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Board Game Entry
Information
Designed By
Art By
Published By
Year Published
550
# of Players:
2 − 2
User Suggested # of Players
Best with 2 players
Recommended with 2 players
(13 voters) [poll]
Playing Time
10 minutes
Mfg Suggested Ages
5 and up
User Suggested Ages
5 and up
(3 voters) [poll]
Language Dependence
No necessary in-game text
(7 voters) [poll]
Category
Mechanic
Primary Name
Mancala
Alternate Names
Adi
Ajua
Apfelklau
Arcana
Awalé
Bantumi
Congkak
Kalah
Kalaha
Man-Kalah
Mandinka
Mankala
Oriënt Kuiltje Kiezel-spel
Sahara
Sungka
Wari
Expanded By Show Expansions »
Families
Description Edit | History

Mancala is not one game, but a family of pit-and-pebble games. Play involves scooping up pebbles from a pit and sowing the pebbles, one at a time, into the other pits. These games were probably created in Africa hundreds (if not thousands) of years ago.

A "standard" Mancala board is composed of six pits on each side of the board, and a larger scoring pit on each side. Two players sit across from each other over the board. The large scoring pit to each player's right is "her" scoring pit.

Online Play

More Information Edit | History

In the west, the most common game sold commercially as “Mancala” includes the rules for the Mancala Game of Kalah. Kalah was introduced to the west by William Julius Champion Jr.

Kalah is played on a board of 2 rows x 6 pits. The two scoring pits on each end are used in play. The commercial sets start the game with 4 pebbles in each pit (but you can also start with 3, 5, or 6 pebbles in each pit as variants). If you sow the last pebble onto your side of the board in an empty pit, you capture all of the pebbles on the opponent’s side of the board in the pit opposite of the one you sowed your last pebble into. If you sow your last pebble into your scoring pit, you can take another turn.

One of the most common Mancala games played in Africa is the game of Oware. It has an international organization, "The Oware Society," which sets standards for international tournaments. Oware is generally considered to require more skill than Kalah. Oware is also played on a board of 2 rows x 6 pits, and also starts with 4 pebbles in each pit; Oware can easily be played with the sets sold commercially in the west as "Mancala."

Microbadge:

http://files.boardgamegeek.com/images/microbadges/mb_Mancalafan.gif Mancala fan

Contents (Typical Mancala Board Sold Commercially):

  • Mancala Board (2 x 6 Holes)
  • 48 Stones

Images
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Files
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0 Gabata
Gabata, by Damian Walker. Traditional Board Game Series. Leaflet #31.
2009-03-30
1 joe.pdf
Three games one page
2007-05-14
4 Wari
Wari, by Damian Walker. The Traditional Board Game Series, Leaflet #5.
2006-10-11
1 Awale-rules.DOC
Awale rules
2005-08-29
0 Kalahavejl.pdf
Danish and Swedish rules
2005-01-18
Statistics
User Rank: 2119
Num Ratings: 1708
Average Rating: 5.87
Standard Deviation: 1.42
Num Views: 60564
GeekBuddy Analysis: Analyze
Similarly Rated: View
Avg. Game Weight: 1.7 moreinfo
Fans: 6
Personal Comments: 626
Users Owning: 2208
Users Wanting: 7
Users Trading: 50
Has Parts For Trade: 0
Want Parts In Trade: 0
Price History: View
Total Plays: 3188
Plays This Month: 1
User Information
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