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Duell,also published under other names, is a two-playerboard gameplayed with dice on a board of 9×8 squares. Players take turns moving one of their dice in order to capture their opponent's pieces, with the ultimate aim of capturing the opponent's key piece to win the game. It is considered achess variant.[1]
Designed by Geoffrey Hayes, it was previously published in theUKby Denys Fisher (1975) asConquestandTheGeorge v MildredDice Gameand in Germany asTactix,in the US by Lakeside Industries asDuelland in Portugal by Dinamização/ASA asThe O Game.
Setup
editThe board is placed between the two players such that the eight rows of nine squares run left to right. The pieces are placed so that from left to right the following numbers appear face up: 5, 1, 2, 6, 1, 6, 2, 1, 5, with the "key piece" (equivalent to the king in chess, which has a "1" on each face) appearing in the middle and the 3s facing towards the controlling player.
To ensure true fairness, each die should be of the samechirality.
Gameplay
editPlayers take turns moving one piece the number of squares shown on the outermost face (at the start of that move) by "rolling" it along the direction of travel such that the uppermost number changes with each square moved. A move may optionally include a single 90-degree change in direction. Moves may not pass through existing pieces of either color.
Opposing pieces are captured by landing on the occupied square with the final move.
The game finishes when one of the players captures their opponent's key piece; the capturing player wins, or when a players' key piece lands in the opponent's "key space" (the square initially occupied by the key piece at the start of the game, in the center of the home row).
Reviews
editReferences
edit- ^Pritchard, David (2007).The classified encyclopedia of chess variants.John Beasley (editor) (2nd ed.). p. 294.ISBN978-0-9555168-0-1.OCLC225581479.
- ^"GAMES Magazine #2".November 1977.
- ^"Games and Puzzles May 1976: Issue 48".Internet Archive.25 March 2023.Retrieved4 April2023.