Mū Tōrere

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Mū Tōrere gameboard and starting setup

Mū Tōrere is a board game played mainly by the Māori people from the east coast of New Zealand’s North Island. It is one of two board games that the Māori people are known to have played before their country became part of the British Empire.

The Ngāti Haua chief Wiremu Tamihana Te Waharoa reputedly offered a game to Governor George Grey with the whole country going to the winner, but Grey declined.[1]

Game rules

Each player controls four counters, or perepere. They are initially placed on the board at the kewai – the eight end-points of the star. At the beginning of the game the middle point, or pūtahi, is empty.

Players move one of their counters per move turn to an empty point. Players can move only to an adjacent kewai, and can move to the pūtahi only when the moved counter is adjacent to an opponent's counter. The player who blocks all the opponent's counters from moving, is the winner.

Notes

  1. A W Reed and Buddy Mikaere (2002). "Draughts". Taonga Tuku Iho: Illustrated Encyclopedia of Maori Life. p. 54. ISBN 1-877246-90-5. 

References

  • Mu Torere by George Jelliss; first published in Games and Puzzles Journal, issue 17
  • Bell, R. C. (1983). "Mu Torere". The Boardgame Book. Exeter Books. pp. 42–43. ISBN 0-671-06030-9. 

External links


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