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Games in the mancala family include:
Popular games
A virtually all widely played games come probably:
Oware, the national game of Ghana, is also known by Warri, Awele, Awari, Ouril, & more list. It has comparatively elementary system however considerable strategical depth. A board is Two×6 sustaining places.
Kalah is the ruleset usually involved by owning commercially available boards; nonetheless, a game is heavy biased towards the number 1 streaming video player, & these are typically considered a babies's game. A board is Two×6 by having places.
Omweso is a strategic game of Uganda, played on an 8×Four board.
Bao is a complex strategy game, also played in an 8×Four board.
Games with unusual features
Eson xorgol, a game from either Kazakhstan, is traditionally played with goat bm. A board is Two×Five.
Das Bohnenspiel is a German mancala based on elementary African mancalas. A board is Two×6 sustaining places.
://Hus is a Namibian game which, although the perfect information game, has sometimes been classified as a game of chance. A board is Four×8.
Other games
Chongkak (Indonesia, Malaysia, and a Philippines) A board is Two×7 by owning places.
Mak Khom (Siam)
Mancal
Mancala (Syria)
La'b Madjnuni
La'b Hakimi
La'b Akila
La'b Roseya
Mancala (Egypt)
Mangala (Nubia)
Gambatta (Abyssinia)
Abangah (Niam-Niam in Sudan) The board is Two×8 by using places.
Toee (Bongo in Sudan)
Kale (Gabun)
Madji (Benni within Nigeria)
Poo (Liberia)
Kapo (Senegal)
Choro
Pereauni
Bao (Kenya) The board is Four×8.
Mbau (Kenya)
Mbau (Kilimanjaro region)
Isafu
Chanka (India, Sri Lanka)
Naranj
Chuncajon (Philippines)
Stewart Culin, Philippine Games, American Anthropologist, Vol. Two, There are no. Quaternity. (Oct-Dec 1900), pp. 643-656.
Wawee (Leeward Islands)
Chuba (USA) A board is Four×11 by having places.
Ba-awa (Ghana) The board is Two×6 by using places.
Contu-Holo (Djuka in Dutch Guiana)
//Hus The board is 4×8
Chungeajon (Philippines)
Gabatta (Abyssinia)
Bau (Wa Chaga)
Isafuba
Halusa (Mesopotamia)
Mandoli (Island of Hydra)
Baqura (Mesopotamia)
Li'b al-ghashim
Beatta (Arabia, Teyma)
Khutka boia (India, Punjab)
Pachgarhwa (India)
Mawkar katiya (Assam)
Cherrapunji (Khasis) The board is Two×7 by having places.
Vai lung thlan (Lushei Kuki clan within Assam)
Longbeu-a-cha (Assam)
Kubuguza
Alan P. Merriam, A Game of Kubuguza Among a Abatutsi of N-East Ruanda. Human, Vol. 53. (November 1953), pp. 169-172.
Kanj guti (Orissa)
Til guti
Pallankuli (Tamils in India)
Sat-gol (India)
Puhulmuti (Sri Lanka)
Walak-pussa (Sri Lanka)
Kotu-baendum (Sri Lanka)
Daramutu (Sri Lanka)
Ellaewala-kanda (Sri Lanka)
Meusueb (Achehn in Sumatra)
Meuta' (Achehn in Sumatra)
Meuchoh (Achehn in Sumatra)
Meulieh (Achehn in Sumatra)
Bajangkaq (Sumatra)
Kaloleh (Sumatra)
Dakon (Indonesia, Malaysia, and a Philippines) A board is Two×7
Mechiwa (Bali)
Matoe (Soemba)
Sai (Flores)
Chonka (Borne)
Aw-li on-nam ot-tjin (Borneo)
Galatjang (Celebes)
Dara-dara (Celebes)
Agsinnoninka (Philippines)
Ingilith (Turkana)
Warri (Ghana, Nigeria) The board is Two×6 by owning stores
Toguz korgool (Kyrgyzstan) The board is Two×9 by having stores
Songo
P. H. G. Powell-Cotton gauze, H. J. Braunholtz, The Mancala Board Known as "Songo.", Human. Vol. 31. (July 1931), pp. 123.
Mefuvha
H. The. Stayt, A Bavenda.
Ouril (Cape Verde)
Trading tools just about virtually all one games may be observed within one of a charted,
HJR Murray, History of Board Games other than Chess (1952)
Laurence Russ, Mancala Games (1984)
H. J. Braunholtz, A Game of Mweso inside Uganda., Human. Vol. 31. (July 1931), pp. 121-122.
Henry R. Muller, Warri: The West African Game of Skill, A Journal of U.s. Folklore. Vol. 43, There are no. 169. pp. 313-316.
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