Kensington is a board game devised by Brian Taylor and Peter Forbes in 1979, named after an affluent borough of London. It is played on a geometrical board based on the rhombitrihexagonal tiling pattern.
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The two players, red and blue, alternately place pieces on the intersections of the board until each has placed fifteen. Thereafter they alternate turns sliding a single piece along a line to an adjacent vertex. The object is to place pieces on the six vertices of a white hexagon or a hexagon of one's own colour.
If a player forms a triangle, he is entitled to relocate one enemy piece. If a player forms a square, he may relocate two enemy pieces. Forming a triangle and a square simultaneously allows one to relocate only two enemy pieces.
Normally, whoever makes the first triangle or square is almost assured of being able to scatter the opposing pieces and win without difficulty. What depth the game does contain revolves around being first to begin scattering. The placing and movement of pieces is reminiscent of Nine Men's Morris.
The board pattern is based on an ancient Islamic tiling pattern.
A 1979 edition of the game was sold in a package resembling a double-LP album. The front part had a cut-out showing the centre of the one-piece non-folding game board which could be slid out of the sleeve like an LP. Rules were printed on the inside and the rear side showed the authors playing the game on the steps of the Albert Memorial.
In a business venture parallel to Trivial Pursuit in Canada, the British inventors set up their own company to make and publish the game. This attracted a fair amount of press attention at the time and Kensington picked up a UK Game of the Year award. Attention for the game was short-lived and the game is now out of print.
In the rules of the 1979 edition the authors offered a prize of 10,000 pounds to the first person to find a position in which neither player of a two-player game could move.