|
Buga-shadara, also known as Bouge Shodre, is a two-player abstract strategy board game from Tuva, a republic in Siberia, Russia. It is a hunt game where one player plays the deers (which is "buga" in the Tuva language). There are two deers usually represented as the black pieces. The boars are also referred black in this article. The other player has 24 white pieces with dogs associated to them. The board is an expanded Alquerque board, and therefore, Buga-shadara is specifically a tiger hunt game (or tiger game). What makes Buga-shadara unique among tiger games is the expansion boards on the two opposite sides of the Alquerque board. They are square, whereas most are triangle-like. A variant of the game allows for White to move one of its pieces immediately after it drops a piece in the beginning portion of the game. However, the rule gives a tremendous advantage for White. Buga-shadara is similar to Rimau-rimau especially Version B where the eight men are placed initially around the eight points of the central square, leaving the middle point vacant. Other than having slightly different board designs, there are 22 men in Version B of Rimau-rimau as opposed to 24 men in Buga-shadara. The opening play is also different. There seems to be no additional opening procedures for Buga-shadara, whereas, in Rimau-rimau, the tigers are allowed to initially remove one man from the board, and reallocate one of its tigers onto any vacant point. Furthermore, there is the optional version in Rimau-rimau to capture an odd number of enemy pieces. == Goal == White wins if it can surround and immobilize the two Deers. The deers win if they capture enough white pieces so that White can no longer immobilize them. If White is reduced to about 10 pieces, the Deers win. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Buga-shadara」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|