This is a documentation for Board Game Arena: play board games online !

Gamehelpkalah: Difference between revisions

From Board Game Arena
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 9: Line 9:


===OBJECT===
===OBJECT===
The object of the game is to capture more stones than one's opponent.
The object of the game is to have more stones in your Kalah than your opponent does. There are three ways to put stones in your Kalah:
1) A player gets stones by placing them in regular movements into their Kalah one at a time).
2) Stones are captured by landing in your open space and your opponent has stones in the opposing hole. Stones from both holes are transfered to the Kalah.(the empty capture varient does not require the opponent to have stones in the opposing hole to claim the single stone)
3) When the opposing player has no stones on their side of the board and it is their turn to play, the game is over and all remaining stones go to your Kalah.
 
This BGA game will end when 50% +1 stones are in a single player's Kalah


===RULES===  
===RULES===  

Revision as of 08:17, 10 November 2016

EQUIPMENT

Kalah is played on a board of two rows, each consisting of six round holes that have a large store at either end called Kalah.

A player owns the six holes closest to him and the Kalah on his right side.

The board is set up with the same number of stones (or seeds) in each round hole. The Kalah is empty at the start of the game.

Beginners may start with three stones in each hole, but the game becomes more and more challenging by starting with 4, 5 or up to 6 stones in each hole.

OBJECT

The object of the game is to have more stones in your Kalah than your opponent does. There are three ways to put stones in your Kalah: 1) A player gets stones by placing them in regular movements into their Kalah one at a time). 2) Stones are captured by landing in your open space and your opponent has stones in the opposing hole. Stones from both holes are transfered to the Kalah.(the empty capture varient does not require the opponent to have stones in the opposing hole to claim the single stone) 3) When the opposing player has no stones on their side of the board and it is their turn to play, the game is over and all remaining stones go to your Kalah.

This BGA game will end when 50% +1 stones are in a single player's Kalah

RULES

At the beginning of the game, from 3 to 6 stones are placed in each hole.

Play is counterclockwise. On a turn, the player removes all stones from one of the holes under his/her control.

Moving counter-clockwise, the player drops one stone in each hole in turn, including the player's own Kalah but not his/her opponent's Kalah.

If the last stone is dropped into an opponent's hole or a non-empty hole of the player, the move ends without anything being captured.

If the last stone falls into the player's Kalah, he must move again.

If the last stone is put into an empty hole owned by the player, he captures all stones of the opposite hole together with the capturing stone and puts them in his/her Kalah. If the opposite hole is empty, nothing is captured. A capture ends the move.

END OF THE GAME

The game ends:

When a player, at his turn, is unable to move, because his no longer has any stones in any of his holes. The remaining stones are captured by his opponent.

OR

When a player collected more half of all stones in his/her Kalah.

The player who has collected most stones in his/her Kalah is declared the winner.

VARIATIONS (OPTION OF THIS ADAPTATION OF THE GAME)

«Pie rule» - Second player can take opponent's first move and change sides of the board.

«Empty Capture» - This variant permits to capture the last stone when landing in an empty hole on the player's own side even when the opposite hole of the opponent is empty.

COMMENT FROM THE DEVELOPER (stst)

THESE RULES ARE USED AT THIS ADAPTATION OF THE GAME