Bimatrix games are a particular instance of strategic form games, the two player, general sum case. The Prisoner's dilemma, one of the best known problems in game theory, is an example of such a game.
For a strategic form game X,Y,A,B, the Bimatrix representation is a matrix whose entries are ordered pairs (aij,bij) of elements of the payoff matrices A and B:
(a11,b11) . . . (a1n,b1n)
. . .
. . .
. . .
(am1,bm1) . . . (amn,bmn)
For a concrete example, consider the game of Two finger morra, which has the following Bimatrix form:
+--------------+--------------+
| | |
| -2 , 2 | 3 , -3 |
| | |
+--------------+--------------+
| | |
| 3 , -3 | -4 , 4 |
| | |
+--------------+--------------+
Part of A survey of game theory- see project homenode for details and links to the print version.