Fanorona (1680)

ag.gameitem.AGID:
Playtime: 20
Min. Age: 7
Number of Players:
2
ag.gameitem.publisher:
L'Impensé Radical,
Giseh Verlag,
La Mèche Rebelle Editions,
Mitra,
nestorgames,
Taş Devrı Oyuncak,
Lemery Games,
A Toi De Jouhet,
Das Spiel,
Northwest Corner, Inc.,
Oficina do Aprendiz,
Regionalia Verlag GmbH,
3Joy Games,
Parker Brothers,
NewVenture Games,
Fratelli Fabbri Editori (Fabbri Editore),
(Public Domain),
L. P. Septímio,
Origem,
Geoludie,
Oak Games,
Gerhards Spiel und Design,
Dujardin,
Murmel Spielwerkstatt und Verlag AG,
Moskito GmbH
Designers:
(Uncredited)
Artists:
(Uncredited),
Lívia Varga,
Néstor Romeral Andrés,
Julien Torsat
Mechanics:
Grid Movement
Beschreibung
Fanorona is a classical two-person strategic abstract game that comes from the island of Madagascar and is still popular there today. It is played on a rectangular board made up of two Alquerque boards with 22 plain black and white pieces. Capturing is compulsory and a series of captures may be made by the same piece on a turn, as in checkers. Unique aspects of the game include its method of capture (either approaching or withdrawing your piece from a line of enemy pieces), and the "vela partie" (debt game) after winning a decisive game (the winner must let the loser "eat" one man each turn for 17 consecutive moves). Because of the density of the board (only one open spot at the games beginning) and the unique method of capture, strategy is complex and enigmatic, with fewer pieces often beating more pieces. (While very different, the game feels somewhat like Zertz due to the above.)
Historical note from one game box: Some Fanorona matches were devoted to the Gods and last but not least the fate and colonialization of Madagascar (1895) supposed to be solved unbloody with Fanorona on the game table.
Fanorona is a classical two-person strategic abstract game that comes from the island of Madagascar and is still popular there today. It is played on a rectangular board made up of two Alquerque boards with 22 plain black and white pieces. Capturing is compulsory and a series of captures may be made by the same piece on a turn, as in checkers. Unique aspects of the game include its method of capture (either approaching or withdrawing your piece from a line of enemy pieces), and the "vela partie" (debt game) after winning a decisive game (the winner must let the loser "eat" one man each turn for 17 consecutive moves). Because of the density of the board (only one open spot at the games beginning) and the unique method of capture, strategy is complex and enigmatic, with fewer pieces often beating more pieces. (While very different, the game feels somewhat like Zertz due to the above.)
Historical note from one game box: Some Fanorona matches were devoted to the Gods and last but not least the fate and colonialization of Madagascar (1895) supposed to be solved unbloody with Fanorona on the game table.
Verwandte Spiele
ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-04-28 10:03:41.784