Sunday, June 2, 2024

Chinese checkers isn't from China (not even close)

Chinese checkers is a classic board game, featuring several marbles that move along a series of holes grouped into a six-pointed star shape.

Chinese checkers was invented in Germany.

Arts & Culture

C hinese checkers is a classic board game, featuring several marbles that move along a series of holes grouped into a six-pointed star shape. As in traditional checkers, the marbles can move to empty spaces or jump over adjacent pieces, with the goal of getting all the pieces to one side of the board. Contrary to its name, however, Chinese checkers has nothing to do with China — it's a variation of a game called Halma (meaning "jump" in Greek). Halma features a square board, and a star-shaped version was invented in Germany around 1880. Originally called Stern-Halma, the star-shaped game was published by the German game and puzzle company Ravensburger in 1892. 

The game arrived in America in the late 1920s under the name Hop Ching checkers, and, later, Chinese star checkers. It was advertised as "a game from the Orient for all ages," but this backstory was invented entirely for marketing, to give the product an air of mysticism. While six-pointed stars such as the one on the Chinese checkers game board have a long history in many cultures, including some Asian spiritual traditions, the board's star shape actually originated in Germany, decades before the game's fictional association with China. Nevertheless, Chinese checkers is the name that stuck in the American lexicon. 

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By the Numbers

Holes in each point of the Chinese checkers star

10

Players in the largest standard checkers tournament

574

Year Ravensburger published its first board game

1884

Starting pieces for each player in standard Halma

19

Did you know?

Chess evolved from an Indian game.

Many cultures have their own variation of chess, all of which are generally considered to have one common ancestor: an Indian game called Chaturanga, meaning "four-limbed," after a battle formation described in the Mahābhārata, an ancient Indian epic. The chess pieces we know in Western chess today were likely derived from the four branches of the Indian army described in the game: chariots, elephants, horses, and infantry. What we know as the bishop, for example, was likely originally an elephant.

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