The Egyptian board game you are referring to is called senet, which means game of passing. It is also known as the oldest board game in the world, first found in burials in 3500 BC.
No one knows for sure what the rules of game-play are, though some historians have tried to make guesses. It is still manufactured and sold today; the rules vary by each company.
they beat them with sticks
No the toys in your question came out in the 1950's and 60's, but children in ancient Egypt played with large hoops of dried grapevines.
Ancient Egypt. Please edit this answer if you have the actual answer. I don't actually know the correct answer.
Basketball can be played pretty much anywhere in the world. Egypt...why not?
the Nileplayed the part in the death proscess in ancient egypt by having the body washed in it
they beat them with sticks
No the toys in your question came out in the 1950's and 60's, but children in ancient Egypt played with large hoops of dried grapevines.
Ancient Egypt. Please edit this answer if you have the actual answer. I don't actually know the correct answer.
the most famous eygption game is senet it is a game where you throw the sticks then move the counters if you hit somewone elses counter you swap places and you must land on the 26th square
Basketball can be played pretty much anywhere in the world. Egypt...why not?
the Nileplayed the part in the death proscess in ancient egypt by having the body washed in it
Almost. Australian aboriginal boomerangs are specially-shaped flat, blade-like throwing sticks used to hunt wild animals - if thrown correctly they will return to the thrower.In ancient Egypt, throwing sticks were also used. In hieroglyphs, they are called amaAt, "throw-sticks" (the a and A represent consonants not present in English, not the vowel "a"). These were simply curved natural sticks and were not designed to return to the thrower, so in that sense they were not like boomerangs.
They played games and did chores and stuff!
they played around and some of the kids where slaves
That question makes absolutely no sense at all. :/
A Nome in ancient Egypt is was a subnational administrative division of ancient Egypt.
Egypt's Ancient Capital.