Quick Othello-A MINUTE TO PLAY
iPad / Jeux
The classic board game, also known as Othello(Reversi), is a strategy board game.
Quick Othello has very strong and fast AI engine.
Compete with your family and friends.
Game Mode
- Challenge
Push your skills to the limit!
The more you win, the cleverer the artificial intelligence becomes.
Enjoy the game in line with your skills.
- Various
This is Othello with additional special rules.
Try Othello with slightly different rules, such as Othello with no-entry squares, XOT-style Othello starting from the endgame, or Othello with a revolution in the middle of the game.
- 2P
Compete against another player by taking turns on one iPhone.
- Match
You can play online against players from all over the world.
Terms of Use: https://www.apple.com/legal/internet-services/itunes/dev/stdeula/
TM & Ⓒ Othello,Co. and MegaHouse
Quoi de neuf dans la dernière version ?
This update includes internal improvements in preparation for future updates.
In future versions, some data from previous versions may no longer be transferable.
We are currently in a data migration preparation period, so please update to **version 2.1.5 or later** and **launch the app at least once** before future updates.
Launching the app once will update internal data to a format compatible with future versions.
Now, a short update from the developer.
I’ve always been more of a music listener than a player. The only instrument I had ever played was the melodica back in elementary school. About three years ago, I decided on a whim to buy an acoustic guitar, with the simple thought that “it would be cool if I could play.”
The guitar turned out to be much more challenging than I expected.
Learning chords, pressing multiple strings with my left hand, keeping rhythm with my right—my head and fingers couldn’t keep up. The sound was muddy, and I often stopped before the song even began to take shape. I quickly gave up on learning by myself and started attending a guitar lesson once a month.
The first songs I practiced were by The Beatles. They’re supposed to be great songs, but when I played them, they somehow sounded different.
My teacher said, “Everyone starts like this,” but I had no idea when that “start” phase would end.
Three years later, I’ve learned the chords I use most, and I can now play slow-tempo songs all the way through without stopping.
I still make mistakes, and my rhythm can be questionable, but it does sound like “something resembling a song.” Compared to myself three years ago, that feels like real progress.
When I practice at home, my cats look slightly annoyed, as if to say, “Could you stop that sound now?”
Interestingly, over time, my goal shifted from “I want to get better” to “I’ll just play a little today.”
Some days I play well, and other days I feel worse than the day before. Still, simply picking up the guitar and making some sound helps clear my mind.
What once felt like a challenge with no visible goal has now become part of my daily life.
Despite mildly bothering my cats, I still pick up the guitar today.
I think this relationship will continue for a while.