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AskMen.com Ross Bonander |
How To: Play Roulette Roulette is hugely popular among gamblers worldwide because it's both thrilling and easy. On the flipside, casinos love it because the odds heavily favor the house, and because it is void of any potential betting system to beat it. |
Wired March 2006 Josh McHugh |
The Great Escape You're trapped in a high tech Spanish slammer, crawling through real tunnels, behind real bars. First-person gameplay breaks out of the box. |
DailyCandy February 8, 2006 |
Childish Games Snatch -- it's like Scrabble for ultra-competitive. |
AskMen.com Lorne Stewart |
How To: Play Blackjack See why blackjack is one of the most popular, fast-paced games in casinos today. There's more to it than you may think. |
Wired February 2006 Brendan I. Koerner |
Geeks in Toyland Lego built a global empire out of little plastic blocks, then conquered the wired world with a robot kit called Mindstorms. So when the time came for an upgrade, they turned to their obsessed fans and rewrote the rules of the innovation game. |
Entrepreneur December 2005 Gisela M. Pedroza |
Tech Toy 12/05 Want a dog, but not sure if you're ready for the responsibility? Practice being master on WowWee's Robopet. |
National Defense December 2005 Michael Peck |
National Guardman's Tactics Game Doesn't Break the Bank Warfighter 101: Movement to Contact can be used by both military trainers and civilian hobbyists. |
DailyCandy November 17, 2005 |
Recreational Therapy Based on the Rorschach test, this game asks players to view a series of inkblots and describe what they see. Other players then consult the diagnosis book, which irreverently analyzes the answers. |
PC Magazine November 2, 2005 Troy Dreier |
Read the TV Screen Budding readers can use the Mattel Fisher-Price Read with Me DVD! to read along with classic children's stories on the television screen, then control the action with a large, kid-friendly remote. |
Wired November 2005 Josh McHugh |
LeapFrog's Wild Ride Jim Marggraff built the fastest-growing toy company in history and made the LeapPad a household name. His new computer pen could be even bigger - unless fickle tweens teach him a lesson. |
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