Hexdame


Hexdame is a strategy board game for two players invented by Christian Freeling in 1979. The game is a literal adaptation of the game international draughts to a hexagonal gameboard.

Game overview

The Hexdame board is a regular hexagon consisting of 61 cells, with each player having 16 men in the initial setup as shown. A man can move forward one step to an adjacent empty cell, or can capture an enemy piece on an adjacent cell by jumping in the same line to the empty cell immediately beyond it. A king's movement and jumping are along rows of adjacent hex cells.
Other than the above, the rules for Hexdame can be taken directly from those for international draughts. For convenience, these have been summarized below.

Summary of international draughts rules

Though Hexdame precisely mirrors the rules of international draughts, the hex board geometry introduces important differences in play dynamic: