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The game of squares (O an quan)

The game of squares (O an quan)

Either boys or girls, usually age’s seven to ten, play the two-person game of O an quan (literally "Mandarin's Box"). They draw a rectangle on the ground and divide it into ten small squares called "rice fields" or "fish ponds.


"They also draw two additional semi-circular boxes at the two ends of the rectangle, which are called"mandarin's boxes, " hence the game's name. Each person has 25 small pebbles and a bigger stone. Each player places the stone in one of the mandarin's boxes and five small pebbles in each of the other squares (see diagram above). Then the game begins. The first player takes up the contents of one square on his or her side of the board (but not a mandarin's box) and distributes the pebbles one by one, starting with the next square in either direction. (Since each square contains five pebbles at the beginning, the first move will distribute five pebbles to the left or right).

After the last pebble is distributed, the player takes the contents of the following square and repeats the distribution process. But if the following square is one of the mandarin's boxes, the turn ends and passes to the other player. If the last pebble falls into a square that precedes one empty square, the player wins all the contents of the square following the empty square and removes these pebbles from the board. If this square is followed by another empty square, the player wins the contents of the square after that, and so on. However, if there are two or more empty squares in a row, the player loses his or her turn.

Once a player has taken pebbles from the board, the turn is handed to the other player. If all five squares on one player's side of the board are emptied at any time, that player must place one pebble he or she has aside back in each of the five squares so that the game can resume. The game continues until the two mandarins' boxes have both been taken. At the end of the game, the player with more pebbles wins, with each of the large stones counting as ten points. If each player retrieves an equal number of points, then the game is a tie. O an quan remains deservedly popular among older children since it requires good counting skills and forethought in order to win.

See Also

Traditional Musical Instruments Introduction
Wedding Ceremony
Battle of the Chickens (choi ga)
Rija Festival Music
The Game of the Dragon-Snake (rong ran)
36 string zither
Language and Scripts
Folk Literature
Funeral Ceremony
Worship of Ancestor Custom
Cat and Mouse Game (meo duoi chuot)
Festival Rituals
Kites That Make Music (dieu sao)
Ly Folk Song or Ly Nam Bo
Ca Tru
Quan Ho
Lithophone or Dan Da
Cai Luong
Dan Day
Religious Belief Dance
K’ni
Dan Nhi
Classical Opera or Tuong
Spinning Tops
Human Chess
Gongs or Cong-Chieng
Releasing pigeons (tha chim)
Overview of traditional festivals
Modern Literature
Traditional Wedding Music of the Khmer
Throwing a sacred ball through the ring (nem con)
Rice cooking competitions (thi thoi com)
Customs of Chewing Betel and Areca Nuts and Smoking Thuoc Lao
Bamboo Jacks (choi chuyen)
Villages – Guilds
Cheo or Vietnamese Popular Theatre
Hue Music and Song
Hat Van
Then Song
Nha nhac, Vietnamese Court Music - An Intangible Cultural Heritage
T'rung
Modern Dancing
Water Puppets
Dan Bau
Moon-Shaped Lute or Dan Nguyet
Tay Son Military Music
Tranh Zither
 
 
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