Order and Chaos
Order and Chaos is a variant of the game tic-tac-toe on a 6×6 gameboard. It was invented by Stephen Sniderman and introduced by him in Games magazine in 1981.[1] The player Order strives to create a five-in-a-row of either Xs or Os. The opponent Chaos endeavors to prevent this.
Game rules
Unlike typical board games, both players control both sets of pieces (Xs and Os). The game starts with the board empty. Order plays first, then turns alternate. On each turn, a player places either an X or an O on any open square. Once played, pieces cannot be moved, thus Order and Chaos can be played using pencil and paper.
Order aims to get five like pieces in a row either vertically, horizontally, or diagonally. Chaos aims to fill the board without completion of a line of five like pieces.
Rules addition
The original rules in Games magazine implied that six-in-a-row also wins. That version of the game was claimed weakly solved as a forced win for Order.[2] The inventor has subsequently suggested a new rule to better balance winning chances for both sides: Six-in-a-row does not qualify as a win. The new rule offers Chaos new defensive tactics against Order's previously "unstoppable" four-in-a-rows.[3] However, the same proof in [2] still holds, and this different version is still won for Order.
See also
References
- ^ Cassan, Ferdinand de. "Austrian Games Museum". www.ludorium.at. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
- ^ a b "solved: Order wins | Order and Chaos". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
- ^ "order and chaos solved? | Order and Chaos". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 2017-07-09.