E-Games: The New Sports for Fun

E-Games: The New Sports for Fun





E-Games is a huge draw for people of all ages in the age of the Internet. Kids of days are increasingly tech-savvy because they want to play games. E-Games are easy to use and adaptable, so you can spend your time making games instead of coding them.

It's easy to make your learning programs more challenging and motivating, which can help your organization run more smoothly. Training games are changing too, thanks to E-Learning. Because computer games and arcades are so widespread, instructional games could be the best choice for e-learning events.

Trainers know that a good game may help people learn by getting them involved in the process, whether it's as pre-course materials, self-teaching tools, or content evaluations. Most games are based on classic game shows like Jeopardy or well-known board games like Monopoly and Trivial Pursuit. The question-and-answer style of those games is great for testing yourself and improving your memory. Games that are played in groups help people work together and generate team spirit. More significantly, games help students feel less anxious about being judged.

A well-designed programmed E-Game often has these features:

· Simple and easy-to-use authoring tools. · A wide range of game kinds. · Detailed help files, sample games, and demos.
· The Flash web player lets you play on different platforms.
• No need to download or install messy software.
· You can make games right from your web browser.
You can choose from a number of skins for your games, including a custom skin that lets you change the colors. You can fully customize any of the game types.
· You may make your own online arcade system that lets you arrange your games into bespoke multi-player arcades and invite other gamers to compete.

The average age of an E-Game Player is 29 years old, while people over the age of 18 buy 92% of all games. 39% of people who play E-Games are women. Sales of computer and video game software went up 8% in 2003, reaching $7 billion in the next several years. They are likely to go up even more. But this part of the business is still minor compared to the movie business.

E-Games' sales went up 11% to $8 million in fiscal 2004, which concluded on June 30. Its profit went up 9% to $1.7 million from the previous year. It lost $184,000 in the first quarter of its 2005 fiscal year because sales fell when Wal-Mart Stores Inc. cut back on the shelf space it gives to low-cost PC games, according to E-Games.

Here are some of the most popular E-Games:

1. AirXonix: This is a 3D version of the Xonix game. You have to control a device that moves around the playing area in the Xonix game while a bunch of monster balls are inside. The goal is to keep the balls away from as much empty playing ground as possible.

2. Buzzing Cars: Buzzing Cars is a completely wild racing game where you need to be both fast and wise. You have to do a lot of different things, including drive robots, chase flying saucers, zap aliens, and of course, race against the clock. You can buy seven different cars, each having its own set of features. Every time a crash happens, the automobiles lose pieces, and finally they fall apart totally.

3. Cross & Word Games: A collection of three easy puzzle games that E-Games made when they first started making RomTech games. There are 110 crossword puzzles in Crossword Mania and 222 word searches in Word Search Mania. Both of these translations from pencil and paper to keyboard and display come with rudimentary design tools that let you make your own puzzles. Word Connect Special Edition is a one-board demo of a Scrabble clone where players try to make words that fit together on a board using lettered tiles.

4. Mahjongg Master: This full-featured version lets you play the classic Chinese strategic game. There are 18 original tile sets, including traditional MahJongg tiles and brand new designs. You can also choose from 70 gorgeous backgrounds, such as scenes, animals, textures, and more. Also, the music is excellent! One of E-Games' best-selling games is MahJongg Master. Millions of people play this game around the world.

5. Marble Blast: This arcade action game from Garage Games lets players control marbles. The goal of the game is to race the marble across 72 levels, each with moving platforms, deadly traps, sparkling prizes, and power-ups. You have to finish the game as quickly as possible.

6. Miniverse Mini Golf: There are two 9-hole mini golf courses for one to four players. One course is located on "Earth" and has you putt through places like a building site, a war zone, and a casino. The other course takes place in space and has a lot of science fiction challenges, like teleporters and laser shields. Players can move their putter by pushing or pulling the mouse, and they can also choose from a range of colors for their golf ball.

7. Pinball: E-Games' There are three tables in Pinball, which is a 3D pinball game. Table glass, light halos, shadows, reflections of the ball on the table, and more are all examples of realistic effects that use 3D acceleration. The standard rules for pinball apply: knock down targets to light up bonuses, and multipliers can make these bonuses even bigger.

8. Word Search Mania: A computer version of the regular pencil and paper word search. Word Search Mania has 222 different puzzles on a wide range of bizarre topics, and they are all different levels of difficulty. It also has a facility that lets you make puzzles from your own lists of words.

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