![]() It’s easy to set up, the materials are cheap and simple, and the game doesn’t take long to play. The actual origin of the game is not known, but this strategy game has endured the test of time due both to simplicity of rules and depth of strategy in the gameplay. It was known to be popular in ancient Roman times, and apparently also had a large following through the medieval era in Europe. The game ends when one of the players is reduced to two pieces, and cannot any longer form mills, or if a player has no legal moves to make, making their opponent the winner in either situation.Here’s a quick overview of how to play Nine Men’s Morris, a traditional strategy game that has been around for thousands of years.If the players agree not to play phase 3 then they continue playing phase 2 until the end of the game. Phase 3 is optional and is considered a variation of the game to give an advantage to the losing opponent once they only have one piece left.In phase 3, the limitation of moving only to an adjacent dot is removed, and both players can move their pieces to any available dot, even if that requires skipping dots or jumping over other pieces.When one of the players has been reduced down to 3 last pieces, phase 2 ends and phase 3 begins.Optional Phase 3: Flying the men across the board.If this happens it is considered as if they formed a new mill and they get to remove one of the opponent’s pieces. A player is allowed to move a piece out of a mill and then moving it back on the next move to form the mill again.In the second phase pieces can only move to an adjacent dot, and pieces cannot jump over each other or skip dots if more than one are available in a row.Once all of the pieces have been placed onto the board, the players begin moving their pieces, in alternating moves, one dot at a time to try to form mills in the same fashion as in the first phase.The act of removing an opponent’s piece after forming a mill is called, “pounding”.If they form more than one mill, then they get to remove as many of the opponent’s pieces, as the number of mills that they formed. Players can form more than one mill in a single move by strategically placing their pieces.If all of the opponent’s pieces form a mill, then none of the opponent’s pieces can be removed. The piece removed has to be not in a mill itself. However, if a mill was formed anyway, then the player who formed a mill gets to remove one of the opponent’s pieces, of their choice, from the board. During this phase each player tries to prevent the opponent from forming a mill.The players take turns placing one piece at a time onto the board, onto the empty dots.Phase 1: Placing the men onto the board.Players decide who goes first either by agreement or by lot, such as toss of a coin. ![]() The game begins when all pieces are off the board.To form a mill, the pieces can be placed either horizontally or vertically, but not at at a 90 degree angle, and they must be connected by lines. Each player tries to form a “mill”, which is 3 of their pieces in one row connected by the line.Each player has 9 pieces, called “men” of a given color.The board consists of a grid of 3 squares one inside the other, with lines connecting the 24 intersections on which pieces can be placed.
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