You have found what you were searching for...
If you want more for your analog gaming (Events, Cons, Groups, Marketplace, Collection-Management ...) , please register here for free:
Register
Eson korgool (0)
Playtime: 0
Min. Age: 0
Number of Players:
2
Publisher:
(Public Domain)
Designers:
(Uncredited)
Artists:
Unknown
Mechanics:
Mancala
This game is currently not traded on the marketplace:
This game is currently not listed on the marketplace. If you want to sell yours, please add it to the marketplace.
Marketplace
Show Description Show Comments Price Trend
A mancala game.
From Mancala World:
http://mancala.wikia.com/index.php?title=Eson_Korgool
Eson Korgool ("nine balls"), also spelled Eson Khorgol (and even found, misspelled, as Eson Xorgol), is a mancala game, which is played by the Kazakh minority in the area of Bajan Ögij in north-western Mongolia. The game was first described in 1963. Usually the holes are dug into the earth, but wooden boards do also exist.
Rules
The game is played on a board that has two rows of five holes each, although it could be played on a circular board, as there are is he holes are shared.
At the start of the game each hole contains nine dung balls, hence the name of the game.
On his turn a player picks up the contents of any hole on either side of the board and then distributes its balls in a clockwise direction (known as the direction of the sun or the male direction in Central Asia) one by one into the following holes.
A move ends after a single lap.
If the last ball is dropped into a non-empty hole, the following hole is empty, the contents of the next hole are captured.
Captures can be effected on either side of the board.
The game ends when no balls can be captured anymore.
The player who captured more balls than his opponent is the winner.
From Mancala World:
http://mancala.wikia.com/index.php?title=Eson_Korgool
Eson Korgool ("nine balls"), also spelled Eson Khorgol (and even found, misspelled, as Eson Xorgol), is a mancala game, which is played by the Kazakh minority in the area of Bajan Ögij in north-western Mongolia. The game was first described in 1963. Usually the holes are dug into the earth, but wooden boards do also exist.
Rules
The game is played on a board that has two rows of five holes each, although it could be played on a circular board, as there are is he holes are shared.
At the start of the game each hole contains nine dung balls, hence the name of the game.
On his turn a player picks up the contents of any hole on either side of the board and then distributes its balls in a clockwise direction (known as the direction of the sun or the male direction in Central Asia) one by one into the following holes.
A move ends after a single lap.
If the last ball is dropped into a non-empty hole, the following hole is empty, the contents of the next hole are captured.
Captures can be effected on either side of the board.
The game ends when no balls can be captured anymore.
The player who captured more balls than his opponent is the winner.
We currently have no price data for this game.
Related Games
ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-05-09 22:03:00.39