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1. Overview
The present invention is a strategy game involving the insertion of square pegs into the round holes on the game surfaces of the rectangular game boxes. There are a number of prior art games involving boards and the insertion of pegs. The prior art games each use a plurality of different shaped holes in the game board and usually round pegs of varying lengths for insertion into the board holes.
2. Prior Art
The U.S. Pat. No. 5,560,605, registered Oct. 1, 1996 by Filadelfo Garcia, et. al., discloses a strategy game with a stationary platform that incorporates three peg cavities for inserting a set of three pegs, and a set of seven disks each with a different diameter. The game starts with all of the disks on a single peg arranged by diameter with the largest diameter disk on the bottom. The strategy goal is to move the same configuration of disks to another peg without putting a disk with a larger diameter over a disk with a smaller diameter.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,019,741, registered Apr. 26, 1977 by Straud D. Harriman, discloses a game of the peg-board type having levered means for ejecting playing piece dowels from predetermined playing surface holes upon the insertion of another playing piece in another predetermined hole of play. The game employs round dowels as playing pieces.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,239,230, registered Dec. 16, 1980 by Phillip L. Shoptaugh, discloses a board game that includes a plurality of three different kinds of playing pieces and a board having playing fields thereon adapted to receive each kind of playing piece. Two of the kinds of playing pieces are designed to be simultaneously played on any playing field and to be moved independently of each other to other playing fields. The third kind of playing piece is adapted to block the playing of one of the other kinds of playing pieces and to be blocked by such kind of playing piece depending on which is played first. The playing pieces are round and of several different diameters.
The present invention is completely new and unique over the prior art as set forth. In the present invention, the rectangular game box is three-dimensional with round holes in the top game surface to receive square pegs.
The game play begins with each player having a game box 10. The total number of 60 pegs, both the 10 pegs that fit game box holes 30 and the remaining 50 pegs that don't fit game box holes 40, are freely intermixed and placed in a central location, between the game players, near the game boxes 10. Each game player has a game box 10. The game play consists in each game player taking a turn, turns being taken counter-clockwise around the group of players. The first turn for the game consists in all the players first taking four pegs from the central location. The next step in the first turn is for one player to take one of their pegs and attempt to fit into the 500 point, leftmost peg hole 15.
Proceeding counter-clockwise, the next player attempts to fit one of their pegs into the 500 point, leftmost peg hole 15. Play proceeds until all four pegs of the first draw from the central location have been tried and points, if any logged on the player score sheet 60.
The next active player then selects a single peg from the central location and attempts to place the selected peg into an unoccupied peg hole, starting with the leftmost peg hole 15 and continuing to the rightmost peg hole 20 and finally to the topmost peg hole 25. If the player's peg does not fit, play proceeds counter-clockwise to the next player until all the holes on the player's game box game surface are filled, completing a round of play. At the end of the round, the player who first filled all three holes on their game box 10 gets not only the 3,000 points for doing that, but also the unused peg points (10 points for each unused peg) from the other players to yield the round total 70, which is entered on the round winner's score sheet 60. The round winner cannot use any of their own unused peg points. The other players yield their peg totals 60 to the round winner and all the game boxes 10 are then emptied of any pegs in the game boxes 10.
On completion of the round of play, all the pegs retained by the players after their attempts to fit into the game surface are then returned to the central location and mixed again. The play then proceeds as before, round by round until a single player reaches a total for all rounds of 6,000 or more points. The first player to accumulate 6,000 or more points is the game winner.
Figures
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1848598 | Barnes | Mar 1932 | A |
4019741 | Herriman | Apr 1977 | A |
4239230 | Shoptaugh | Dec 1980 | A |
5560605 | Garcia et al. | Oct 1996 | A |
6142786 | Culberson et al. | Nov 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
29715750 | Oct 1997 | DE |
2114008 | Aug 1938 | GB |