Archive for June 23rd, 2024

The Basics of Backgammon Game Plans – Part 1

The aim of a Backgammon match is to move your chips around the Backgammon board and get those pieces from the board quicker than your opponent who works harder to attempt the same buthowever they move in the opposite direction. Winning a round of Backgammon requires both tactics and luck. Just how far you can shift your checkers is up to the numbers from tossing the dice, and just how you shift your chips are decided on by your overall playing techniques. Players use a few tactics in the different stages of a match depending on your positions and opponent’s.

The Running Game Technique

The goal of the Running Game tactic is to lure all your chips into your inside board and pull them off as quickly as you can. This technique concentrates on the pace of moving your checkers with little or no efforts to hit or block your opponent’s chips. The best scenario to employ this tactic is when you think you might be able to move your own pieces faster than your opponent does: when 1) you have a fewer checkers on the game board; 2) all your chips have moved beyond your competitor’s checkers; or 3) the opponent doesn’t employ the hitting or blocking tactic.

The Blocking Game Technique

The main aim of the blocking technique, by the name, is to block the competitor’s pieces, temporarily, not fretting about shifting your pieces rapidly. As soon as you’ve established the blockade for the competitor’s movement with a few checkers, you can shift your other pieces swiftly off the game board. You really should also have a good strategy when to withdraw and shift the checkers that you utilized for the blockade. The game becomes interesting when the opposition utilizes the same blocking tactic.

 

The Essential Details of Backgammon Tactics – Part 2

As we dicussed in the previous article, Backgammon is a game of skill and pure luck. The goal is to move your pieces carefully around the board to your inside board and at the same time your opposing player moves their checkers toward their inner board in the opposing direction. With opposing player checkers moving in opposing directions there is going to be conflict and the need for particular techniques at specific times. Here are the last 2 Backgammon plans to round out your game.

The Priming Game Plan

If the purpose of the blocking strategy is to slow down the opponent to move his checkers, the Priming Game strategy is to completely stop any activity of the opposing player by creating a prime – ideally 6 points in a row. The opponent’s chips will either get bumped, or result a bad position if she ever attempts to leave the wall. The ambush of the prime can be established anywhere between point 2 and point eleven in your board. Once you have successfully built the prime to block the activity of the competitor, your competitor doesn’t even get to toss the dice, that means you move your checkers and toss the dice yet again. You’ll win the game for sure.

The Back Game Strategy

The goals of the Back Game technique and the Blocking Game tactic are very similar – to hinder your competitor’s positions with hope to better your odds of winning, but the Back Game plan utilizes alternate tactics to do that. The Back Game strategy is frequently utilized when you are far behind your opponent. To participate in Backgammon with this strategy, you have to hold 2 or more points in table, and to hit a blot (a single checker) late in the game. This strategy is more challenging than others to use in Backgammon seeing as it needs careful movement of your checkers and how the chips are relocated is partially the result of the dice toss.