L-Game With Wood Board

by Rob Cai in Living > Toys & Games

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L-Game With Wood Board

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L-game is a simple strategic board game for two players, invented by Edward de Bono.

It is composed by a 4 x 4 square board, two L pieces (one of each player) and two neutral pieces 1 x 1.

The starting arrangement is shown in the upper picture. On each turn, a player must first move its L piece and, optionally, he can move either one of the neutral pieces in a free position. The pieces cannot be overlapped and the L piece can be rotated and also flipped upside-down. The only rule is that it must be placed in a different position: it is enough just to cover at least one new square on the board. The game is won by a player when there is no free position for the opponent to place its L piece.

You can find more details and the analysis of the game on Wikipedia.

Supplies

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You just need three small wood boards, wood cutting tools, sand paper.

We cut boards with dimensions 16 cm x 16 cm, and two pieces with dimensions 12 cm x 8 cm. Each unit is 4 cm x 4 cm.

Eventually, you can use 8" x 8" and 6" x 4". In this case the unit square is 2" x 2".

After the final sending, we oiled the pieces with linseed oil to highlight the grain of the wood.

Board and Pieces

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You can build a wood version as shown in these pictures. It is a very simple wood crafting, and it is ideal as a starting project for a kid, as I did.

For the board, we cut a square piece with dimensions 16 cm x 16 cm, and engraved a grid (three horizontal lines and three vertical) with a grinding wheel for wood.

We cut two wood pieces with dimensions 12 cm x 8 cm, and then we cut the L shape. In this way you also obtain four neutral square pieces. You just need two of them, thus you can keep the other two as spare. I suggest to use a dark wood for the first L piece, and a light one for the other.

An Example of a Quick Match

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In this step I show and example of a quick match composed by only four moves.

As you can see in the third step the white L is flipped, and in the fourth step the white loses since there is no a new free position for its L-piece.

Conclusion and Variant

In principle the color of the neutral pieces does not matter, but I also realized you can play L-game with a variant rule: you use two different neutral pieces (dark and light)… well, they are no more neutral then... and the player can eventually move only the 1 x 1 square of the same color of its L piece.

Although simple, this board game is not trivial and playing and learning the strategies is more amusing of what you can believe!