Ludo (Board game)

by Ekraft

free


not available



Ludo boardSpecial areas of the Ludo board are typically coloured bright yellow, green, red, and blue...

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Ludo boardSpecial areas of the Ludo board are typically coloured bright yellow, green, red, and blue. Each player is assigned a colour and has four tokens of matching colour (originally bone discs but nowadays tokens made of cardboard or plastic). The board in Ludo is normally square with a cross-shaped game track, with each arm of the cross consisting of three columns of squares—usually six squares per column. The middle columns usually have five squares coloured, and these represent a players home column. A sixth coloured square not on the home column is a players starting square. At the centre of the board is a large finishing square often composed of triangles in the four colours atop the players home columns – thus forming "arrows" pointing to the finish.
Ludo RulesTwo, three, or four may play Ludo. At the beginning of the game, each players tokens are out of play and staged in one of the large corner areas of the board in the players colour (called the players yard  ). When able to, the players will enter their tokens one per time on their respective starting squares, and proceed to race them clockwise around the board along the game track (the path of squares not part of any players home column). When reaching the square below his home column, a player continues by racing tokens up the column to the finishing square. The rolls of a cube die control the swiftness of the tokens, and entry to the finishing square requires a precise roll from the player. The first to bring all their tokens to the finish wins the Ludo game. The others often continue play to determine second-, third-, and fourth-place finishers.
Each player rolls the die, the highest roller begins the game. The players alternate turns in a clockwise direction.
To enter a token into play from its staging area to its starting square, a player must roll a 6. If the player has no tokens yet in play and does not roll a 6, the turn passes to the next player. Once a player has one or more tokens in play, he selects a token and moves it forward along the track the number of squares indicated by the die roll. Players must always move a token according to the die value rolled, and if no move is possible, pass their turn to the next player.
When a player rolls a 6 he may choose to advance a token already in play, or alternatively, he may enter another staged token to its starting square. The rolling of a 6 earns the player an additional ("bonus") roll in that turn. If the additional roll results in a 6 again, the player earns an additional bonus roll. If the third roll is also a 6, the player may not move a token and the turn immediately passes to the next player.
A player may not end his move on a square he already occupies. If the advance of a token ends on a square occupied by an opponents token, the opponent token is returned to its owners yard. The returned token may only be reentered into play when the owner again rolls a 6. Unlike Pachisi in Ludo, there are no "safe" squares on the game track which protect a players tokens from being returned. A players home column squares are always safe, however, since no opponent may enter them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludo_(board_game)
Features:- well known Ludo game - nice graphics- fun for up to 4 players on 1 machine- computer Ai