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Chopsticks (hand game)

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The game's scores are tracked on the fingers of both hands.

Chopsticks (sometimes called Calculator, or just Sticks)[citation needed] is a hand game for two or more players, in which players extend a number of fingers from each hand and transfer those scores by taking turns tapping one hand against another.[1][2] Chopsticks is an example of a combinatorial game, and is solved in the sense that with perfect play, an optimal strategy from any point is known.[3]

Description

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Gameplay

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In Chopsticks, players tally points using the fingers of both hands, with each extended finger counting as one point. A hand with less than five points is considered to be "living"; if it collects five points or more, it is "knocked out" and becomes "dead." The goal of the game is to knock out both of the opponent’s hands; the winner is the last player with a living hand. [2][3][4]

In the basic game for two players, each starts with two points—with one finger of each hand extended. Players then take turns, and on each turn must either:

(1) "Attack” by tapping either of the opponent's hands, adding points to it.

  • The point value (number of extended fingers) of the tapping hand gets added to the opponent's tapped hand, and the opponent extends one or more additional fingers accordingly. For example, two fingers tapped by one finger become three fingers (2 + 1 = 3). The point value of the tapping hand stays the same.
  • In basic play, any sum greater than five "knocks out" the tapped hand, reducing it to zero points. By convention, a dead hand is moved behind the player's back, out of sight.[1]

—OR—

(2) "Split" by tapping their own two hands together to redistribute points between the hands.

  • The new point distribution must differ from the old; a player can't simply swap points between hands. For example, one and three must become two and two, not three and one. In standard play, a living hand can split to a dead hand, bringing the dead hand back into play.
  • Splits between two living hands are sometimes known as transfers; between living and dead hands, as divisions.

Due to the game's simple basic structure, there are many rule variations, as noted below. For example, in one variation a hand can only be knocked out by a sum of exactly five points; any points over five are "rolled over" as in modular arithmetic. For example, three points plus three becomes one point, and the tapped hand stays alive. In the "suicide" variation, a player may knock out their own hand by transferring all points from it, reducing it to zero. In other variations, and for multi-player or team play, more complex transfer and division moves are allowed.

Abbreviation

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Each position in a two-player game of Chopsticks can be encoded as a four-digit number, with each digit ranging from 0 to 4, representing the number of active fingers on each hand. This can be notated as [ABCD], where A and B are the hands of the player who is about to take their turn, and C and D are the hands of the player who is not about to take their turn. Each pair of hands is notated in ascending order, so every distinct position is represented by one and only one four-digit number. For example, the code 1023 is not allowed, and should be notated 0123.

The starting position is 1111. Unless any special transfers are used, the next position must be 1211. The next position must be either 1212 or 1312. During the game, the smallest position is 0001, and the largest is 4434.

This abbreviation can be expanded to games with more players. A three-player game can be represented by six digits (e.g. [111211]), where each pair of adjacent digits represents a single player, and each pair is ordered based on when players will take their turns. The leftmost pair represents the hands of the player about to take his turn; the middle pair represents the player who will go next, and so on. The rightmost pair represents the player who must wait the longest before his turn (usually because he just went).

Moves

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Under normal rules, there are a maximum of 14 possible moves:

  • Four attacks (A→C, A→D, B→C, B→D)
  • Four divisions (02→11, 03→12, 04→13, 04→22)
  • Six transfers (13→22, 22→13, 14→23, 23→14, 24→33, 33→24)

However, only 5 or fewer of these are available on a given turn. For example, the early position 1312 can become 2213, 1313, 2413, 0113, or 1222.

Game lengths

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The shortest possible game is five moves. There is one instance:

  • 1111 1211 1312 0113 1401 0014

Without revisitation (repeating a position), the longest possible game is nine moves. There are two instances:

  • 1111 1211 1212 2212 2322 0223 0202 0402 0104 0001
  • 1111 1211 1212 2312 2323 0323 0303 0103 0401 0004

With revisitation, the longest possible game is indefinite.

Positions

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Since the roll-over amount is 5, Chopsticks is a base-5 game. In a two-player game, each position is four digits long. Counting from 0000 to 4444 (in base 5) yields 625 positions. However, this includes redundancies—most of these positions are incorrect notations (e.g. 0132, 1023, and 1032 are incorrect notations of 0123), which appear different but are functionally the same in gameplay.

To find the number of functionally distinct positions, note that each player can be one of 15 distinct pairs (00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 11, 12, 13, 14, 22, 23, 24, 33, 34, and 44). With two players, there are 15*15 = 225 functionally distinct positions. In general, for players, there are functionally distinct positions.

However, there are 21 unreachable positions: 0000, 0100, 0200, 0300, 0400, 1100, 1101, 1200, 1300, 1400, 2200, 2202, 2300, 2400, 3300, 3303, 3400, 3444, 4400, 4404, and 4444.

  • 15 of these positions are simply one player having each of the 15 distinct pairs, and the other player being dead. The problem is that the dead player is the player who just took his turn (hence the "00" on the right side). Since the player can't lose on their own turn, these positions are unreachable.
  • 4 of these positions are the player to move having [kk], and the other player having [0k], where . This is unreachable because the player who just went [0k] would not be able to split, so therefore that player must have attacked using his [0k]. But there's no way to use [0k] to attack an enemy so that they move to [kk]. That would require attacking a dead hand, which is illegal.
  • The remaining two positions are 3444 and 4444. 4444 is unreachable because a player cannot reach [44] from a split, and therefore had to already have [44]. The only possible pair that goes to [44] after being attacked by [44] is [04], which again requires that a dead hand be attacked. 3444 is actually reachable, but only from 4444. Since 4444 is not reachable from 4444, neither is 3444.

This gives a total of 204 unique, reachable positions.

There are 14 reachable endgames: 0001, 0002, 0003, 0004, 0011, 0012, 0013, 0014, 0022, 0023, 0024, 0033, 0034, 0044. Satisfyingly enough, these are all the 14 possible endgames; in other words, someone can win using any of the 14 distinct live pairs. Out of these 14 endgames, the first player wins 8 of them, assuming that the games are ended in the minimum number of moves.

Generalisations

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Chopsticks can be generalized into a -type game, where is the number of players and is the rollover amount.[further explanation needed]

Fewer than two players

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In a one-player game, the player trivially wins for virtue of being the last player in the game. A game with zero players is likewise trivial as there can be no winners.

Two players

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Given and a rollover of ,

  • There are positions, including redundancies.
  • There are distinct finger pairs (the -th triangular number), and thus functionally distinct positions.
  • For , there are unreachable positions.
    • unreachable positions occur when the current player has any distinct pair and the other player is dead. However, the dead player is the player who just took his turn. Since a player can't lose on their own turn, these positions are unreachable.
    • unreachable positions occur when the current player has and the other player has and , for . These positions are unreachable because the other player [CD] did not have split on the previous turn, so must have attacked using their alive hand. However, there is no way to attack as such that results in the target having both hands of value , as this would require attacking a dead hand, which is illegal.
    • An unreachable position occurs when both players have two hands of value . As such, the previous player could not have split, so must have attacked. But to result in the opponent's hands both having of value would have required attacking a dead hand, which is illegal.
    • An unreachable position occurs when the current player has and , and the other player has . This position has only one previous position, which is unreachable from the starting position.

Thus, for , there are reachable positions.

Rollover Positions Functionally distinct positions Reachable positions
3 81 36 26
4 256 100 85
5 625 225 204
6 1296 441 413
7 2401 784 748
8 4096 1296 1251
9 6561 2025 1970
10 10000 3025 2959
11 14641 4356 4278
12 20736 6084 5993

More than two players

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Given a rollover of 5,

  • With 2 players, there are 204 positions.
  • With 3 players, there are 3,337 positions.
  • With 4 players, there are over 25,000 positions.

Degenerate cases

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A game with a rollover amount of 1 is the trivial game, because all hands start dead.

A game with a rollover amount of 2 is degenerate, because splitting is impossible, and the rollover and cutoff variations result in the same game. Hands are either alive and dead, with no middle state, and attacking a hand kills the hand. In fact, one could simply keep count of the number of 'hands' a player has (by using fingers or some other method of counting), and when a player attacks an opponent, the number of hands that opponent has decreases by one. There are a total of reachable positions in the game, and a game length of . The two player game is strongly solved as a first person win.

When two players have only one hand, the game becomes degenerate, because splits cannot occur and each player only has one move. Given a rollover of , each position after moves in the game can be represented by the tuple , where is the -th Fibonacci number with and . The number of positions is given by least positive number such that divides . This variant is strongly solved as a win for either side depending upon and the divisibility properties of Fibonacci numbers. The length of the game is .

Variations

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  • Misère: First player to have both of their hands killed wins.
  • Suicide: Players are allowed to kill one of their own hands with a split. For example, in the position 1201, a player could execute 12→03, thus bringing the game to 0103. The opponent is forced to play B→D, bringing the game to 0401, at which point a quick win for the first player is possible.
  • Swaps/Cherri: If players have two unequal live hands, they may swap them (though forfeiting their turn). This variation commonly yields a draw by repetition or infinite loop for obvious reasons. To avoid this, limits can be placed on the number of consecutive swaps a player can do without being attacked before they are forced to attack.
  • Sudden Death: Players lose when they only have one finger left (on both hands). Alternately, each player could begin with three lives, and every time they get down to [01], they lose a life.
  • Meta: If a player's hands add up to over five, they can combine them, subtract five from the total, and then split up the remainder. For example, [44] adds up to 8, which becomes 3 after subtracting five; these can then be split into [12]. Therefore, it is possible to go from [44] to [12] in a single move. Meta unlocks 2 new possible moves (34→11, 44→12). If playing both Meta and Suicide, four additional moves are unlocked (24→01, 33→01, 34→02, 44→03), for a maximum of 20 possible moves in total.
  • Logan Clause: Players are allowed to suicide and swap, but only if doing both simultaneously (i.e. swapping a dead hand for a live one).
  • Death Attack: Players are allowed to attack dead hands. Attacking a dead hand will treat the dead hand as a 0 before being attacked.
  • Cutoff or Game of Five: If a hand gets above five fingers, it is dead (as opposed to rollover, described in the official rules).[3]
  • Zombies: With three or more players, if a player is knocked out, then they are permanently reduced to one finger on one hand. On their turn, they may attack, but may not split or be attacked (invented by Chris Bandy).
  • Transfers only: Divisions are not allowed. The only splits allowed are transfers.
  • Divisions only: Transfers are not allowed. The only splits allowed are divisions.
  • Splits: Splitting is only allowed when dividing an even number into two equal halves, or optionally, an odd number being divided as evenly as possible (using whole numbers). In this variation, the second player has a winning strategy (can always force a win).[3]
  • Stumps / Knubs: If a player is at [01], it is legal to split into [0.5 0.5], represented by curling a finger down halfway.[3]
  • More Hands: Each player has "more than two hands", usually represented by playing in teams of multiple people. With more hands per player, different transfer, division, swapping, and suicide rules are possible, including:
    • Single transfer: Each player can transfer fingers between only two hands.
    • Multiple transfer: Each player can transfer fingers between more than two hands, so long as the resulting state is different from the original state.
    • Single Division: The player can transfer fingers from only one hand to only one dead hand.
    • Partition: The player can transfer fingers from only one hand to multiple dead hands.
    • Transfer and partition: The player can transfer fingers from multiple hands to revive dead hands.
  • Different Numbers: A hand dies when it reaches a positive number (in standard Chopsticks, ). Different hand counting systems could be used for numbers greater than 5 such as Chinese hand numerals, senary finger counting, and finger binary. This variation often includes rollovers.
  • Suns: Both players start with a 4 on each hand (4444). This is a position that is unreachable in normal gameplay (i.e. from the opening position 1111).
  • Integers: It is permitted to swap one of one's own hands by flipping it over, changing the +/- sign of the hand. This allows for negative and zero value hands, though a hand still dies at 5 or −5. With rollover, this action becomes identical to replacing the value of the hand with 5 minus the value.
  • Unnamed: Attacking own hands are allowed, adding two additional moves (A→B, B→A). Typically played in conjunction with Swap and Cutoff variants.
  • Cherry Bomb: Transferring to exactly 5 will cause the attacker's hand to become [11] and the target's hand to become [01]. In a two-player game, the position becomes 1101, which becomes an easy forced win, so it is best played with more than 2 people.
  • Self-adding: As their turn, players can add 1 finger to any living hand, or transfer multiple fingers to a dead hand. This enables self-destruction (by adding 1 to a living hand with 4 fingers) and resurrection. This game variation has more complicated strategy.

Optimal strategy

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Using the rules above, two perfect players will play indefinitely; the game will continue in a loop. In fact, even very inexperienced players can avoid losing by simply looking one move ahead.

In the cutoff variation, the first player can force a win. One winning strategy is to always reach one of the following configurations after each move (preferentially choosing the first one):

  • 1211 (starting here)
  • AB12, where A and B can be any number of fingers (winning immediately if possible)

Conversely, in the Division and Suicide only variation, then the second player has a winning strategy.[5][how?]

See also

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  • Morra (game) – a different hand-game, which is based on chance rather than logic.

References

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  1. ^ a b "How to Play Chopsticks". wikiHow. Retrieved 2021-06-19.
  2. ^ a b "Chopsticks Game". Activity Village. Retrieved 2014-03-27.
  3. ^ a b c d e Japanese games – Chopsticks (hand game), 2008
  4. ^ "Can the game "Chopsticks" be mathematically solved?". StackExchange. Retrieved 2024-12-07.
  5. ^ "How to Always Win Chopsticks". wikiHow. Retrieved 2021-06-19.
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