Layli Goobalay


Layli Goobalay is a board game played in parts of Somalia. It is a variant of the classical count and capture game mancala, which is one of the oldest two-player strategy board games played throughout the world. Layli Goobalay means "to exercise with circles" in the Somali language.

Rules

Layli Goobalay is played on a 2x6 mancala board, with 48 seeds. At game setup, 4 seeds are placed in each pit. Similar equipment and game setup are used for in other mancalas.
At his or her turn, the player takes all the seeds from a pit and sows them counterclockwise. If the last seed of a sowing falls in a non-empty pit that is not a Uur, relay-sowing applies. Thus, the player's turn ends when the last seed in a sowing is dropped in an empty pit or in a Uur pit. Depending on the pit where this last seed was dropped, the following situations may occur:
A player can never begin a sowing from Uur pits, and relay-sowing does not apply to Uur pits. Consequently, the content of Uur pits tends to grow over time.
The game ends when one of the player can no longer move. Both players then capture the seeds from their own Uurs and from the other pits in their own rows. The player who captured most seeds wins the game.