The classic game of “checkers” has been varied in many ways over the years. It is usually a two-person game in which one-half of the classic checkerboard comprising 32 squares—16 of one color (usually black) and 16 of another color (usually red)—is the domain of one player and the other one-half is the domain of a second player.
There are variations of checkers for more than two players, but few are for three players.
There are variations of checkers and other board games that have been implemented on personal computers, on a host network or in an integral small device for a single player, typically, to play against the device. It is contemplated that the version of checkers disclosed herein may also be so implemented using appropriate software or a suitable microchip to allow the device to take the part of two of the three players.
The present variation of the classic checkers board game makes changes in the game and how it is played, but includes the possibility of using conventional checker pieces (albeit in three colors instead of two) or using other types of pieces as “checkers.”
This invention consists of a game board and rules that allow three players simultaneously to play a game based on the traditional game of checkers. The game board provides a Home Base for each of three players (instead of two, as in traditional checkers) separated by a triangular Battle Zone in which the game pieces are allowed more freedom of movement than in their Home Bases. The object of the game is, as in traditional checkers, to avoid capture so that you have pieces remaining on the gameboard after all pieces of both opponents have been captured. The invention includes a second variation that uses a gameboard in which the Battle Zone is configured in a different manner.
The present game features a gameboard made up of three equivalent rectangles, each attached along their longer axes to a side of an equilateral triangle that forms the center of the board. Each rectangle, called a “Base,” is divided into four rows of eight squares, one-half of which are the same “dark” color and the other half of which are the same “light” color. The squares alternate by color so that no dark square is adjacent to another dark square. The squares of each Base are marked with a device in a color to identify that Base with the pieces for which that Base is “Home” and to differentiate that Base from the Home Base of the other players. The triangle at the center of the board, called the “Battle Zone,” is composed of three concentric equilateral triangles made up of discs the color of the dark squares in the Bases. The background of the Battle Zone is the same color as the light squares in the Bases. Each of the discs is approximately the same diameter as the length of a side of the squares. There are 36 discs in the Battle Zone, with the outermost triangle having eight discs to a side, the central triangle being made up of only three discs, and the remaining triangle having four discs to the side. (
A set of twelve game pieces, or “checkers” is assigned to each player. The checkers are all the same color, but each set of twelve is marked with a device in the same color as the identifying color of one of the three Bases to identify that set of pieces as belonging to that Base. The pieces can resemble classical checkers—cylinders with a diameter approximately three times their height—or other objects, so long as the design and/or color device of each set of twelve pieces is sufficient to identify the members of that set of twelve pieces with each other, to differentiate them from the members of the other two sets, and to allow for signification that a piece has attained the status of a “King.” The sets of pieces, or checkers, can be made of wood, plastic, metal or other materials.
In playing, each player sits directly behind the Base whose pieces he or she is to play. The player's pieces are aligned, one to a square, on the dark squares of the three rows of the Base closest to the player, leaving the row of each Base adjacent to the Battle Zone empty at the beginning of play. Inside the Bases, the game is played only on the dark squares, and no player's pieces can ever occupy the the light squares.
The players select the method by which they will determine which of them plays first, with one method being the rolling of dice, with the player rolling the highest number beginning play. After the beginning player's turn, play passes to the next player in a counterclockwise direction. During a turn, a player may move only one of the player's pieces.
Unless the piece has been “crowned” or attained the status of a “King,” as hereinafter described, a piece while inside a Base (either the player's Home Base or the Home Base of another player), may be moved only in a forward direction, that is, away from the player. While inside a Base, and except when executing a “jump” or series of “jumps,” a piece may move only to an unoccupied dark square diagonally adjacent to and forward from the dark square occupied by that piece. If a dark square diagonally adjacent to and forward from the square occupied by the piece is occupied by a piece of an opponent, the player may capture the opponent's piece, if the dark square diagonally adjacent to and forward of the the opponent's piece and on the same diagonal with the player's piece, is unoccupied. The player achieves this capture by moving the piece across the opponent's piece diagonally to the unoccupied dark square, a move called a “jump.” The player then removes the captured opponent piece from the board. If immediately after an initial jump, the jumping piece occupies a square that is diagonally adjacent to a forward square occupied by an opponent's piece and the next forward square on the same diagonal is not occupied, the player may continue his move by jumping the second opponent piece, a move called a “double jump.”
In addition to the fact that there can be three players, the primary difference between the present game and traditional checkers is the presence of the Battle Zone and the method of play therein.
A player's piece enters the Battle Zone from the player's Home Base by moving forward to any unoccupied directly or diagonally adjacent dark disc (
Inside an opponent's Base, the piece moves forward only, in the same manner as inside its Home Base, toward the last row of the opponent's Base. Upon reaching this last row, piece is “crowned” and becomes a “King.” To signify that a piece has been crowned, one of that player's pieces that has been captured by an opponent and removed from play is stacked atop or otherwise attached to the piece being crowned and thereafter the attached or stacked pieces are moved together. The movements of a King differ from those of other pieces only in that a King may move diagonally forward or backward inside any Base that it occupies. This ability to move forward or backward on the diagonal makes it possible for a King to execute a Triple Jump or Quadruple Jump or even more complex moves so long as opponents' pieces are aligned to allow such moves. Inside the Battle Zone, the King moves in the same manner as any other piece. A King can only be jumped by an opposing King.
Play continues until only one player has pieces remaining on the board.
In a second version of this game, the Battle Zone is comprised of only two concentric equilateral triangles, one with eight dark discs to a side and the other with five dark discs to a side. The central area framed by these triangles is empty and is called the “Mine Field.” (
Play of the game differs for the second version only with regard to movements related to the Mine Field. Because a player's piece in the Battle Zone cannot be moved parallel to the long side of the Player's Base, each piece must pass through the Mine Field on its way to an opponent's Base. A piece may not come to rest in the Mine Field, but must pass into and out of it in a single move. (
Play of the second version is more difficult than the first version because the Battle Zone is more constricted.