Players take turns to move a piece of their own colour. Any piece that reaches the far edge of the board is immediately crowned and is thereafter known as a "King". The act of crowning is a physical one - another piece of the same shade is placed on top of the piece in order to distinguish it from an ordinary piece.
Kings move diagonally forward or backwards. When a player advances a piece to his King Me row, its crown is raised and it becomes a King. At times, a King will be demoted to a piece (and its crown will be lowered). It must reach the King Me row to be crowned once again.
Starting position Each player starts with 12 men on the dark squares of the three rows closest to that player's side (see diagram). The row closest to each player is called the kings row or crownhead. The player with the darker-coloured pieces moves first. Then turns alternate.
No flying kings; men cannot capture backwards Men cannot jump kings. A sequence must capture the maximum possible number of pieces.
A win is scored when an opponent's pieces are all captured or blocked so that they cannot move. When neither side can force a victory and the trend of play becomes repetitious, a draw game is declared. Games similar to checkers were played in the days of the early Egyptian pharaohs (c.
Ultra kings are the final piece upgrade to be attained by reaching the ends of the board, and are signified by placing an opposing player's piece color between two of your own. Ultrakings can move (teleport) to any unoccupied square.
King can move diagonally any number of fields, forwards or backwards - these are called "flying kings". King can stop on any square behind the piece that was captured. A piece becomes a king if it reaches the promotion line of the board (the most distant row on the opponent's side) and stops on it.
Players take turns to move a piece of their own colour. Any piece that reaches the far edge of the board is immediately crowned and is thereafter known as a "King". The act of crowning is a physical one - another piece of the same shade is placed on top of the piece in order to distinguish it from an ordinary piece.