| The Game of the Amazons (in Spanish, El Juego de las Amazonas; often called Amazons for short) is a two-player abstract strategy board
game invented in 1988 by Walter Zamkauskas of Argentina. It is a member of the territorial game family, a distant relative of
Go. El Juego de las Amazonas (The Game of the Amazons) is a trademark of Ediciones de Mente.
The Game of the Amazons is played on a 10x10 chessboard (or an international checkerboard). Although the game uses pieces with
moves like a chess queen, it is in no sense a chess variant. The two players are White and Black; each player has four
amazons, which start on the board in the configuration shown. A supply of markers (checkers, poker chips, etc.) is also
required.
Rules
White moves first, and the players alternate moves thereafter. Each move consists of two parts: moving one of one's own
amazons one or more empty squares in a straight line (orthogonally or diagonally), exactly as a queen moves in chess; it may not cross or enter a square
occupied by an amazon of either color or an arrow. After moving, the amazon shoots an arrow from its landing square to
another square, using another queenlike move. This arrow may travel in any orthogonal or diagonal direction (even backwards along
the same path the amazon just traveled, into or across the starting square if desired). An arrow, like an amazon, cannot cross or
enter a square where another arrow has landed. The square where the arrow lands is marked to show that it can no longer be used.
The last player to be able to make a move wins. Draws are impossible.
Territory and Scoring
The strategy of the game is based on using arrows (as well as one's four amazons) to block the movement of the opponent's
amazons and gradually wall off territory, trying to trap the opponents in smaller regions and gain larger areas for oneself. Each
move reduces the available playing area, and eventually each amazon finds itself in a territory blocked off from all other
amazons. The amazon can then move about its territory firing arrows until it no longer has any room to move. Since it would be
tedious to actually play out all these moves, in practice the game usually ends when all of the amazons are in separate
territories. The player with the largest amount of territory will be able to win, as the opponent will have to fill in her own
territory more quickly.
Scores are sometimes used for tie-breaking purposes in Amazons tournaments. When scoring, it is important to note that
although the number of moves remaining to a player is usually equal to the number of empty squares in the territories occupied by
that player's amazons, it is nonetheless possible to have defective territories in which there are fewer moves left than
there are empty squares. The simplest such territory is three squares bent at an angle with an amazon in the middle.
History
El Juego de las Amazonas was first published in Spanish in the Argentine puzzle magazine El Acertijo (number 4, December
1992). An approved English translation was written by Michael Keller and an article first appeared in the chess magazine
NOST-Algia. Other game publications also published the rules, and the game gathered a small but devoted following. The Internet
spread the game more widely, and it is considered by many aficionados to be one of the best and deepest abstract games.
Michael Keller wrote the first computer program to play The Game of the Amazons in 1994 (in Fortran with a text interface; a
later version was written in Visual Basic; see References). Quite a few stronger programs have been written in recent years by
various authors (see Online Play below).
An authorized version of the game appears in the Transpose collection by Kadon Enterprises.
Online Play
There are a few places on the Internet where games of Amazons are organized. Among them are:
- Little Golem (http://www.littlegolem.net), which supports rated tournaments and individual unrated games in
a 'turn-based' mode. The time control there is 10 days + 36 hours per move.
- BrainKing (http://www.brainking.com) - play Amazons in 'turn-based' mode. The server features different
time controls, tournaments, rating list and Amazons discussion board.
- Amazons can be played by email, using Richard Rognlie's Play-By-eMail Server.
- GGS (http://www.cs.ualberta.ca/~mburo/ggsa/) (Generic Game Server), which supports real-time games
for human and computer players.
- Amazong (http://jenslieberum.de/index.html)
- java applet that plays Amazons, two-fold winner of the Computer
Olympiad.
References
- Amazons at the University of Alberta (http://www.cs.ualberta.ca/~tegos/research/amazons/index.html) - AI research to create a
strong Amazons playing program, Amazons computer tournaments, a lot of interesting links about the game.
- Amazons on ChessVariants.org (http://www.chessvariants.org/other.dir/amazons.html) - history and a sample game of Amazons.
Also you can download a program for Windows, which plays Amazons game.
- Gamazon (http://www.yorgalily.org/gamazons/) - open source program, which plays Amazons (Linux
only)
- The Game of the Amazons (http://www.solitairelaboratory.com/amazons.html)
- Transpose by Kadon Enterprises (http://www.gamepuzzles.com/abstract.htm#TP)
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