PACHISI
well there is senet: a commonly played game with sticks for dice mehen: a game with a spiral pattern, and some lion shaped pieces
The game "Life" has car shaped pieces.
phiscani
theres none
Patolli is a traditional Mesoamerican board game that was played by various indigenous cultures in what is now Mexico and Central America. It is a gambling game that involves strategy and luck, often played with beans or seeds as markers. Players move their pieces around a cross-shaped board to reach the central goal while trying to block their opponents.
Pachisi
Mehen is called the Game of the Snake because the board looks like a coiled snake. The game was invented in ancient Egypt around 1000 BC. Each player has a mother space and a hyena space. There are pieces shaped like lions. They used marbles as dice.
The original game, marketed in 1935, contained four colored wooden pawns shaped like "Sorry" pieces. Parker Brothers acquired the game in 1936 and began using the die-case metal tokens in 1937.
many
Parcheesi is a classic board game that originated in India and is played with two to four players. The objective of the game is to move all of your pieces around the board and into your home base before your opponents. Players take turns rolling dice and moving their pieces accordingly. Capturing opponents' pieces and strategic blocking are key elements of the game. The first player to get all their pieces into their home base wins.
A board game piece represents a person who is playing the game (in a game such as Monopoly). Chess pieces are a bit different, they represent soldiers or leaders in a war being played out on the board. In Risk, pieces represent military units, such as battalions. Different games have different designs.
Draughts, also known as checkers, is a two-player strategy board game played on an 8x8 grid. Each player starts with 12 pieces on opposite sides of the board. The goal is to capture all of your opponent's pieces or block them from moving. Players take turns moving their pieces diagonally forward, capturing their opponent's pieces by jumping over them. The game ends when one player captures all of their opponent's pieces or blocks them from moving.