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Mega Tic-Tac-Toe 9x9

Mega Tic-Tac-Toe 9x9 at Mac App Store analyse

Alexey Kolotov
7,088 ratings · Power index: 120
Version 1.4.6
Size 19.13 Mb
Updated 8 years ago
Released 13 Dec 2011

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Description

Tic-tac-toe (noughts and crosses) 9x9 is a pencil-and-paper game for two players, X and O, who take turns marking the spaces in a 9×9 grid. The X player goes first. The player who succeeds in placing five respective marks in a horizontal, vertical, or diagonal row wins the game. In current version of game you can select between 2 types of game: 1. vs computer - easy level - hard level (in full version) 2. vs another human on the same device History An early variant of Tic-tac-toe was played in Roman Empire, around the first century BC. It was called Terni Lapilli and instead of having any number of pieces, each player only had three, thus they had to move them around to empty spaces to keep playing. The games grid markings have been found chalked all over Rome. However, according to Claudia Zaslavskys book Tic Tac Toe: And Other Three-In-A Row Games from Ancient Egypt to the Modern Computer, Tic-Tac-Toe could originate back to ancient Egypt. The different names of the game are more recent. The first print reference to "noughts and crosses", the British name, appeared in 1864. The first print reference to a game called "tick-tack-toe" occurred in 1884, but referred to "a childrens game played on a slate, consisting in trying with the eyes shut to bring the pencil down on one of the numbers of a set, the number hit being scored". "Tic-tac-toe" may also derive from "tick-tack", the name of an old version of backgammon first described in 1558. The U.S. renaming of noughts and crosses as tic-tac-toe occurred in the 20th century. In 1952, Tic-tac-toe became the first known video game, OXO (or Noughts and Crosses) for the EDSAC computer. The computer player could play perfect games of tic-tac-toe against a human opponent. In 1975, Tic-Tac-Toe was also used by MIT students to demonstrate the computational power of Tinkertoy elements. The Tinkertoy computer, made out of (almost) only Tinkertoys, is able to play Tic-Tac-Toe perfectly. It is currently on display at the Museum of Science, Boston.

Estimates

Monthly Downloads > 2.64k
Est. Revenue ~ $1.08k

Availability

Devices

iPhone3GS iPadWifi iPad3G iPhone4 iPodTouchThirdGen iPodTouchFourthGen iPad2Wifi iPad23G iPhone4S iPadThirdGen iPadThirdGen4G iPhone5 iPodTouchFifthGen iPadFourthGen iPadFourthGen4G iPadMini iPadMini4G iPhone5c iPhone5s iPadAir iPadAirCellular iPadMiniRetina iPadMiniRetinaCellular iPhone6 iPhone6Plus iPadAir2 iPadAir2Cellular iPadMini3 iPadMini3Cellular iPodTouchSixthGen iPhone6s iPhone6sPlus iPadMini4 iPadMini4Cellular iPadPro iPadProCellular iPadPro97 iPadPro97Cellular iPhoneSE iPhone7 iPhone7Plus iPad611 iPad612 iPad71 iPad72 iPad73 iPad74

Pricing by country

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Canada free
China free
France free
Germany free
Italy free
Netherlands free
Portugal free
Spain free
Poland free
UK free
India free
Japan free
Poland free
Russia free
Turkey free
USA free
Korea, Republic Of free
Ukraine free