users to have a convenient way to use the command line. Aside from
providing a way to use a powerful shell, Konsole also offers features
that make it easier or more pleasurable to work in the command line,
such as profile management, scrollback, and color schemes, including
translucency for effects.
Konsole also provides an embedded KPart terminal which is used by
apps such as Yakuake, Dolphin, and Kate, giving users a consistent
and familiar interface when working in the command line.
planets by sending ships to them. The goal is to build an interstellar
empire and ultimately conqueror all other player's planets. Konquest
can be played against other people or a computer.
board which represents the sea. Players try to hit each others ships
in turns without knowing where they are placed. The first player
to destroy all ships wins the game.
It has built in a powerfull parser. You can plot different functions
simultaneously and combine their function terms to build new
functions. KmPlot supports functions with parameters and functions
in polar coordinates. Several grid modes are possible. Plots may
be printed with high precision in correct scale.
KolorLines has been inspired by well known game of Color Lines, written
for DOS, by Olga Demina, Igor Ivkin and Gennady Denisov back in 1992.
The goal of KolorLines is quite plain. The player has to move the
colored balls around the game board, gathering them into the lines of
the same color by five. Once the line is complete it is removed from the
board, therefore freeing precious space. In the same time the new balls
keep arriving by three after each move, filling up the game board.
KolorLines cannot be won, and is played against the high score
exclusively. The game ends once the whole game board is filled up
with balls.
syllables in different languages. It is meant to help learning the
very first sounds of a new language, for children or for adults.
Currently 25 languages are available: Arabic, Czech, Brazilian
Portuguese, Danish, Dutch, British English, English, English Phonix,
French, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Kannada, Hebrew, Hindi
Romanized, Low Saxon, Luganda, Malayalam, Norwegian Bokml, Punjabi,
Spanish, Slovak, Ukrainian and Telugu, you can choose them using
the Languages menu. A toolbar with the special characters per
language is provided if you don't have the correct country keyboard
or the keyboard layout to be able to display correctly the accented
letters.
computer or a friend - or you can set up a game between two computer
players and just watch.
The playing area is a box of cubes containing points. When the game
starts each cube has one point, no owner and a neutral color. If
you click on a neutral cube it becomes yours, changes to your color
and increases by one point. Your objective is to capture all the
cubes, but now it is your opponent's turn.
* Search with English keyword, Japanese reading, or a Kanji
string on a list of EDICT files.
* Search with English keyword, Japanese reading, number of
strokes, grade number, or a Kanji on a list of KANJIDIC files.
* Comes with all necessary files.
* Limit searches to only common entries.
* Nested searches of results possible.
* Compact, small, fast interface.
* Global KDE keybindings for searching highlighted strings.
* Browse Kanji by grade.
It is part of the KDE Education Project.
played by as many as six players. Participants have to collect
points by rolling five dice for up to three times per single turn.
Each roll generates a specific combination of numbers which the
player is free to either accept or decline. However, each specific
combination of numbers can be accepted only once. After thirteen
turns the game ends and the scores are compared. The player with
the largest amount of points wins the game.
robots and why they have been programmed to destroy, no one knows.
All that is known is that the robots are numerous and their sole
objective is to destroy you. Fortunately for you, their creator has
focused on quantity rather than quality and as a result the robots
are severely lacking in intelligence. Your superior wit and a fancy
teleportation device are your only weapons against the never-ending
stream of mindless automatons.
(Japanese), weiqi or wei ch'i (Chinese) or baduk (Korean). Go is noted
for being rich in strategic complexity despite its simple rules.
The game is played by two players who alternately place black and white
stones (playing pieces, now usually made of glass or plastic) on the
vacant intersections of a grid of 19x19 lines (9x9 or 13x13 lines for
easier flavors).
word letter by letter. At each miss, the picture of a hangman
appears. After 10 tries, if the word is not guessed, the game is
over and the answer is displayed. A hint can be shown to help you
guess the word.
The words are nouns and available in several languages at the moment
including English US, Bulgarian, Catalan, Czech, Danish, German,
Greek, British English, Spanish, Estonian, Finnish, French, Irish
(Gaelic), Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian (Bokml), Dutch, Norwegian
(Nynorsk), Occitan, Punjabi, Polish, Portuguese, Brazilian Portuguese,
Russian, Slovenian, Serbian, Slovak, Swedish, Tajik, Turkish and
Ukrainian. The program will detect which languages are present and
enable them. You will also be able to easily download other languages
via the Get New Stuff dialog.
There are at least 4 categories per language: easy, medium, hard
and animals which contains only animals nouns.
about the political divisions of some countries (divisions, capitals
of those divisions and their associated flags if there are some).
It is part of the KDE Education Project.
game. The players try to build up a row of four pieces using different
strategies. Pieces are placed on a board. The game can also be
played against a computer.
It is played on a field, surrounded by walls, with two or more balls
that move about in the field bouncing off of walls. The player can
build new walls, decreasing the size of the active field.
falling blocks in a way that lines are completely filled. When a
line is completed it is removed, and more space is available in the
play area. When there is not enough space for blocks to fall, the
game is over.
the levels escaping ghosts in a maze. You lose a life when a ghost
eats you, but you can eat the ghosts for a few seconds when eating
an energizer. You win points when eating pills, energizers, and
bonus, and you win one life for each 10,000 points. When you have
eaten all the pills and energizers of a level, you go to the next
level, and the player and ghost speeds increase. The game ends when
you have lost all your lives.
author played as a child. A word is picked at random and displayed with
its letters in a messed order, with difficulty dependent on the chosen
level. You have an unlimited number of attempts, and scores are kept.
used in two different ways: Scoring a manual game where you play as
always and use Kajongg for the computation of scores and
for bookkeeping. Or you can use Kajongg to play against any combination
of other human players or computer players.
If you are looking for Mah Jongg solitaire, use the kmahjongg package.