!
I am glad to see that Chess is not #1 that would have been so predictable and overrated. I guess I am just one for going against the grain. I personally would have made GO the #1. It has been around for ever and I think takes the most strategy to win! I do think poker is a strategy game for all those who seem to disagree and also a very popular game (which seems to make sense that it could fall relatively high on the list). Also Poker was not defined. There are several versions of the game…I mean I remember playing poker when I was a little kid…maybe a young as 5. There is so much going on in a poker game…knowing when to fold, bluff, what odds your getting on a particular hand….I think the list is fun good job!!!
I’m convinced that every youngest child hates Monopoly because their older siblings are big fat cheaters. That certainly holds true for me- my oldest sister was always the banker and slipped my other sister money and didn’t give me enough…urggggg I hate Monopoly.
Speaking of my sister though, my brother in law proposed to her using a chess board (I don’t really know that rules, but if you get a pawn to somewhere, you can make them a difference piece? I’m not sure) At any rate, he slipped the ring over the pawn just in time to make it a queen and instead asked her to be his queen and opened his hand and there was the ring (awww) As a result, they have a cabinet in their house filled with chess boards people got them for the wedding…it’s like a chess museum..kinda weird.
Poker over Bridge?! Poker shouldn’t even be on the list. Strategy my butt.
Where the ***** is Starcraft?
Man your list sucks ass.
mushyyyyew – Wheres your list *****? You can ***** off. I dont care what your suggestion was.
Anyone who has made a list for this site doesnt come on here suggesting crap, knowing full well somebody has spent hours making that list. You can ***** off – get a real name and then punch yourself in the face, film it and post it on You Tube because being such an ass you are going unloved when you could be looking like the prick you are on a whole other level. Man you suck ass.
Good list, although the PC picture of Civilization was strange and subsequently made a bunch of people who can’t read start screaming “Where the “F” is Starcraft?!”
Notable additions could be: Stratego and Chinese Checkers
I don’t really see a need for that Illuminati game, but if you say so..
I must say that Axis & Allies is a very limited-strategy game. I’ve been playing the game for over 28 years, and you can tell within the first 4 rounds which side will win (dice notwithstanding). And the strategy is almost always the same for each of the 5 nations – maybe 2 variations for any given nation as a rule.
Number 1 is just not right for strategy games – Poker is more of a tactical game, not a strategic one. There’s absolutely no way you can plan 5,6 or a dozen ‘moves’ in advance… not strategic.
I would definitely put Diplomacy and Othello (Go) much much higher on this list.
I agree with #34.Well said Wally! What is the American translation for ***** off? Over here it means your mad. I used to beat my sisters at Monopoly like a rented mule. Then I got caught cheating and could no longer be the banker. I have no patience for board games,now poker is another thing.Anyway pretty cool list nothing to argue about though.
I was telling my teenage daughter about this list, and she asked ” what about Parcheesi?”
Also knows as Sorry/Pachesi/etc. its a game where you have 4 or 5 tokens and you have to get them all around the board without your opponent doing the same or knocking yours home (by landing on them). small amount of luck in the dice rolling, but lots of strategy for which piece to move when.
Chinese checkers is a good strategy game as well – with no random element!!
I love Diplomacy. It is so hard finding someone who will play the game. Takes too long for most people.
Is Diplomacy just another name for the game Stratego?
I would remove checkers altogether as the game has been “solved” with computer algorithms. Kind of sad really.
It should be noted that the Civilization board game and the Civilization computer game that most people today know are completely different games. The description given for #9 is definitely about the board game and not the computer game (as one of the possible ways of winning the Civ computer game is by destroying everyone else).
On the other hand, I think both Civilizations are possible candidates for this list.
Oooh, a list I almost entirely agree with. And found immensely enjoyable!
Not too fond of Poker being the number one spot. It is undeniably a strategy game, but only insomuch as being able to know when to play, bet, fold, etc. As someone said earlier, take away the monetary factor and the game is about as strategic as Solitaire or Go-Fish.
I love Go, I learned it while learning Korean (in which it’s called Baduk). I’m still horrible at it though!
I love everything included in the list, all viable strategy games. Honorable mention, I think, should go to a few of the tabletop war games around (Warhammer 40K, Flames of War, etc.) They aren’t my cup of tea, but I’ve watched them be played, and the strategy involved is undeniable!
A list of strategy games without the drinking game “*****” mentioned is not a valid list in my book.
Idreno(74) – No, Stratego is a much different board game, much like the card game concentration, except that instead of getting matching pairs of cards, you capture enemy markers based on who’s marker has the better rank (and watch out for the bombs!).
Poker is a game of statistical probability, not strategy.
One of my favorite games:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequence_(board_game)
#80 z (and others):
fwiw, I ran a query on Amazon for “poker strategy”, and it returned over 700 results. True, allot of these books likely focus on explaining in great detail the odds and probablity tables, but there is plenty of strategy involved in the betting aspects of the game. As some have said: take that (betting) away and ya got nothing, but IMO take that away and you don’t have Poker either. Debatable semantics perhaps.
That all said, I agree with many of the comments here that say chess should be numero uno.
#71 bigski – I’m not sure where “over here” is for you. I am an American, so here goes for the ***** off explanation! “***** off” (to me) is a British/European term rudely telling someone to go away. In America, “*****ed off” means you’re angry, not “***** off.” I would say “F**k off” here to rudely tell someone to go away.
I don’t know if I confused the issue or not!
For my money, I’d swap Illuminati with Stratego. Used to play the hell out of the Lord of the Rings edition.
I also have enjoyed Ludo; another dice game; mastermind, and of course, snakes and ladders – but perhaps these fit into another catagory (or another list
)
71.bigski & 83.Ernmas: Hmmmm, I’m in the odd position of being an American who thinks of the term “***** off” as a somewhat rude way of telling someone to bug off…go away. I’d never tell anyone to f*ck off. It wouldn’t come naturally to me.
So, does that confuse the issue even more?
Speaking of dice games, a favorite of mine is the classic bar game “Liar’s Dice”. Yes the random element of a dice roll and knowing and calculating the statistical probabilities plays a big part, but there is a good deal of strategy also involved.
i somehow knew poker would be first on the list
Go is very popular in Korea. Almost every park has a cluster of (mainly) old (mainly) men playing. A television channel broadcasts games all day.
Quite by coincidence I saw a banner ad at an intersection tonight for an amateur baduk championship. I asked my wife what that was, and she said “The game with the small black and white counters”. Then, scrolling back, I find that Anon E Mouse has anticipated me with the Korean name for that.
Anon E Mouse: annyeong haseyo?
Years ago I was a school boarding house assistant. One Saturday afternoon a small group of students settled in for a game of Axis and Allies. I wandered by again and the Axis players were winning comfortably. I wandered by again again and they’d lost. At least that game ran true to history.
Soon I after I returned to university, and a group of us went away to the family holiday house of one student in our group. One member of the uni wargaming society brought our Risk, and proceeded to beat the rest of us single-handedly, even after we’d agreed to gang up on him. I gave up and composed music instead.
I don’t have the patience for most of these. I am also a bad loser.
Astraya: Annyeong hashimnika! (pardon my romanization… I’m horrrid at it and rusty as is… Not many places to practice my speaking around here
)
Yep, you pick those kinds of things up spending two years learning Korean from native Koreans (quirks and all, but they were great.)
I’ve had a crash course in most of these, seeing as how my major ‘hang out with friends’ place is a gaming store. I managed to win my first game of Risk… came as a suprise. Not to mention I’m a huge D and D nerd.
Hurray for D&D – been playing since 1979! Of the 20 games listed, I’ve played all but maybe 6 of them. Yes, I too am am nerdy… heehee.
Oh, and I too am am for two am making am am sentence mistakes!
#85 Segue – I guess it may be a generational thing. I generally tell people to go away, and neither the ***** off or other. If they don’t leave when I repeatedly ask, then I’ll resort to the f*** off! As for other slang, I tend to cuss non-American when I am bowling!
JayArr: D&D nerds unite! I love that game so much. Yep, I’m a straight up nerd!
The whole ***** off vs. f**k off thing… It depends on present company and mood for me. I say both.
Chess is just simply the best, well you dont need to think about that one
92. Ernmas & 93. Anon. E. Mouse: When I was about 8 I struck my finger with a hammer, and blood started flowing freely from the gash I had opened.
I ran into the kitchen yelling to my mum “Look at my bloody finger!”, whereupon I was suddenly on the other side of the room with a stinging cheek, and mum screaming at me for using foul language. Meanwhile, my finger was making a puddle on the floor.
Segue(95) – I find that when I’m drunk, I’m *****ed… When I’m *****ed, I need to ***** a lot – when I finish *****ing, I’m still *****ed, but at least I’ve *****ed – hopefully in the proper receptacle… ready to keep on keeping on (now THAT’S strategy)!
I was expecting Othello.
Some of these I’ve never heard or tried. I love Scrabble – one of my all time favorites – but put me in front of a Monopoly board and the hours dra-a-a-a-a-a-g on and on…
96. JayArr: That gave me the best laugh of the week so far!
Thanks!
Poker has way too much luck involved to be #1, especially ahead of a game like chess which has none whatsoever.
A really *****ty player can beat a professional if they are getting the right cards at the right time. It happens regularly.
Everyone who has played poker has seen good players get beaten out by others who barely even know the rules.
Such a thing would never happen in chess (or probably every other game on the list)
Ernmas & segue thankyou for settin me strait on the *****ing thing. Having thought about it I think it`s more fun to say F@ck-off than *****-off.It seems to get your point across better.Anyway have a Happy Halloween today.Peace out!
Your comments betray a very strong cultural bias.
With tens of millions of players in east Asia for several millenia, surely Go ranks as the number 1 in all-time importance, far surpassing chess and poker.
Sorry Elwin most people over here never played Go.Not that there`s anything wrong with that.
Dane (#66) Maybe you’d be surprised to know that many bridge players play poker as well…
Bridge should definately be higher. It is aknowledged as a mental sport, along with chess, but the moreI watch poker tournament, the more I believe thatluck is not much of a factor. Sure, an amateur, clueless of the game can beat a pro once or twice, but in the long run a pro can beat any amateur no matter what cards are dealt.
lol gay I thought these were gonna be the best stradegy VIDEO games not board games lmao, civilization is an acception but you gotta get like age of mythology age of empires star wwars galactic battlegrounds stuff like that
I was actually Stratego champ at the neighborhood park when I was a teenager. Fun game. But the strategy is pretty simple (well, at least against my fellow 14 yr olds!): wait for or get the other guy to expose his 1 and 2 first (might have to sacrifice a 3 or 4 to do it), then you can control the three lanes with your own 1, 2, and a 3 by taking out anything that tries to get past you. Once you have even a one piece rank advantage (even if it’s only over a portion of the board), you just start hitting anything that moves and the game is as good as won.
A great game to play is Rifts
Yo oz. This doesn’t include video / computer games. Otherwise I’d agree with you
[Civilization was a board game before being a computer game, in case you didn't know]
i think every other game on that list is more complicated than poker.
Yeah but the beauty of poker is that someone with absolutely no experience and the worst hand possible can still beat a world class player with a great hand. Sure it’s unlikely, because it’s still a strategy-based game, but it’s still possible. And that element of poker is not shared by any other game on this list.
The list needs Stratego, other than that its pretty good
STRATEGO!!!
Othello have nothing to do with Go so it should be on the list.Poker No 1.I dont think so.Go is No ONE.Theres much more
possible turns in GO than in Chess.Poker and Backgammon
sould be more close to each other on the list.But thank you
for an interesting list.REAL Boardgames RULES!!!
Go should really be the first. The only reason there aren’t Go computer programs is because it is impossible to make them, because there is too much strategy required. In Asia, where Go originated, people literally spend their life time trying to learn Go strategy, and still can’t master it. It’s on a higher level than even chess, tbh.
Yeah, instead of wasting their lives playing Go they should spend their lives partying, like the protagonists of Dazed and Confused.
Only strategy game
whyy no magic the gathering???
puerto rico is very good…
illuminati my favorite
I love poker and all but it shouldn’t be on the list because it is based off luck. Chess and Go have absolutely no luck involved. You can see every move your opponent is making and you must out wit him. There is no luck there. Also Magic the gathering should replace illuminati and Starcraft replace civilization.
Some of the items on this list require minimal strategy. Nobody thinks about a strategy when playing Monoply; they jsut roll the dice and buy. Poker is too much down to luck to be top of this poll. Chess should be number one. People spend their whole trying to learn how to play the perfect game of chess.
I can play chess a11 day long and would have put it at no. 1 but I haven’t played Go yet.
Where’s Stratego?