The aim of the game is to guess what country/region the photo was taken in.
If you guess incorrectly, the game will tell you how far away you are, and displays an arrow, that points in the direction of the correct country/region.
A new WhereTaken will be available everyday!
The aim of the game is to guess what US state the photo was taken in.
If you guess incorrectly, the game will tell you how far away you are, and displays an arrow that points in the direction of the correct US state.
WordyBuilder is a word guessing game in German. Reassemble the given letters to form words that are valid under official scrabble rules. You play it via Twitch Chat.
Mr. Challenger is a late-1970s Texas Instruments handheld electronic game featuring four word-based game modes focused on vocabulary and spelling challenges. It ships as a calculator-style unit and plays solo, emphasizing quick word recognition and anagram-like tasks.
This game is designed to teach Japanese how to speak English through four different activities. Those activities include:
Typing on an English or Japanese Katakana tutor keyboard to learn words and the objects that pair with them.
Four different domestic locations with objects and their names dictated.
Four categories of puzzles that indicate objects and their relationships.
Four radios with their own topic, which show an object, the name in English and the name in Japanese.
A game of simulated historical and geographical knowledge. Players must pinpoint the location of a photograph and the year by dropping a location pin on a map and select the year the photograph was taken.
Points are awarded for distance from correct location and year.
This program is made to teach the player how to drive and to test them on the dos and don'ts of driving. This comes in the form of true or false questions in a limited time either during a simulated drive or during a driving school examination. Correct answers grant the player points on their driving license, while incorrect answers lose points and/or health in the case of the simulated drive.
Multimedia CD-ROM glossary of computer-related terms ("ASCII", "E-mail", "Cross-platform" etc.) with both a serious explanation spoken by an animated "geek" character, and digitized video clips of Dennis Miller giving his own humorous definition of the same term.
The content of the game is made up of information revolving products by the Furukawa Battery Co., Ltd. After brief reading, the player has to play quizzes as multiple choice questions.
Taking on the theme of the popular Japanese TV quiz show of the popular "Yoshimoto Club", the player participates in a quiz game with multiple choice answers, the goal being to earn as many points as possible to win a prize.
Japanese language educational software with sections focusing on vocabulary, kanji, communication, cultural, and comprehension. Designed for adult learners for improving Japanese language mastery.
The rule is simple: choose the answer that suits provided description the most! There're also 3 types of hints in case you got stuck at some point: "additional info", "50/50", "one mistake is ok".