Egyot games




















Play hundreds of match-3 games, solve challenging match-3 puzzles and rebuild this ravaged but once-beautiful area into the treasure of the New Kingdom! This game is a unique and epic blend of city building and match-3 puzzles, tied together with a storyline full of court intrigues, cunning plans and historical events worthy of Nefertiti, in the colorful and vibrant setting of Ancient Egypt.

Help the determined citizens revive their community after devastating attacks by the power-mad Irsu and his wily retinue. Then establish a link between your family and magical antiquities to enthrone the right person. Makeover a fertile ground, find your missing sister and keep a powerful artifact away from evil forces to ensure that fortune favors your settlers once again!

You may disable in-app purchases in your device settings. Collect them all! Search for "g5" in Windows Store! However, Sanera suddenly proclaims that she is to be married to a rich man she met long ago in Babylon. Can you get to the bottom of the lies and bring peace to the settlement?

His tales seem to be more than just stories. Enjoy unique and brain-teasing levels. Can you master them all? Check it out! Join the G5 email list and be the first to know about sales, news and game releases! Your feedback helps us provide you with the best experience. Some of the squares had symbols which represented bad and good fortune. Two sets of pawns were used to play the game. The object of the game was to be the first player to pass into the afterlife unscathed by bad fortunes along the way.

The ancient Egyptians believed the winner was under the protection of the gods Ra , Thoth and Osiris.

It was a game of chance that also required some strategy and skill. Senet boards were placed in graves because they believed the dead could use them on their dangerous journey to the afterlife. Mehen is also known as the Game of the Snake and references the snake god of the same name. Evidence of Mehen dates back as early as 3, B. The board is circular and it is a snake curled around itself divided into rectangular spaces, with the head of the snake at the center.

Boards have been found with different numbers of rectangular spaces as well as with different numbers of game pieces. Game pieces were in the shape of lions and lionesses and were played with balls that resembled marbles.

Game instructions are still unknown though many attempts to decipher it have been made. One such theory is that it is very similar to a game called the Hyena Game which is played today. Aseb, also known as the Twenty Squares Game, has three rows of four squares; the remaining eight squares protrude past the original twelve.

A player must throw a four or a six to get their piece out of the home or reserves and then throw again to be able to move it. Make your own Mehen board printout game. Make your own King Tut mask printout.

The Nile River. Gifts of the Nile. Boats and Square Sails. Two Lands, Unification, King Menes. The Three Kingdoms. Hieroglyphics, Rosette Stone.

Government Officials. Soldiers and the Military. Trade and Economy. Paying for Goods. Time Keeping and Shadow Clocks. Egyptian Calendars. Ancient Egypt Maps. Ancient Egypt Timelines. The Neighbors: Kush and Nubia. Women could run a business.

Children were cherished. Marriage and Divorce. Hair Styles. Jewelry and Perfume. Food - no one went hungry. The Marketplace. Table Manners. House of Life. House of Books. Medicine and Doctors. Craftsmen and Merchants. Farming and Farmers. Social Classes. The Ankh - Key of Life.



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