Template:Short description Template:Italic title Template:Refimprove {{#invoke:Infobox|infobox}}Template:Template other{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Infobox game with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| actor | ages | AKA | alt | blank_data | blank_label | caption | date | designer | director | footnotes | genre | illustrator | image | image_alt | image_caption | image_link | image_size | isbn | isbn_note | italic title | label_width | language | logo | logo_alt | logo_caption | logo_link | logo_size | manufacturer | materials | media_type | movement | name | other_names | parent_game | players | playing_time | publisher | random_chance | related |series | setup_time | skills | subject_name | subtitle | system | title | voice_over | web | website | width | writer | years }}

Tantrix is a hexagonal tile-based abstract game invented by Mike McManaway from New Zealand. Each of the 56 different tiles in the set contains three lines, going from one edge of the tile to another. No two lines on a tile have the same colour. There are four colours in the set: red, yellow, blue, and green. No two tiles are identical, and each is individually numbered from 1 through 56.

GameplayEdit

In the multiplayer version of the game, each player chooses a colour, so there are between two and four players. Each draws one tile from the bag, and the person who draws the highest number goes first.

Each player then takes five more tiles from the bag, and places all six tiles face up in front of them. The first person plays one tile, usually with their colour on it. Play then rotates clockwise. After playing a tile, each player takes a replacement tile from the bag, so that they always have six in front of them. Tiles played must match the colour of the edges adjoining it.

When three tiles surround an empty space so that it is effectively half covered this is called a forced space. If the person whose turn it is has a tile that fills that space they must play it. The player repeats this process until there are no more forced spaces that they can fill, at which stage they make a free move, where they can play any tile as long as they don't breach the three restriction rules given below. Once they have had a free move, they must then fill any more forced spaces that they can. Thus one player's turn can consist of several moves.

The three restriction rules are: Template:Ordered list

Once there are no tiles left in the bag, the three restriction rules do not apply.

The aim of the game is to get the longest line or loop in your colour. Each tile in a line counts as one point, and in a loop is two points. Only the highest-scoring line or loop counts.

Online playEdit

Although quiet and underpopulated compared to the standards of Yahoo! Games and the like, playing Tantrix online has gained a dedicated following with players from all over the world competing against each other or against computer robots. Players are rated out of 1000 points according to their wins and losses and taking into account of their opponents rank. The aim of top players is to get to 1000 points (which only three players have managed so far). The goal of a regular player is to reach the score of 950 which is difficult to reach. Once this score has been attained the player can gain Tournament Rankings (ELO) and eventually earn the title "Master". Masters can then play "master games" which have a different scoring system. Only a few players achieve master status, with a limit of 120 total imposed.

Serious players of Tantrix take part in a number of structured tournaments each year. Although the winners only play for bragging rights, and in the major tournaments a small trophy to keep for a year, these events are taken seriously, and are the ultimate challenge for tantricists.

The WORLD TANTRIX CHAMPIONSHIP begins every August, and takes nearly four months to complete. Only 47 competitors took place in the second WTC in 1998, but that number had grown to 200 by 2006. The tournament starts in a qualifying round, where the lower-ranked players compete for selection into the main draw (128-player knockout tournament).

There are three other "world-wide" tournaments held online each year:

  • The World Team Tantrix Championship (WTTC) involving teams of five from one country or region, first in held in 2002
  • The World Junior Tantrix Championship (WJTC) a world championship for players under 16, first held in 2002
  • The World Doubles Tantrix Championship (WDTC) first played in 2005

There are also three continental tournaments each year:

  • The European Championship (Euro) the major dedicated continental tournament, first run in 1999
  • The Pan-American Tantrix Championship (Pan-Am) first held in 1999
  • The Afro-Asian Championship (AsAf) the African Championship was first held in 1999 once, then re-established in 2004, incorporating Asian competitors at the same time

And many national online tournaments:

  • The New Zealand Tantrix Championship first held in 2000
  • The Australian Tantrix Championship first held in 2001
  • The Hungarian Tantrix Championship first held in 2002
  • The Hungarian Masters Tournament first held in 2002
  • The Swedish Tantrix Championship first held in 2003
  • The French Tantrix Championship first held in 2007
  • The Dutch Tantrix Championship first held in 2008
  • The German Tantrix Championship first held in 2008
  • The Spanish Tantrix Championship first held in 2008
  • The Polish Tantrix Championship first held in 2008
  • The Norwegian Tantrix Championship first held in 2009
  • The Czech Tantrix Championship first held in 2010

Face-to-face playEdit

In addition to these online tournaments, offline tournaments (referred to as 'Table Opens') are growing in popularity. The first Table tournament was the 2002 British Open and was mostly a local affair with 13 of the 14 entrants from Britain. As the player base widened, players started traveling more. Table Opens in Europe soon became the most popular because of the larger playing population. By 2009 there was enough demand to hold a World Tantrix Open.

World Opens

  • 2014 World Tantrix Table Open (Bischoffen, Germany)[1] Template:Webarchive
  • 2013 World Tantrix Table Open (Trosa, Sweden)[2]
  • 2011 World Tantrix Table Open (Almere, Netherlands)[3]
  • 2010 World Tantrix Table Open (Budapest, Hungary)[4]
  • 2009 World Tantrix Table Open (Edinburgh, United Kingdom)[5]

National Opens

  • The British Table Open, first held in 2002
  • The New Zealand Table Open, first held in 2004
  • The Swedish Table Open, first held in 2004
  • The German Table Open, first held in 2005
  • The French Table Open, first held in 2005
  • The Spanish Table Open, first held in 2005
  • The Hungarian Table Open, first held in 2005
  • The Dutch Table Open, first held in 2006
  • The Polish Table Open, first held in 2007
  • The Australian Table Open, first held in 2007
  • The Israeli Table Open, first held in 2007

HistoryEdit

The first version of Tantrix was created by Mike McManaway in 1988 and was called Mind Game[6]. It used 56 cardboard pieces with only two coloured lines, red and black.[7] Owning a games shop, McManaway sold the game directly and following customer feedback continued to change the rules and design. In 1991, the tiles were changed to plastic and two more colours were added, allowing for four-player games.

File:Tantrix tiles ryg.svg
The 16 possible tiles (necklaces) with the colours red, yellow and green – on the right the triple intersections, which were taken out of the game

The tiles were (and still are) hand-painted, featuring different colours to those now used, even pink. The early form of the game featured eight "triple intersections", but these were found to slow the game play as they only fitted into three different forced spaces (compared to six for all other tiles). So in 1993, the triple intersections were removed from the game.<ref>From the FAQ on tantrix.com: So, since triple intersections only have half the chance of being "forced", they easily clog up players hands as the game progresses. The negative consequences of this caused the removal of the triple intersection tiles from the game in 1993. </ref>

Along with the multiplayer version of the game, McManaway created smaller solitaire puzzles using 10 or 12 tiles that required the player to put the tiles together to create loops of certain colours.

McManaway has also created many solitaire puzzles, including 3-D versions, match only versions (requiring players to colour match tiles within a confined space) and loop and line versions (requiring players to use all the nominated tiles to complete a loop or line in a specific colour). However many of the editions are no longer available.

The main versions sold in most countries are:

  1. Template:Italics correction: A solo version, consisting of 10 tiles, where players attempt puzzles that take between 30 seconds and 45 minutes.
  2. Template:Italics correction: A set of 14 tiles designed to play Tantrix Solitaire combined with expanded Tantrix Discovery puzzles.
  3. Template:Italics correction: Tantrix meets sudoku. A number of pre-placed clues controls the difficulty of each puzzle.
  4. Template:Italics correction: A bag with all 56 Tantrix tiles, with which players can play all editions of Tantrix.

Tantrix got its first big contract in 1994 when Air France bought the game to give to children on its flights.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2003 Tantrix was named Toy of the Year in Hungary and won the British National Association of Toy and Leisure Libraries gold award in the games category.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

TilesetEdit

Tantrix Tiles<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Yellow-Red-Blue-(Green) Yellow-Red-(Blue)-Green (Yellow)-Red-Blue-Green Yellow-(Red)-Blue-Green
No. VN Pattern Image No. VN Pattern Image No. VN Pattern Image No. VN Pattern Image
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File:Tantrix tile 23.svg
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BGYBYG
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28 003 abbcca
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File:Tantrix tile 28.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 25.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 55.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 53.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 30.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 48.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 49.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 51.svg
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File:Tantrix tile 43.svg
8 021 accbab
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RGGBRB
File:Tantrix tile 41.svg
7 021 bccaba
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File:Tantrix tile 7.svg
13 102 abbacc
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File:Tantrix tile 13.svg
6 120 abcacb
YRBYBR
File:Tantrix tile 6.svg 42 120 abcacb
RBGRGB
File:Tantrix tile 42.svg
40 120 bcabac
BGRBRG
File:Tantrix tile 40.svg
39 120 cabcba
GRBGBR
File:Tantrix tile 39.svg
45 003 abbcca
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File:Tantrix tile 45.svg
37 021 abbcac
RBBGRG
File:Tantrix tile 37.svg
46 021 accbab
YGGBYB
File:Tantrix tile 46.svg
33 021 bccaba
RGGYRY
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BGGRBR
File:Tantrix tile 36.svg
38 021 cbbaca
GBBRGR
File:Tantrix tile 38.svg
47 102 abbacc
YBBYGG
File:Tantrix tile 47.svg
35 120 abcacb
YRGYGR
File:Tantrix tile 35.svg
34 120 bcabac
RGYRYG
File:Tantrix tile 34.svg
32 120 cabcba
GYRGRY
File:Tantrix tile 32.svg
Triple intersections removed from the set
61 300 abcabc
YRBYRB
File:Tantrix 061x 300 abcabc (YRBYRB).svg 57 300 abcabc
YRGYRG
File:Tantrix 057x 300 abcabc (YRGYRG).svg 63 300 abcabc
RBGRBG
File:Tantrix 063x 300 abcabc (RBGRBG).svg 59 300 abcabc
YBGYBG
File:Tantrix 059x 300 abcabc (YBGYBG).svg
62 300 acbacb
YBRYBR
File:Tantrix 062x 300 acbacb (YBRYBR).svg 58 300 acbacb
YGRYGR
File:Tantrix 058x 300 acbacb (YGRYGR).svg 64 300 acbacb
RGBRGB
File:Tantrix 064x 300 acbacb (RGBRGB).svg 60 300 acbacb
YGBYGB
File:Tantrix 060x 300 acbacb (YGBYGB).svg

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

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