TOUCH GAME TABLE

NEW! Our four Touch Game Tables offer board game enthusiasts a completely new experience. On these modern tables, 1-4 players can enjoy the challenges of a number of different games at the same time, free of charge! A great way to pass the time for all ages.

A sample of the games available:

  • Word duel: Time is running out while you create more and more words from the given letters. The points earned for the words push your race car forward. The winner is the one who forms the most valuable word by the end of the game.
  • Bee-Smart: A board game for 2, 3, or 4 players. The goal is for your little bee to collect the most value from the flowers, but the others can block your way. Don’t worry, you have more than one life
  • Mahjong: A popular game, but with a twist on the TouchGameTable: firstly, four players can grab the same cards simultaneously, and secondly, besides the traditional flower and season cards, there are also multiplication tables, especially for younger players: after all, it’s better to practice in a game than to memorize!
  • Puzzle: You can choose a picture and how many pieces you want the game to split it into. At the start, you will only see a few elements, but they will definitely fit somewhere. The shape of the pieces helps: right-angled pieces belong in the corners.
  • Snake: The small worm becomes a large snake by consuming bigger and bigger crystals on the board as the player guides it. If the snake reaches the edge of the board, it reappears on the opposite side. The winner is the one who grows the snake the largest without crashing into anything.
  • Sudoku: Together, we solve a big sudoku puzzle, with all players working on the same board. You can argue, try different approaches, and in the end, everyone earns points based on their contribution to solving the puzzle.
  • TeDoku: A little bit of Tetris, a little bit of Sudoku, but completely a TouchGameTable game: place Tetris shapes on a 9×9 grid. Completing a full row or a 3×3 square scores points and the game continues. You can rotate the pieces, or even swap them for a point deduction.
  • City Hunter: Who can find the capitals of Europe? What about capitals in Asia or America? Each player receives three challenges each round. The closer you are to the correct city, the fewer points you lose. You can zoom and move the map for more accuracy. This is a fantastic educational game and very enjoyable!
  • Memory: You can choose whether to play with fewer or more cards, with animal, car, or Budapest-themed pictures. One thing’s for sure: if there’s a preschooler in your group, you’re 99% likely to lose. They’re the best at this game.
  • Tic-Tac-Toe Plus: This is the digital version of the classic tic-tac-toe game we used to play under desks on grid paper. But now, if you can surround a square with your color, that square changes to your color too! This could help you form a line and win the game.
  • Fun History: This is an original game you can’t play anywhere else. You need to arrange historical events in the right order. But instead of focusing on wars, we focus on other significant events: when was the matchstick invented? When did Queen perform in Budapest? When was the first Olympic gold medal won by Áron Szilágyi
  • Mills: The classic mills game with a few surprises! It’s a great mini-strategy game, which people never get tired of playing. It helps develop thinking skills and patience in children.
  • Chess: This classic game, about 8,000 years old, was originally invented for military strategy planning according to legends. What is certain, however, is that those who exercise their mind with chess gain clear and efficient thinking, even in everyday life
  • Longest road: This game, with its unique mechanics, has been among the top 3 most popular for years. You need to build roads using the given tiles, with lines representing the paths. The tiles can be rotated by clicking before placement, offering endless variations to build with. It’s important to consider how your roads benefit others: sometimes you might end up creating a longer road for someone else than for yourself.
  • Scrabble: This game has different rules than the well-known box version: nothing is set in stone, but every word you form has to be accepted by the other players. The board rotates towards the next player
  • Roulette: The rules are the same as in casino roulette, but players can’t expect real cash rewards here. The only reward is the joy of winning, and virtual chips. Of course, they can multiply if fortune is on your side.
  • Running sushi: This game is a source of many laughs and the same hunting experience you would find in a running sushi restaurant. The small dishes filled with sushi pieces are constantly arriving on the conveyor belt in the middle. Each player has their own dishes in front of them. When the dish coming towards you matches what’s in front of you, click on it quickly. This means you’ve got the dish, and the color of your plate changes. Find all your dishes first to win the game!
  • Battle of Colors: A tricky game where the color of the square you land on forces your opponent to only move on squares of the same color. The goal is to reach your opponent’s baseline with your pawn. You have to think about your own goal and prevent your opponent from reaching their baseline. They can move as many squares as they want horizontally, vertically, or diagonally.
  • Tree Tower: This solitaire version can be played by 4 players from all sides. You compete against each other and the clock. You need to place a card that’s one rank higher or lower than the current card, following the French card game rules: 2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-J-Q-K-A.
  • Hungary City Hunter: Who hasn’t had sweaty palms when, during geography class, they had to point to a city on a map? Our 7th grader’s class played this for 1.5 hours at a class party. A little girl whispered to me: “Just don’t let the geography teacher see, because it’s way more fun than in class!”
  • Tangram: A Japanese-origin puzzle game where you need to form a given figure from variously sized triangles. The pieces can be rotated, but it’s not as easy as it seems at first.
  • Matchstick Math: If you had a great math teacher or a playful grandparent, you know how interesting it can be to solve a problem while also paying attention to the shape of the numbers. You need to move one matchstick to make the math problem correct.
  • Checkers: This classic logic game from the old board games is still popular today, especially because the pieces don’t get lost.
  • Wordsearch: The winner is the one who forms the most words from the given letters within the time limit. However, at the end, each word has to be confirmed by the other players to score points. You can try making up words, but you need to justify them: if you explain the meaning and the others accept it, you score. You might end up explaining terms from your grandma’s dictionary, like “vine,” “threshing basket,” or “sourdough,” and she’ll learn new terms too, like “server,” “cloud,” or “sneaker.” It will turn into a nice conversation!
  • Word Builder: Form the name of a capital city or country from the given letters. The winner is the one who forms the name first. We often play several rounds of this, and the kids end up learning the capitals and countries.
  • Login Master: What colours are in what order in the puzzle that the TGT is putting together? This is for each player to guess. Many of you may know it from Generation X: it used to come in an ugly brown box with little plastic mushrooms and black and white spikes.
  • Hotel Finder: Everyone gets three hotel names in turn, and they must click on the map to point to where it might be. The player gets points based on how far off they were. The goal is to collect the fewest points. This game, originally created for the Hungarian Hotel Association’s annual conference, became so popular that we left it up on the screen after the event.
  • 2048: Patience and good situational awareness are needed to combine the 2-point tiles into larger ones. But of course, it’s a bit different here, as you have to play against others. 2-3-4 players battle it out.
  • Barricade: If you liked the game “Sorry!” you’ll love this version, full of obstacles. Of course, it might not be fun when others block your path, but you can retaliate with a good move!

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