Games

Visitors play Pachinko, a Japanese form of legal gambling, at Dynam Japan Holdings Co.'s Pachinko parlour in Koga, north of Tokyo, April 7, 2014. 

Some loud, smoky pachinko parlors defy Japan’s shutdown

Culture

The country has shut down schools and offices and parks — and yet, outside some pachinko joints, men stubbornly line up to get their fix.

Schoolyard Rhymes

Arts, Culture & Media

Ricky Jay on Games

Arts, Culture & Media
Lacing up for a jog.

How games are changing the way we stay fit

Health
Golden Globes hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler pose at the 2014 Golden Globe Awards.

Watching the Golden Globes? Then play Golden Globes bingo with us!

Arts
A tense moment during a game of "Mafia" in Kiev, Ukraine.

Entrepreneurs around the world love this Soviet-era storytelling game

Culture

The psychological game “Mafia” pits a well-connected minority against a civilian majority. It was invented in the Soviet Union as sort of spoof of KGB thinking, but it has gone global. The Russian government uses it to train spies, and would-be entrepreneurs around the world play it to practice their negotiating skills.

A cover illustration for the Communist-era board game Burokratopoly, which is being re-launched by Berlin's DDR Museum.

To understand life in East Germany, all you need is this board game

Culture

The board game called Bürokratopoly isn’t about getting filthy rich, though players might feel filthy after they’re done playing. The popular German game was created by dissidents in communist East Germany years ago as a satire about power and corruption. Now it has become a teaching tool for German kids trying to understand what it was like to live in the Communist East.

Crossword puzzle

‘Dr. Fill’ vies for crossword solving supremacy, but still comes up short

Technology

Computers may be getting smarter and faster. They may revolutionize industrial and social policy by using ‘big data’ to make massive calculations. But in the modest realm of crossword puzzle solving, computers are still no match for the complexity and creativity of the human mind.

Norwegian chess world champion Magnus Carlsen in a suit and holding a bottle a Champagne  while attending the Norwegian Sports Gala in Oslo January 4, 2014.

The Italian Bobby Fischer is making chess history in St. Louis

Culture

A tournament in St. Louis has everyone in the chess world mesmerized. Norway’s glamorous, 23-year-old World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen was the favorite. But a younger upstart has won a record-setting seven games … and could unseat him.

Germany's Christoph Kramer —concussion

Concussions in soccer are a real thing. So why not change the substitution rule?

Sports

Soccer’s governing body FIFA is being sued in California over the sport’s handling of concussions. One key to the debate over concussions in soccer is whether FIFA will change its rigid substitution rules at the top professional and international levels.