If a player's piece movement (or one of its sub-moves in case of a multi-roll) ends at a circle which is occupied by an opponent's piece, this piece is captured and returned to the opponent's base. When this goal is reached, all next rolls are made only with one die. In other words, a player rolls three dice per turn until a six is rolled and the first piece is placed on the board. The very first placement in the game is supported by three rolls instead of one, in order to start the game faster. The next picture demostrates a 6-6-2 roll which causes a placement to E1 (the first six), followed by a movement to C5 (the second six) and A5 (the two): In order to place a piece to the start position (the white E1 and the black G11 circle), a six must be rolled, otherwise the piece stays at the base position. The moves are made around the game board, clockwise. If a six is rolled, the player rolls the die again and both (or more) numbers are used to make a move with the selected piece. Each turn begins with a dice roll, followed by a piece movement. The goal of the game is to move all four pieces to the home position, displayed by the white - F2, F3, F4, F5 - and black - F7, F8, F9, F10 - rectangle.īoth players start the game with all four pieces at the base position (the big white - B2, C2, B3, C3 - and black - I9, J9, I10, J10 - sector). BrainKing currently provides a two player version which is displayed on the following picture (the initial position): Ludo is a classic dice-and-race game, played with four pieces per player and a set of dice.
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