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:

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:

  1. Find all of the 12 pentomino shapes*, sketch them on paper.
  2. Draw them using the marker pen onto card that is marked in squares the same size as the chess board you use.
  3. Don't mark the pentominoes in any way so that there is no way to tell the top, bottom, front or back.
  4. Cut out the set of pentominoes.

See Bernard's Bag for a link to the complete set of pentomino shapes


To Play:

Version 1

Version 2

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)