Origami-Red identical cards
The goal of this game is to match up all the pairs of cards (or images, really). There are thirteen cards total, but you may reduce the number of pairs if you want a quicker game.
Mobile devices seem to have a problem with showing the second card before notifying you of the result. If this happens to you, please check the "Delay Message" box.
You can adjust the size of the images to some extent using the "Enlarge" and "Reduce" buttons. A mobile device may have a limit to how small it can make the images.
The game keeps track of the number of hits (matching pairs that you found), and misses (cards that you had seen but nevertheless matched up incorrectly). If you turn over two cards that do not match, you will have zero, one, or two misses: zero, if you'd never seen either card before; one, if you'd seen one card but not the other; two, if you'd seen both cards but still tried to match them in error.
The images
I folded all of the objects in this group. They are all red because I had only red paper with me, not for any artistic reasons. I've made notes in those cases where I know where I got the models.
The gryphon
The gryphon is the most complex model in this group. I found it on the Internet years ago, and the diagram I have is credited to Perry Bailey. You can't see it very well in this picture, but he has wings and a spiky tail. The spiky tail is just visible as the angled thing at the upper left.
The frog
This is traditional. You make it by folding a frog base and then angling out the legs.
The sealion
The butterfly
The owl
For some reason, this seems to be the favorite model of this whole group. It came from a book modestly entitled The World's Best Origami.
The songbird
This also came from The World's Best Origami.
The raptor
I found the diagram online at Stephen O'Hanlon's site, where he has it labeled as a procompsognathus, but that was too long for the game so I called it a raptor.
It certainly looks like some kind of predatory dinosaur, although it seems a bit heavily built for a velociraptor.
The vulture
This came from a book entitled Origami Jungle Birds.
The emu
The toucan
This also came from Origami Jungle Birds. I couldn't get it to stand up because of the tail extending down behind, and I couldn't get it to balance on a book, so I was forced to perch it on my finger for its cameo.
The angelfish
The elephant
The dog