Template:Short description Template:Italic title Entropy is an abstract strategy board game for two players designed by Eric Solomon in 1977. The game is "based on the eternal conflict in the universe between order and chaos [...] One player is Order, the other Chaos. Order is trying to make patterns vertically and horizontally. Chaos is trying to prevent this."<ref>mozai.com</ref> The game originally employed a 5×5 gameboard, but in 2000 a 7x7 board was introduced to allow deeper strategies.Template:Sfnp
Entropy was awarded a rare 6 out of 6 by Games & Puzzles Magazine in 1981.<ref name="times97">Entropy, Mind Sports Olympiad supplement, p 8, The Times, 11 August 1997, online version available from studiogiochi MSO archives [1] Template:Webarchive</ref> David Pritchard called the game "a modern classic". It is sold commercially under the names Hyle (a 5×5 board) and Hyle7 (a 7×7 board).<ref name="bgg_hyle">Template:Bgg</ref>
RulesEdit
The gameboard is a square grid of 7×7 cells. A game consists of two rounds. Each round starts with the board empty, and a bag containing 49 chips in seven colours.
The first player to move (Chaos) draws coloured chips at random from the bag and places each one on the board in an empty cell. For each chip that is placed, the second player (Order) may slide any chip horizontally or vertically any distance through empty cells, to rest in a currently empty cell, without jumping over any other chips already on the board. When the board becomes full, the round is finished. Order scores 1 point for each chip in any palindromic pattern of chip colours (e.g. red–green–blue–green–red scores 3 + 5 = 8 points; red–red–red scores 2 + 2 + 3 = 7 points) occurring either horizontally or vertically.<ref name="res_mso">Article about Entropy, http://www.boardability.com/game.php?id=entropy, Retrieved on 6 September 2010.</ref> The players reverse roles and play a second round. The player with the higher score as Order wins the game and draws are possible.
ChampionshipsEdit
The game has been included as one of the events at the annual Mind Sports Olympiad since its inception.<ref name="bgg_hyle">Template:Bgg</ref> Demis Hassabis had won this event a record five times until losing in 2007.<ref name="guardian_mso_2007">Stephen Moss, This time it's personal, The Guardian, 27 August 2007, Retrieved on 13 June 2010.</ref> Demis' record was broken in 2021 by David Jameson (Wales) who won his sixth title, extending the record in 2023. The event has also been won by Hassabis's brother George and by other Pentamind champions, David M. Pearce, Alain Dekker, Paco Garcia de la Banda and Andres Kuusk.
- 1997: Template:Flagicon Murray Heasman
- 1998: Template:Flagicon Peter Horlock
- 1999: Template:Flagicon George Hassabis
- 2000: Template:Flagicon Demis Hassabis
- 2001: Template:Flagicon Demis Hassabis
- 2002: Template:Flagicon David M. Pearce
- 2003: Template:Flagicon Demis Hassabis
- 2004: Template:Flagicon Demis Hassabis
- 2005: Template:Flagicon Peter Horlock
- 2006: Template:Flagicon Demis Hassabis
- 2007: Template:Flagicon David M. Pearce
- 2008: Template:Flagicon Peter Horlock
- 2009: Template:Flagicon Alain Dekker
- 2010: Template:Flagicon Paco Garcia de la Banda
- 2011: Template:Flagicon Peter Horlock
- 2012: Template:Flagicon Andres Kuusk
- 2013: Template:Flagicon Andres Kuusk
- 2014: Template:Flagicon David Jameson
- 2015: Template:Flagicon Andres Kuusk
- 2016: Template:Flagicon David Jameson
- 2017: Template:Flagicon David Jameson
- 2018: Template:Flagicon David Jameson
- 2019: Template:Flagicon David Jameson
- 2020: Template:Flagicon David Jameson
- 2021: Template:Flagicon Paul Kolk
- 2022: Template:Flagicon Alain Dekker
- 2023: Template:Flagicon David Jameson
- 2024: Template:Flagicon Alain Dekker
ReferencesEdit
Bibliography
Further readingEdit
External linksEdit
- Template:Bgg
- Online play (turned-based) at Abstract Play
- Online play (real time) at Vint.ee