background Ludii Portal
Home of the Ludii General Game System

   

Home Games Forum Downloads References Concepts Contribute Tutorials Tournaments World Map Ludemes About


 
Evidence in Malaya

3 pieces of evidence found.

Id DLP.Evidence.676
Type Ethnography
Game Main Chongkak
Date 1900-01-01 - 1900-12-31
Rules 2x8/2x9 board with a store on either end. Play starts with same number of counters in each hole as number of holes in the row (6 counters if 6 holes in a row, etc). Store on either end. A player's store is the store to their left. Play is clockwise; stores included when sowing. Played by women. Play begins from any hole belonging to the player. Counters are sowed clockwise: if the final counter lands in an empty hole, in player's own row, they take the counters in the opposite hole and place them in the store. If play ends in the store, they can then take counters from any of their holes and sow again. if play ends in an empty hole in the opponent's row, play ends. if play ends in a hole with counters, those are collected and sowing continues. A round ends when there are no counters left in a player's row. The opponent then takes all remaining counters and adds them to their store. Next round begins with each player taking the counters from their store and placing the same number of counters in the holes as when the game began, starting from right to left. Surplus counters are placed in the store. unfilled holes are excluded from play in this round. Play continues as before. Play continues with as many rounds as needed until one player does not have enough counters to fill a single hole.
Content "Main chongkak, again, is a game played with a board (papan chongkak) consisting of a boat-shaped block. In the top of this block (where the boat’s deck would be) are sunk a double row of holes, the rows containing eight holes each, and two more holes are added, one at each end. Each of the eight holes (in both rows) is filled at starting with eight buah gorek (the buah gorek being the fruit of a common tree, also called kĕlichi in Malacca). There are usually two players who pick the buah gorek out of the holes in turn, and deposit them in the next hole according to certain fixed rules of numerical combination, a solitary buah gorek, wherever it is found, being put back and compelled to recommence its journey down the board. A similar game is, I believe, known in many parts of the East, and was formerly much played even by Malay slaves, who used to make the double row of holes in the ground when no board was obtainable." Skeat 1900: 485-486
Confidence 100
Source Skeat, W. 1900. Malay Magic: Being an Introduction to the Folklore and Popular Religion of the Malay Peninsula. London: Macmillan and Co.

Id DLP.Evidence.1759
Type Ethnography
Game Main Dam
Date 1915-01-01 - 1915-12-31
Rules 8x8 board. Twelve pieces per player. Pieces move diagonally one space forward, and can capture opponent's pieces by jumping them if they are adjacent. Capturing must happen if it is possible. Once pieces reach the opposite side of the board from their starting position, they become kings and can move diagonally either forwards or backwards, and can capture by jumping over any number of pieces, any distance. The goal is to capture all of the opponent's pieces.
Content "The Western game od draughts has been introduced by the Dutch and bears the Dutch name of main dam. This main dam does not differ in any important detail from its European prototype (The only difference is that the crowned man (dam) can jump any distance along a line whether the intermediate spaces are occupied or not), but it is played on a native uncolored chess-board.
Confidence 100
Source Wilkinson, R. 1915. Malay Literature Part II. Kuala Lumpur: Government Press.

Id DLP.Evidence.1828
Type Ethnography
Game Apit
Date 1915-01-01 - 1915-12-31
Rules 8x8 board. An opponent's piece may be captured when it is surrounded on opposite sides by two of the player's pieces. When a player moves a piece between two of the opponent's pieces, both of the opponent's pieces are taken.
Content "Apit is played on a draught-board. If a player can plae one of his pieces on each side of a hostile piece he takes it, or if he can move one of his own between two of the enemy's he takes both." Wilkinson 1915: 57.
Confidence 100
Source Wilkinson, R. 1915. Malay Literature Part II. Kuala Lumpur: Government Press.

     Contact Us
     ludii.games@gmail.com
     cameron.browne@maastrichtuniversity.nl

lkjh Maastricht University Department of Advanced Computing Sciences (DACS), Paul-Henri Spaaklaan 1, 6229 EN Maastricht, Netherlands Funded by a €2m ERC Consolidator Grant (#771292) from the European Research Council