When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of mancala games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mancala_games

    The most widely played games are probably [according to whom?]: Bao is a complex strategy game of Kenya and Tanzania, played on a 4×8 board. Kalah is the ruleset usually included with commercially available boards; however, the game is heavily biased towards the first player, and it is often considered a children's game. The board is 2×6 with ...

  3. Mancala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mancala

    Board configurations vary among different games but also within variations of a given game; for example Endodoi is played on boards from 2×6 to 2×10. The largest are Tchouba ( Mozambique ) with a board of 160 (4×40) holes requiring 320 seeds, and En Gehé ( Tanzania ), played on longer rows with up to 50 pits (a total of 2×50=100) and using ...

  4. Mangala (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangala_(game)

    Mangala is a traditional Turkish mancala game. [2] It is strictly related to the mancala games Iraqi Halusa , Palestinian Al-manqala , and Baltic German Bohnenspiel . There is also another game referred as Mangala played by the Bedouin in Egypt , and Sudan , but it has quite different rules.

  5. Kalah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalah

    The game provides a Kalah board and a number of seeds or counters. The board has 6 small pits, called houses, on each side; and a big pit, called an end zone or store, at each end. The object of the game is to capture more seeds than one's opponent. At the beginning of the game, four seeds are placed in each house. This is the traditional method.

  6. Aw-li On-nam Ot-tjin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aw-li_On-nam_Ot-tjin

    Aw-li On-nam Ot-tjin (or simply Otjin) is a traditional mancala game played by the Penihing people of Borneo. The first transcription of the rules of the game was completed by norwegian ethnographist Carl Sofus Lumholtz. Despite its origin, Otjin is similar to african mancalas such as Ba-awa and quite different than most Asian mancalas.

  7. Oh-Wah-Ree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oh-Wah-Ree

    There are many different Oh-Wah-Ree variations which have their own rules and win conditions. In each version, pebbles are divided equally between the 12 pits. On their turn, a player chooses any one of the pits marked by a marker of their colour and scoops all the pebbles out of it, dropping them one at a time clockwise into adjacent pits.

  8. Enkeshui - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enkeshui

    Both players take all the seeds from one of their pits and relay-sow them concurrently. The first player who finishes sowing will be the first to play in the remainder of the game. Notice that since the initial race is concurrent, its outcome is quite unpredictable. Thus, each game will actually begin (after the race) with a different initial ...

  9. Latho - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latho

    Latho is a traditional solitaire game played by the Dorzé people of Ethiopia. The equipment needed to play the game is similar to that used for mancala games, i.e., a board with 2 rows of 6 "pits", and 30 counters ("seeds"). The game was first described by British academic Richard Pankhurst in 1971.

  1. Related searches mancala solitaire game rules for different solitaires one piece 3 6 5 creedmoor review

    mancala board games pdfmancala board
    mancala gamemangala rules
    mancala games list