Numbers game

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Numbers game.
it’s A 12 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: KENO, DICE, LOTTO, BEANO, BINGO, SUDOKU, LOTTERY, KENKEN.

Last seen on the crossword puzzle: –Washington Post Crossword Thursday, February 8, 2024

Last seen on: –L.A. Times Daily Crossword – Dec 6 2022
Wall Street Journal Crossword – June 15 2022 – Addenda
NY Times Crossword 25 Nov 21, Thursday
LA Times Crossword 5 Oct 21, Tuesday
LA Times Crossword 22 Aug 21, Sunday
NY Times Crossword 16 Jul 21, Friday
NY Times Crossword 16 Jul 21, Friday
LA Times Crossword 3 Dec 20, Thursday
Universal Crossword – Oct 27 2020
Wall Street Journal Crossword – April 03 2020 – By the Numbers
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 27 2019 – Say Cheese
LA Times Crossword 19 Jul 19, Friday
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
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Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
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Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
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Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
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Wall Street Journal Crossword – July 03 2019 – Dropping Off
Newsday.com Crossword – May 17 2019
New York Times Crossword – Mar 14 2019
NY Times Crossword 29 Aug 18, Wednesday

Random information on the term “KENO”:

KMZQ (670 AM, “The Score”) is a radio station broadcasting a sports format. Licensed to Las Vegas, Nevada, United States, the station serves the Las Vegas area. The station is owned by Kemp Communications.

It has been granted a U.S. Federal Communications Commission construction permit to decrease its day power to 25,000 watts.

The station was assigned the call letters KSXX on October 10, 2003. On October 26, 2004, the station changed its call sign to KBTB and on July 29, 2008 to the current KMZQ. It signed on as KMZQ in 2008.

KENO on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “DICE”:

DragonFly BSD is a free and open source Unix-like operating system created as a fork of FreeBSD 4.8. Matthew Dillon, an Amiga developer in the late 1980s and early 1990s and a FreeBSD developer between 1994 and 2003, began work on DragonFly BSD in June 2003 and announced it on the FreeBSD mailing lists on 16 July 2003.

Dillon started DragonFly in the belief that the methods and techniques being adopted for threading and symmetric multiprocessing in FreeBSD 5 would lead to poor system performance and cause maintenance difficulties. He sought to correct these suspected problems within the FreeBSD project. Due to ongoing conflicts with other FreeBSD developers over the implementation of his ideas, his ability to directly change the FreeBSD codebase was eventually revoked. Despite this, the DragonFly BSD and FreeBSD projects still work together contributing bug fixes, driver updates, and other system improvements to each other.

Intended to be the logical continuation of the FreeBSD 4.x series, DragonFly’s development has diverged significantly from FreeBSD’s, including a new Light Weight Kernel Threads (LWKT) implementation, a lightweight ports/messaging system, and feature-rich HAMMER file system. Many concepts planned for DragonFly were inspired by the AmigaOS operating system.

DICE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “BINGO”:

Bingo is a game of probability in which players mark off numbers on cards as the numbers are drawn randomly by a caller, the winner being the first person to mark off all their numbers. Bingo became increasingly more popular across the UK with more purpose-built bingo halls opened every year until 2005. Since 2005, Bingo Halls have seen a marked decline in revenues and the closure of many halls. The number of bingo clubs in Britain has dropped from nearly 600 in 2005 to under 400 as of January, 2014. These closures are blamed on high taxes, the smoking ban, and the rise in on-line gambling, amongst other things.

The game is thought to have begun in Italy in the 16th century, specifically, around 1530 Bingo is believed to have migrated to France, Great Britain, and other parts of Europe in the 18th century. Players mark off numbers on a ticket as they are randomly called out, in order to achieve a winning combination. Bingo originates from the Italian lottery, Il Gioco del Lotto d’Italia. From Italy, the game spread to France and was known as Le Lotto, played by the French aristocracy. Tombola was used in nineteenth-century Germany as an educational tool to teach children multiplication tables, spelling, and even history. The origins of the modern version of the game are a little bit unclear, but it definitely gained its initial surge of popularity with the first modern version of the game appearing at carnivals and fairs in the 1920s, and is attributed to a Hugh J. Ward. The patent for a modern Bingo card design went to Erwin S. Lowe in 1942.

BINGO on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “KENKEN”:

Sudoku (数独?, sūdoku, digit-single) (i/suːˈdoʊkuː/, /-ˈdɒ-/, /sə-/, originally called Number Place) is a logic-based, combinatorial number-placement puzzle. The objective is to fill a 9×9 grid with digits so that each column, each row, and each of the nine 3×3 subgrids that compose the grid (also called “boxes”, “blocks”, or “regions”) contains all of the digits from 1 to 9. The puzzle setter provides a partially completed grid, which for a well-posed puzzle has a single solution.

Completed games are always a type of Latin square with an additional constraint on the contents of individual regions. For example, the same single integer may not appear twice in the same row, column, or any of the nine 3×3 subregions of the 9×9 playing board.

French newspapers featured variations of the puzzles in the 19th century, and the puzzle has appeared since 1979 in puzzle books under the name Number Place. However, the modern Sudoku only started to become mainstream in 1986 by the Japanese puzzle company Nikoli, under the name Sudoku, meaning “single number”. It first appeared in a US newspaper and then The Times (UK) in 2004, from the efforts of Wayne Gould, who devised a computer program to rapidly produce distinct puzzles.

KENKEN on Wikipedia