These games were invented by Solomon W. Golomb, who came up with
the idea of polyominoes.
Penta Play
For 2, 3 or 4 players
You will need:
- A chess board.
- Stiff card (preferably marked in squares)
- Scissors
- Paper
- Pencil and thin marker pen
- Ruler
Goal:
To be last person to be able to place a pentomino piece on the
playing board.
To prevent your opponent(s) from finding space to place
pentomino pieces on the board.
To prepare for play:
- Find all of the 12 pentomino shapes*, sketch them on
paper.
- Draw them using the marker pen onto card that is marked in
squares the same size as the chess board you use.
- Don't mark the pentominoes in any way so that there is no way
to tell the top, bottom, front or back.
- Cut out the set of pentominoes.
See Bernard's Bag for a link to the complete set of pentomino
shapes
To Play:
Version 1
- Divide the set of pentominoes between the players.
- Don't let other players see the pieces.
- Decide who will go first, second etc.
- Place a piece on the board to cover any five squares.
- The next player chooses a piece and places it onto the
board.
- Try to block your opponents by leaving either no space for them
to place a pentomino piece or a space into which their shapes won't
fit.
- The winner is the last person to place a piece on the
board.
Version 2
- Lay out all of the pentomino pieces.
- Decide who will go first, second etc.
- The first person chooses one of the pieces, then the second
person chooses a piece etc.
- Players lay his or her chosen pieces in front of them for
others to see.
- The first person to play chooses one piece and places it on the
board.
- Players take turns to place pieces on the board.
- Try to decide which are the best moves to block opponents from
placing their pieces.
- The winner is the last person to place a piece on the
board.
Note:
The second version of the game requires players to use and
develop their visual perception skills. Rather than rely on chance,
as in the first game, players have to determine whether shapes held
by their opponents will fill the spaces and which of their own
pieces will alter the available spaces sufficiently to prevent
play.
Computer Version (2 Players)
- Each player has 6 pieces. Player 1 has the first turn.
- Player 1 rotates pieces by clicking the
button or flips them using the
button. (Not all pieces have these. Why?) Take some time to learn
how the pieces work.
- Player 1 then moves a piece onto the board.
- Players alternate turns.
- A player may click on the
to find
out if it is possible to move or not.