![]() One player will have an empty space opposite, giving them the advantage. Two opposite sides are left open.ĥ players - this is sometimes not considered a legal option. If using 2 sets, then the players set up their colors on opposite sides and must move their colors to their own opposite side.Ĥ players - this way is standard Chinese checkers. If using 1 set, then the players must move to the opposite empty star point. You can also play with multiple sets of marbles where each player plays 2 or 3 sets or colors of marbles and has to move all of them across the board to win.ģ players - 3 players can be played with 1 or 2 sets of marbles. You can move in any direction.ĭepending on the number of players there are different ways to play Chinese checkers:Ģ players - with two players you move all your marbles across the board to other player's start point. You do not have to hop over a marble if you don't want to. You can hop over your own or your opponent's marbles. See the blue path of hops in the picture below for an example. You can only jump over 1 marble at a time (for example you can't jump over 2 marbles that are next to each other), but you can do multiple jumps on the same turn as long as the hops are all lined up. The marble can be moved to an adjacent open space or may jump over other marbles that are right next to the marble. When a player takes a turn, they may move one marble. The object of the Chinese checkers is to get all of your marbles to the opposite point of the star. Each player has 10 colored marbles that start out inside the point of the star. ![]() There are lots of places in the star where marbles fit. We'll discuss the most popular way called the "hop across" version here.Ĭhinese Checkers uses a special board that looks like a six pointed start. There are some different ways to play the game. The aim of the game is to build up four stacks of cards starting with Ace and ending with King, all of the same suit, on one of the four foundations, at which time the player would have won.Chinese Checkers is a fun game to play with 2 to 6 players. Any empty piles can be filled with a King, or a pile of cards with a King. Every face-up card in a partial pile, or a complete pile, can be moved, as a unit, to another tableau pile on the basis of their highest card. The four foundations (light rectangles in the upper right of the figure) are built up by suit from Ace (low in this game) to King, and the tableau piles can be built down by alternate colors. The remaining cards form the stock and are placed facedown at the upper left of the layout. The topmost card of each pile is turned face up. ![]() The first and left-most pile contains a single upturned card, the second pile contains two cards (one downturned, one upturned), the third contains three (two downturned, one upturned), and so on, until the seventh pile which contains seven cards (six downturned, one upturned). From left to right, each pile contains one more card than the last. After shuffling, a tableau of seven fanned piles of cards are laid from left to right. Klondike is played with a standard 52-card deck, without Jokers. It is rumored that the game was either created or popularized by the prospectors in Klondike. The game rose to fame in the late 19th century, being named "Klondike" after the Canadian region where a gold rush happened. ![]() and Canada, Klondike is the best-known solitaire card game, to the point that the term "solitaire", in the absence of additional qualifiers, typically refers to Klondike. ![]()
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