Log in / create account Page Discussion Edit History Go to the site toolbox

Linear Chaos

From BluWiki

The board must be completely full, and it must contain more red �lines� than blue �lines�. A �line� is defined here as a straight row of at least X stones (the Pattern Inventor chooses X). Note that a line can be oriented in any of three directions on the board (labeled A, B, and C in the picture below). The number of lines on the board are calculated by counting lines in each of the three directions independently. This means that a single stone can be a part of three separate lines (one in each direction). Also, lines which are longer than the minimum length X count only as a single long line, not as multiple shorter lines running in the same direction. For example, let�s say that in a particular game, X=4. Let�s say also that there is a line of 8 red stones in a row on the board. This counts as only one 8-stone line, not as two 4-stone lines. An example of a finished game and score calculation is given below:


Figure 1


Let�s say that in this game, X=4. The table below gives the number of red and blue lines in each direction:

Red Blue
A 6 4
B 5 2
C 4 2
Totals 15 8


In this case, there are more red lines (15) than blue ones (8), so the builder wins.

Site Toolbox:

GNU Free Documentation License 1.2
This page was last modified on 31 December 2007, at 01:50. - This page has been accessed 532 times.
Disclaimers - About BluWiki