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Shashki 5.0.8
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 Shashki is played by two people, on opposite sides of a playing board, alternating moves.
One player has blue pieces, and the other has red pieces.
Pieces move diagonally and pieces of the opponent are captured by jumping over them.
The playable surface consists only of the dark squares. A piece may only move into an unoccupied square.
Capturing is mandatory. A piece that is captured is removed from the board. In all variants, the player who has no pieces left or cannot move anymore has lost the game.
Uncrowned pieces ("shashka") move one step diagonally forwards and capture other pieces by making two steps in the same direction, jumping over the opponent's piece on the intermediate square.
Shashka can jump side to side.
Multiple opposing pieces may be captured in a single turn provided this is done by successive jumps made by a single piece.
Shashka may also capture (diagonally) backwards.
Notice that captured pieces are removed from the board only after capturing is finished.
When shashka reach the crownhead or queens row (the farthest row forward), they become queens and acquire additional powers including the ability to move forward and backwards as far as they want in diagonals.
If a shashka touches the queens row from a jump and it can continue to jump backwards, it has to jump backwards as queen.
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| Title |
Date |
Size |
Sclezanka 1.3.7 Some pieces of two colors get mixed within the area. The game object is to drive the computer's pieces into the holes using the pieces of your color. Use real physical laws are combined with simple and intuitive game control to prove your superiority | 2007-07-26 | 493 KB | Durak 2.2.8 Durak (Fool) limits the number of players to 6. The deck of 36 cards is shuffled, and each player receives 6 cards. The top card on the remaining deck is made visible and placed at the bottom of the deck across it (so that its denomination is seen). | 2007-07-25 | 442 KB | Shashki 5.0.8 Shashki is played by two people, on opposite sides of a playing board, alternating moves. One player has blue pieces, and the other has red pieces. The player who has no pieces left or cannot move anymore has lost the game. | 2007-07-24 | 800 KB | Crossnull 2.2.8 The game is played on a 15 x 15 board. The first player places a cross piece on an empty cell by turn, the second player places a null. The one who place five pieces in a row (vertically, horizontally or diagonally) first wins. | 2007-07-23 | 415 KB | Reversi 3.0.8 Reversi are names for a strategic board game which involves play by two parties on an eight-by-eight square grid with pieces that have two distinct sides. Each of the two sides corresponds to one player, they are referred to here as red and blue. | 2007-07-21 | 416 KB |
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