Games played with Go equipment

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Games_played_with_Go_equipment an entity of type: Abstraction100002137

Many games can be played with Go equipment: a supply of white and black stones and a board with 19×19 intersections, other than Go and many more can be played with minor modification. Games that can be played without modification on the intersections of a 19×19 Go board include: * Breakthrough, which can be played on just about any board shape one wishes * Gomoku, Ninuki-renju and its close relative Pente * Connect6, similar to naughts and crosses (tic-tac-toe), but requires connecting six in a row, and with two stones per move * Gonnect * * Capture Go * Alea evangelii * Pente rdf:langString
rdf:langString Games played with Go equipment
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rdf:langString Many games can be played with Go equipment: a supply of white and black stones and a board with 19×19 intersections, other than Go and many more can be played with minor modification. Games that can be played without modification on the intersections of a 19×19 Go board include: * Breakthrough, which can be played on just about any board shape one wishes * Gomoku, Ninuki-renju and its close relative Pente * Connect6, similar to naughts and crosses (tic-tac-toe), but requires connecting six in a row, and with two stones per move * Gonnect * * Capture Go * Alea evangelii * Pente Games that can be played without modification on the intersections of a Go board reduced in size (perhaps by masking the unwanted sections with paper or tape) include: * Alak, a Go-like game restricted to a single spatial dimension (1×19) * Five Field Kono (5x5) * Renju (15×15) * Philosopher's football (15×19) * Some games of Gonu Games that can be played without modification on the squares of a Go board reduced in size include: * Gess (18×18 squares—no reduction required) * Crossings (8×8 squares) * Epaminondas (12×14 squares) * Lines of Action (8×8 squares) * Connect Four (most commonly 7×6 squares) It's also possible to use Go equipment as a low-tech interface to Conway's Game of Life; use black stones in the board's squares as 'pixels', and for each generation use white stones to indicate where new cells will be born. Then remove 'dead' black stones, replace the white stones with black ones to complete the new generation, and repeat the process.
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