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Andantino (game)

Andantino is a two-player abstract strategy[?] dynamic[?] board game invented by David Smith[?]. The game uses no fixed board; instead, the players place tiles according to the rules, creating the "board" as the game progresses.

One player is Black, and plays black tiles; the other player is White, and plays white tiles. The tiles are regular hexagons, and should have no discerning features other than their colour.

The game is played as follows:

Note that due to these required rules, the first three plays of the game are forced; using number signs to represent black tiles and zeroes to represent white tiles, after the third move the game will always look like this:
  _
 /0\_
 \_/0\
 /#\_/
 \_/

This may be rotated or reflected, but the gameplay will be identical.

There seems to be a considerable first-move advantage in Andantino; playing two games, where the players swap first play, is common.

David Smith[?]'s games commonly use a dynamic board; see Spangles[?] and Trax[?] for others.

Andantino is playable on Richard Rognlie's play-by-eMail server. Like many connection games[?], where pieces typically do not move or become captured, Andantino lends itself well to play as a pencil-and-paper game. It can be considered a considerably deeper replacement for Tic-Tac-Toe.

Reference

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump