Thai. ‘Cavity board game’. A traditional board game from southern
Thailand played with
marbles, dry beans, nuts or fruit stones (mahk),
often look sawahd (ลูกสวาด), greenish gray
nuts from a kind of climber. The board consists of a elongated
wooden boat-like panel with either rounded or tapering ends and
sixteen round cavities. Fourteen of those are arranged two by two,
in a double row of seven indentions each and flanked by two larger
cavities, one on either side. These two larger holes are to collect
the winning playing pieces and are known as hua meuang (หัวเมือง)
or reuan (เรือน), the ‘village
heads’ or ‘home [base]’ respectively. The game is played with two
contestants, who sit on opposite sides and need to drop and collect
the playing pieces, gradually
moving up to the hua meuang. A countdown is given after which both
players need to quickly distributed their playing pieces by dropping
them in any of the cavities at will, but only on ones own side. This
is called deun mahk khum (เดินหมากขุม) and each time a marble, stone
or nut is dropped or collected is called kwak (ควัก). When all the
playing pieces of one player are dropped, that is called taai (ตาย).
He now has to wait for the other side to finish and when both sides
ran out of nuts, the pieces need to be collected again, starting
with the player who ran out of nuts first. Players now have to move
their marbles up to their own village head on the left side, one at
a time. If a cavity holds the same number of nuts as the cavity on
the opposite side, those nuts may now be collected by either player
whose turn it is. The one who collects the most playing pieces in
his hua meuang
wins the game. Although sometimes the game is played until one side
has no more playing pieces or less than seven which is called ko
khaad (คอขาด).
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