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  2. Parcheesi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parcheesi

    Parcheesi is typically played with two dice, four pieces per player and a gameboard with a track around the outside, four corner spaces and four home paths leading to a central end space. The most popular Parcheesi boards in America have 68 spaces around the edge of the board, 12 of which are darkened safe spaces.

  3. Parqués - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parqués

    Parqués has 8 safe boxes and 96 in total; Parcheesi has 16 and 68, respectively. In Parcheesi, doublets (pairs) also have the same special purpose (getting an extra turn). Capturing is done the same way. In Parcheesi, 5 has a special meaning, allowing to get pieces out of the nest. It is different from Parqués, where 5 is a regular value.

  4. Pachisi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pachisi

    Pachisi (/ p ə ˈ tʃ iː z i / pə-CHEE-zee, Hindustani: [pəˈtʃiːsiː]) is a cross and circle board game that originated in Ancient India. It is described in the ancient text Mahabharata under the name of "Pasha". [1] It is played on a board shaped like a symmetrical cross.

  5. List of cross and circle games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cross_and_circle_games

    Has been played in India since at least the 16th century, and is considered the ancestor to many Western cross and circle games such as Ludo, Parcheesi, and Sorry!. Parcheesi: United States: Two six-sided dice Trademarked American adaptation of the Indian game Pachisi. Parchís: Spain: Single six-sided die

  6. Sorry! (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorry!_(game)

    Sorry! is a board game that is based, like the older game Ludo, on the ancient Indian cross and circle game Pachisi.Players move their three or four pieces around the board, attempting to get all of their pieces "home" before any other player.

  7. Cross and circle game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_and_circle_game

    However, later scholars have called into question our ability to assign historical precedence among randomizing activities such as divination, impartial decision-making, gambling, and game-playing, [8] and elements of his monolithic genealogy of games have been called "absurd". [4] Nevertheless, some historical connections are in evidence.

  8. Chaupar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaupar

    Fabric chausar board. Chaupar (IAST: caupaṛ), chopad or chaupad is a cross and circle board game very similar to pachisi, played in India.The board is made of wool or cloth, with wooden pawns and seven cowry shells to be used to determine each player's move, although others distinguish chaupur from pachisi by the use of three four-sided long dice. [1]

  9. Yahtzee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahtzee

    Wood [2] classifies Yacht, and a similar three-dice game called Crag, as sequence dice games. Yahtzee is similar to Yacht in both name and content. Although Yahtzee is clearly derived from Yacht, it differed from it in a number of significant ways: It introduced the upper section bonus. It included the Three of a Kind category.

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