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- Newsgroups: rec.games.abstract
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!nntp.Stanford.EDU!sccm.stanford.edu!boman
- From: boman@sccm.stanford.edu (Erik Boman)
- Subject: Re: hnefatafl and tablut
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.045406.12419@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: ?@leland.Stanford.EDU
- Organization: Scientific Computing/Computational Mathematics, Stanford
- References: <1992Dec30.041723.19059@leland.Stanford.EDU> <kleber.725702553@husc.harvard.edu>
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 92 04:54:06 GMT
- Lines: 30
-
- In article <kleber.725702553@husc.harvard.edu>, kleber@husc11.harvard.edu (Gwydden) writes:
-
- |> OK, a question about hnefetafl and Tablut-- what prevents the swedes
- |> from making a shape like
- |> Ss
- |> ss
- |> which is completely invincible according
- |> to the rules as I've seen them? (Now how do you explain *that* in terms
- |> of a simulation of real combat??)
- |>
- |> --Michael Kleber I don't have an overactive imagination...
- |> kleber@husc.harvard.edu I have an underactive reality... --EG
-
- It is correct that the attackers (Muscovites) cannot capture any of the defenders (Swedes)
- in this situation. Capture is by interception, i.e. one piece on each side of the enemy
- piece. So if the Swedes hold on to this position, the game ends in a draw.
- Recall that the goal for the Swedes is to let the king flee off the board,
- i.e. the defending player wins if there is an open row or column to the edge of the
- board for the king on his/hers turn.
-
- I do not know how likely this tie situation is to occur in a real game. It could
- be difficult for the Swedes to keep the draw if all their other pieces are captured,
- since they then would be forced to move one of the pieces in the 'invincible' square.
-
- BTW, does anybody know if there is a stalemate rule in tafl games? None of my
- sources address this issue.
-
- I refrain from discussing the analogy to real combat...
-
- Erik
-