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About Dominoes
Dominoes
(or "dominos") generally refers to the individual or collective
gaming pieces making up a domino set (sometimes called a deck or
pack) or to the games played with these pieces. (In the area of
mathematical tilings and polysquares the word domino often
refers to any rectangle formed from joining two squares edge to
edge.)
Standard domino sets consist of 28 pieces called bones, tiles,
stones or dominoes. Each bone is a rectangular tile with a line
dividing its face into two square ends. Each end is marked with
a number of black spots (also called pips) or is blank. The
spots are generally arranged as they are on six-sided dice, but
because there are also blank ends having no spots there are
normally seven possible faces.
Standard domino sets have ends ranging from zero spots to six
spots (double six set), but specialized sets might range from
zero to nine (double nine set), zero to twelve (double twelve
set), zero to fifteen (double fifteen set), or zero to eighteen
(double eighteen set).
History
Tile games of some form have been found from around 1120 AD in China. Chinese
dominoes are longer than Western ones and are divided into two types and were
originally carved from bone or ivory with the indented pips made of ebony. Each
Chinese tile represents one of the twenty-one different permutations of throwing
two cubic dice although there are a total of thirty-two tiles since certain
dominoes are duplicated. A set of Chinese tiles is divided into two categories -
Military and Civilian. The Civilian tiles are the set of tiles that have
duplicates while the Military tiles are those that are unique. A variety of
different games were and still are played with these tiles and the much more
modern tile game of Mah-Jong evolved from Chinese Dominoes.
The game appeared first in China in in the 14th Century but the first recorded
reference in Europe is from Italy where they were played in the courts of Venice
and Naples. The tiles were originally constructed by gluing and pinning two
sheets of ebony on either side of the bone tile. This prevented cheating by
being able to see the pip value from the back of the tile in certain lights. It
also served to produce nice contrasting white pips on black background by
allowing the bone to show through holes in the ebony. The pin through the middle
of the tile became known as the "spinner", for obvious reasons. Although tiles
have not been constructed in this way for centuries, tradition has maintained
the spinner which can still be found on many modern sets. Many players feel that
it is still of benefit since it makes the tiles more easy to shuffle and
protects their faces.
Although domino tiles are clearly of Chinese inheritance, there is debate over
whether the game played by Europeans was brought by the Chinese to Europe in the
eighteenth century or, in fact, was invented independently. European dominoes
are shorter than Chinese ones and there is a single tile for each permutation of
the throw of two dice or a blank making a total of twenty-eight tiles. This is
the standard or "double-six" set and, as in China, various games can be played
with it. Double-twelve sets (91 tiles) are popular in America and Double-nine
sets (55 tiles) also exist.
The game arrived in Britain in the late 18th Century from France (possibly via
French prisoners of war) and quickly seems to have become popular in inns and
taverns at the time. The word "Domino" is French for a black and white hood worn
by Christian priests in winter which is probably where the name of the game
derives from.
Dominoes or variants of it are played in almost all countries of the world but
it is most popular in Latin America. The National English Domino and Cribbage
Championships has been organised by Keith Masters annually in Stoke on Trent
since 1985. The British National Domino and Cribbage Championships has been
organised by Keith Masters (no relation of the author) annually in Stoke on
Trent since 1985. Here are the current competition dates.
Common
domino games
Most domino games are block games or draw games. In draw games,
players draw from the boneyard when they have no matching bone.
In block games, players pass and forfeit the turn when they have
no matching bone. Otherwise, there is no difference. Both
generally consist of several hands of dominoes played until one
of the players accumulates an agreed upon number of points and
wins the series. Points are generally earned only by the first
player in each hand to go out (play his or her last bone, also
called to domino) and win the hand. The primary object is thus
to play all ones bones before an opponent does.
There are
many existing rules for determining which player is the leader
(or downer), the player to make the first play of the hand. In
some rules, the lead is determined by lottery. The bones are
shuffled face down on the table, and each player draws one bone.
The player with the highest double, or heaviest bone, or other
agreed upon prize is designated the leader. By this rule, the
leader then reshuffles the bones before the final deal. By other
rules, the final deal determines the leader. Playing the first
bone of a hand is sometimes called setting the first bone,
leading the first bone, downing the first bone, or posing the
first bone, and the bone so set, led, downed, or posed is called
the set, the lead, the down, or the pose. After the first hand,
the winner of the previous hand is usually the leader for the
next. By some rules, however, the lead rotates player to player
across hands.
After the
final shuffle the bones are dealt; each player in turn draws the
number of bones required. The stock of bones left behind is
called the boneyard, and the bones therein are said to be
sleeping. If the leader was determined by lottery, the leader
sets by placing any bone face up on the table. If the leader was
not determined by lottery, the player with the highest double
leads with that double, and if no player has a double, the hand
is reshuffled and redealt.
The next
player, and all players in turn, must play a bone with an end
that matches one of the open ends of the layout. Play continues
until one of the players goes out (and calls "out!" or
"domino!") and wins the hand or until all the players are
blocked. If all the players are blocked the player with the
lightest hand wins.
In block
games, players who cannot match on their turn must forfeit the
turn by knocking (passing)--accomplished by rapping twice on the
table or by saying, "go" or "pass". In draw games, players who
cannot match must draw bones from the boneyard until obtaining a
playable bone. According to most rules, the last two bones in
the boneyard may not be drawn. If the boneyard is exhausted
(only two bones left), the player knocks.
The
winning player scores a point for each pip on each bone still
held by each opponent. If no player went out, however, and the
win was determined by the lightest hand, the winning player
sometimes scores a point for each pip on each bone still held by
each opponent, and sometimes only the excess held by opponents.
A game is generally played to 100 points, the tally being kept
with paper and pencil or on a cribbage board.
The
origin of dominoes
Dominoes are descendants of dice. The two ends on each of the
original Chinese dominoes represented one of the 21 combinations
that can occur with the throw of two dice. Modern western
dominoes, however, have blank ends on them as well and so the
number of dominoes is generally 28. Dominoes were apparently
unknown in Europe until the 18th century and may have been
invented in their modern form in Italy. The dark spots on light
faces apparently reminded people of masquerade masks with
eyeholes (called dominoes) and thus gave the playing pieces
their name. Chinese dominoes do not have blanks, but some whole
tiles are duplicated..
Other
uses of dominoes
Other than playing games of strategy, another common pastime
using domino tiles is to stand them on edge in long lines, then
topple the first tile, which falls on and topples the second,
etc., resulting in all of the tiles falling. Arrangements of
thousands of tiles have been made that have taken several
minutes to fall. By analogy, similar phenomena of chains of
small events each causing similar events leading to eventual
catastrophe are called domino effects.
Domino
tiles and suits
Bones are generally named for the number of spots on the two
ends of the bone. A bone with a 2 on one end and a 5 on the
other end is called the 2-5, for example. Bones that have
different numbers on the two ends are called singles, and bones
that have the same number on both ends are called doublets or
doubles. Bones that share a common number of spots on one end
are said to be of the same suit. In a double-six set, for
example, 1-0, 1-1, 1-2, 1-3, 1-4, 1-5, and 1-6 all belong to the
suit of one. All singles belong to two suits. The 1-2, for
example, belongs to the suit of one and the suit of two. All
doubles belong to one suit only.
The
ranks of domino pieces
The value of each end of a bone is determined by the number of
spots on the end, with zero (blank) being the lowest and six
being the highest. The rank of a bone is determined by the
combined number of pips on the two ends. This rank is sometimes
referred to as the bone's weight so that a higher ranking bone
is called a heavier bone while a lower ranking bone is called
lighter.
Playing
a domino piece
4-6 played on 4-5The bones that are face up in play are
called the layout, chain, or line. The layout will have one or
more open ends that are available to be played upon. In most
games, there are two open ends--one at each end of a line of
bones. In some games there may be more, or there may be varying
numbers depending upon the circumstances of play. In some games,
the first doublet of each hand, often called the "sniff" or
"spinner", forms the intersection of a cross in the layout. This
usually means that there are four open ends once the doublet has
been played.
When only a single bone has been played, the two open ends are
generally the two ends of the bone. If Player A played a 4-5,
for example, there is a 4 on one open end and a 5 on the other.
The next player must usually play a bone with an end that
matches one of the open ends. Player B, therefore, must play a
bone with either a 4 or a 5, and the matching ends must touch.
If Player B plays the 4-6, the new bone is placed with the two 4
ends touching so that the new open ends are 5 and 6. Doubles are
placed crosswise and sprouted (played upon) crosswise. As the
layout grows, the two ends of the layout generally form the two
playable ends.
Other domino games
Dominoes is a game for 2 players
consisting of 28 dominos, each player gets 7 dominos. There are 3 versions of
online domino games: Five-Up (aka Muggins or All Fives), Draw and Block. Object
of the Game is to be the first person to attain the agreed-upon number of points
(100 - 500). Points may be awarded during the play of the hand by making the
exposed ends of the chain total to a multiple of five (in Five-Up). The winner
at the end of each hand also scores points for all the pips remaining in the
other player's hand. Players can also select between 7-bone hand and 9-bone
hand.
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