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Gameboards

There are various Geeklists that try to seriously characterize games by what type of gameboard the game uses. Innumerable whimsical lists have been avoided.

N x N Checkerboard

For this series of boards only half, the dark squares, or the NxN checkerboard are used so there are (N^2)/2 spaces on which to play men on an even board, (N^2+1)/2 on an odd board.

N x N Square grid

For this set of games the game should be played in the cell of NxN grid. The overall complexity of the game depends on the number of men, and the overall size of the board which determines the number of playing positions.

While perhaps somewhat confusing at first, games should be considered as if they were played in the cells rather than on the points. This can no doubt be a controversial issue, but the idea is to keep games of the same general complexity together. It doesn’t matter much for large gameboards, but for small gameboards the issue is significant.

(1) The standard Go Board is 18x18 cells, but Go is played on the points of the grid, so it is equivalent to a 19x19 placement grid.

N x (N+1) Grid

Not many such boards so just one list.

N x (N+2) Grid

Not many such boards so just one list.

NxN Games

  • (? future list of games that can be played on a NxN board for any size N.)

Cubical grid

Hexagonal Board divided into hexagons

With the edges of the small hexagons at 0º and 60º to the edges of the large hexagon (instead of 30º and 90º), a different series of boards is possible (1, 13, 43, 91, 157, 241, ...):

Also for tiling games that tile the planar to create boards with irregular shapes:

Triangular Board

This may need to be split by board size if a lot of entries are obtained.
(Note that is does not include games that tile the plane with triangles producing any sort of figure.)

Hexagonal Board divided into Triangles

For this set of games the game should be played in the cell of the triangle and not on the points (which would be equivalent to playing in hexagons).

(For now this list is small and hasn't been subdivided...)

Misc Geeklist about the Gameboard

Dot & Boxes Games

These are typically, but not necessarily played on a rectangular grid.

Games which only have a vertical gameboard

Gameboards which extend in a vertical direction (eg by stacking...)

Games played on a vertical gameboard

Games which are played in 3 dimensions

Games played by stacking Spheres

Games played by stacking Cubes

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