Welcome to Tournament BBS BackGammon written by Joe W Mahurin Using door routines by Scott Baker This instruction file is not intended to be a tutorial on backgammon, but only presents basic rules of the game. For further instruction I recommend that you read one of several good books on the subject. I highly recommend Beginning Backgammon by Tim Holland, published by Tartan Books. The Rules of Backgammon The game is played by two people. The movement of pieces is governed by the roll or two dice. Doubles require four plays of the number of the dice. No piece may be placed on a spike held by two or more of the opponent's pieces. When a play lands on a spike occupied by a single man of the opponent's, such a man is hit and must be taken from the board and placed on the bar. A player that has a piece on the bar may not move any other piece until the piece is moved off the bar. When taking pieces off the board to place home, you may remove a piece from a spike corresponding to the number on a thrown dice, or from from the highest occupied spike which is lower than the number indicated on a die. If a number is rolled for an unoccupied spike, no piece in a lower spike can be taken home while a piece remains on a higher spike. You are not required to take a piece home if you can move if you are able to move a piece forward on the board. The game is won by the player who first takes all his pieces home. A gammon is won if the opponent has no taken a single piece home. A gammon doubles the bet. A backgammon is won if the opponent has not taken a single piece home, and still has one or more men on the bar. A backgammon triples the bet. The doubling cube: a) The number on the doubling cube shows the multiple of the bet. Example: If the bet is one point, and the doubling cube reads 4, then the actual bet is 4 points. b) a roll of doubles on the dice automatically doubles the bet (increases the bet by a multiple of two. c) Either player may challenge his opponent to double before he rolls the dice. d) You may accept or decline a double at no penalty. e) A gammon doubles the amount on the doubling cube. A Backgammon triples the amount on the doubling cube. The Play: The actual game play consists of a) moving a piece the exact number of spikes indicated by the number on each of two dice thrown. b) placing a piece in your opponent's home board, on a spike that corresponds to the number on a thrown die. c) taking your pieces off your opponent's home board and putting them home. d) when none of your, or your opponent's pieces remain on the board, or on the bar, and all of your, or your opponent's pieces reside in home, the game is over. The player with all pieces of his pieces home is declared the winner.