Peg Game Instructions

Although peg solitaire is a challenging game with numerous variations that keep even seasoned puzzlers interested, the rules are simple enough for young children to learn how to play. Peg solitaire has been played for over 300 years and is also known by other names, such as Hi-Q and marble solitaire.

Peg Solitaire at Cool Math Games: This puzzle game dates back to the 17th century. Can you find the right moves to get down to one? Peg Solitaire - Play it now at CoolmathGames.com. Learning to play the “Peg Board Game” (sometimes known as an “IQ Test”) is easy to learn, but difficult to master. The rules are staggeringly simple, but the strategy can be complex. The object is to remove pegs from the board by “jumping” them. The fewer pegs left on the board, the “smarter” the player is.

Equipment

Peg solitaire is traditionally played on a board with 33 small holes arranged in the shape of a plus sign, with three columns of seven holes intersecting with three rows of seven holes. Also included with the game are 32 pegs that fit into the holes. Peg solitaire can be played on other boards with the same arrangement, such as a piece of paper with circles drawn on it for the holes and pennies as the pegs.

Setup

Before beginning peg solitaire, the player should set up the board by placing one peg in each hole except for the center hole.

Rules

Peg solitaire is played by jumping a peg over another other peg into an empty hole on the other side. Pegs cannot jump diagonally, nor can they jump over more than one peg at a time. They can, however, chain together multiple jumps by hopping over one peg into an empty hole and then, either in the same direction or a different direction, hopping from that hole over one more peg into another empty hole. Multiple jumps like this can continue as long as possible, as in Checkers. When a peg is hopped over, it is immediately removed from the game board.

Winning the Game

The goal of peg solitaire is to remove all the pegs from the board except one, which should end up in the center hole that was empty at the beginning of the game. In 1912, Ernest Bergholt developed a winning solution that required only 18 moves, where a move was picking up a peg and legally jumping it over one or more pegs before setting it down. For young children, a more appropriate goal may be to end with five or fewer pegs on the board.

Variations

Peg solitaire has a number of alternate initial configurations of the pegs, including an arrow, pyramid, fireplace and diamond. In addition, peg solitaire can be played on alternate boards such as a board of 15 holes arranged in a triangle, where pegs can jump horizontally or diagonally.

The Princess of Soubise playing solitaire, 1687

Peg solitaire (or Solo Noble) is a board game for one player involving movement of pegs on a board with holes. Some sets use marbles in a board with indentations. The game is known simply as Solitaire in the United Kingdom where the card games are called Patience. It is also referred to as Brainvita (especially in India).

The first evidence of the game can be traced back to the court of Louis XIV, and the specific date of 1687, with an engraving made that year by Claude Auguste Berey of Anne de Rohan-Chabot, Princess of Soubise, with the puzzle by her side. The August 1687 edition of the French literary magazine Mercure galant contains a description of the board, rules and sample problems. This is the first known reference to the game in print.

Shower

The standard game fills the entire board with pegs except for the central hole. The objective is, making valid moves, to empty the entire board except for a solitary peg in the central hole.

  • 3Strategy

Board[edit]

English peg solitaire board
European peg solitaire board

There are two traditional boards ('.' as an initial peg, 'o' as an initial hole):

EnglishEuropean

Play[edit]

Playing Peg solitaire
A man playing triangular peg solitaire at a Cracker Barrel restaurant.

A valid move is to jump a peg orthogonally over an adjacent peg into a hole two positions away and then to remove the jumped peg.

In the diagrams which follow, · indicates a peg in a hole, * emboldened indicates the peg to be moved, and o indicates an empty hole. A blue ¤ is the hole the current peg moved from; a red * is the final position of that peg, a red o is the hole of the peg that was jumped and removed.

Thus valid moves in each of the four orthogonal directions are:

On an English board, the first three moves might be:

Strategy[edit]

There are many different solutions to the standard problem, and one notation used to describe them assigns letters to the holes:

This mirror image notation is used, amongst other reasons, since on the European board, one set of alternative games is to start with a hole at some position and to end with a single peg in its mirrored position. On the English board the equivalent alternative games are to start with a hole and end with a peg at the same position.

There is no solution to the European board with the initial hole centrally located, if only orthogonal moves are permitted. This is easily seen as follows, by an argument from Hans Zantema. Divide the positions of the board into A, B and C positions as follows:

Initially with only the central position free, the number of covered A positions is 12, the number of covered B positions is 12, and also the number of covered C positions is 12. After every move the number of covered A positions increases or decreases by one, and the same for the number of covered B positions and the number of covered C positions. Hence after an even number of moves all these three numbers are even, and after an odd number of moves all these three numbers are odd. Hence a final position with only one peg cannot be reached, since that would require that one of these numbers is one (the position of the peg, one is odd), while the other two numbers are zero, hence even.

There are, however, several other configurations where a single initial hole can be reduced to a single peg.

A tactic that can be used is to divide the board into packages of three and to purge (remove) them entirely using one extra peg, the catalyst, that jumps out and then jumps back again. In the example below, the * is the catalyst.:

This technique can be used with a line of 3, a block of 2·3 and a 6-peg L shape with a base of length 3 and upright of length 4.

Other alternate games include starting with two empty holes and finishing with two pegs in those holes. Also starting with one hole here and ending with one peg there. On an English board, the hole can be anywhere and the final peg can only end up where multiples of three permit. Thus a hole at a can only leave a single peg at a, p, O or C.

Studies on peg solitaire[edit]

A thorough analysis of the game is known.[1] This analysis introduced a notion called pagoda function which is a strong tool to show the infeasibility of a given, generalized, peg solitaire, problem.

A solution for finding a pagoda function, which demonstrates the infeasibility of a given problem, is formulated as a linear programming problem and solvable in polynomial time.[2]

A paper in 1990 dealt with the generalized Hi-Q problems which are equivalent to the peg solitaire problems and showed their NP-completeness.[3]

A 1996 paper formulated a peg solitaire problem as a combinatorial optimization problem and discussed the properties of the feasible region called 'a solitaire cone'.[4]

In 1999 peg solitaire was completely solved on a computer using an exhaustive search through all possible variants. It was achieved making use of the symmetries, efficient storage of board constellations and hashing.[5]

In 2001 an efficient method for solving peg solitaire problems.[2]

An unpublished study from 1989 on a generalized version of the game on the English board showed that each possible problem in the generalized game has 29 possible distinct solutions, excluding symmetries, as the English board contains 9 distinct 3×3 sub-squares. One consequence of this analysis is to put a lower bound on the size of possible 'inverted position' problems, in which the cells initially occupied are left empty and vice versa. Any solution to such a problem must contain a minimum of 11 moves, irrespective of the exact details of the problem.

It can be proved using abstract algebra that there are only 5 fixed board positions where the game can successfully end with one peg.[6]

Solutions to the English game[edit]

The shortest solution to the standard English game involves 18 moves, counting multiple jumps as single moves:

Shortest solution to English peg solitaire

The order of some of the moves can be exchanged. Note that if you instead think of * as a hole and o as

a peg, you can solve the puzzle by following the solution in reverse, starting from the last picture, going

towards the first. However, this requires more than 18 moves.

This solution was found in 1912 by Ernest Bergholt and proven to be the shortest possible by John Beasley in 1964.[7]

This solution can also be seen on a page that also introduces the Wolstenholme notation, which is designed to make memorizing the solution easier.

Other solutions include the following list. In these, the notation used is

  • List of starting holes
  • Colon
  • List of end target pegs
  • Equals sign
  • Source peg and destination hole (you have to work out what it jumps over yourself)
  • , or / (a slash is used to separate 'chunks' such as a six-purge out)

Brute force attack on standard English peg solitaire[edit]

Free online peg game

The only place it is possible to end up with a solitary peg is the centre, or the middle of one of the edges; on the last jump, there will always be an option of choosing whether to end in the centre or the edge.

Game

Following is a table over the number (Possible Board Positions) of possible board positions after n jumps, and the possibility of the same pawn moved to make a further jump (No Further Jumps).

NOTE: If one board position can be rotated and/or flipped into another board position, the board positions are counted as identical.

nPBPNFJ
110
220
380
4390
51710
67191
72,7570
89,7510
931,3120
1089,9271
nPBPNFJ
11229,6141
12517,8540
131,022,2245
141,753,73710
152,598,2157
163,312,42327
173,626,63247
183,413,313121
192,765,623373
201,930,324925
nPBPNFJ
211,160,9771,972
22600,3723,346
23265,8654,356
24100,5654,256
2532,2503,054
268,6881,715
271,917665
28348182
295039
3076
nPBPNFJ
3122

Since there can only be 31 jumps, modern computers can easily examine all game positions in a reasonable time.

The above sequence 'PBP' has been entered as A112737 in OEIS. Note that the total number of reachable board positions (sum of the sequence) is 23,475,688, while the total number of possible board positions is 8.589.934.590 (33bit-1) (2^33) , So only about 2.2% of all possible board positions can be reached starting with the center vacant.


It is also possible to generate all board positions. The results below have been obtained usingthe mcrl2 toolset (see the peg_solitaire example in the distribution).

nPBP
11
24
312
460
5296
61,338
75,648
821,842
nPBP
977,559
10249,690
11717,788
121,834,379
134,138,302
148,171,208
1514,020,166
1620,773,236
nPBP
1726,482,824
1828,994,876
1927,286,330
2022,106,348
2115,425,572
229,274,496
234,792,664
242,120,101
nPBP
25800,152
26255,544
2768,236
2814,727
292,529
30334
3132
325


In the results below It is generate all board positions really reached starting with the center vacant and finish in central hole.

nReal
11
24
312
460
5292
61,292
75,012
816,628
nReal
949,236
10127,964
11285,740
12546,308
13902,056
141,298,248
151,639,652
161,841,556
nReal
171,841,556
181,639,652
191,298,248
20902,056
21546,308
22285,740
23127,964
2449,236
nReal
2516,628
265,012
271,292
28292
2960
3012
314
321


Solutions to the European game[edit]

There are 3 initial non-congruent positions that have solutions.[8] These are:

1)

Possible solution: [2:2-0:2, 2:0-2:2, 1:4-1:2, 3:4-1:4, 3:2-3:4, 2:3-2:1, 5:3-3:3, 3:0-3:2, 5:1-3:1, 4:5-4:3, 5:5-5:3, 0:4-2:4, 2:1-4:1, 2:4-4:4, 5:2-5:4, 3:6-3:4, 1:1-1:3, 2:6-2:4, 0:3-2:3, 3:2-5:2, 3:4-3:2, 6:2-4:2, 3:2-5:2, 4:0-4:2, 4:3-4:1, 6:4-6:2, 6:2-4:2, 4:1-4:3, 4:3-4:5, 4:6-4:4, 5:4-3:4, 3:4-1:4, 1:5-1:3, 2:3-0:3, 0:2-0:4]

2)

Possible solution: [1:1-1:3, 3:2-1:2, 3:4-3:2, 1:4-3:4, 5:3-3:3, 4:1-4:3, 2:1-4:1, 2:6-2:4, 4:4-4:2, 3:4-1:4, 3:2-3:4, 5:1-3:1, 4:6-2:6, 3:0-3:2, 4:5-2:5, 0:2-2:2, 2:6-2:4, 6:4-4:4, 3:4-5:4, 2:3-2:1, 2:0-2:2, 1:4-3:4, 5:5-5:3, 6:3-4:3, 4:3-4:1, 6:2-4:2, 3:2-5:2, 4:0-4:2, 5:2-3:2, 3:2-1:2, 1:2-1:4, 0:4-2:4, 3:4-1:4, 1:5-1:3, 0:3-2:3]

and 3)

Possible solution: [2:1-2:3, 0:2-2:2, 4:1-2:1, 4:3-4:1, 2:3-4:3, 1:4-1:2, 2:1-2:3, 0:4-0:2, 4:4-4:2, 3:4-1:4, 6:3-4:3, 1:1-1:3, 4:6-4:4, 5:1-3:1, 2:6-2:4, 1:4-1:2, 0:2-2:2, 3:6-3:4, 4:3-4:1, 6:2-4:2, 2:3-2:1, 4:1-4:3, 5:5-5:3, 2:0-2:2, 2:2-4:2, 3:4-5:4, 4:3-4:1, 3:0-3:2, 6:4-4:4, 4:0-4:2, 3:2-5:2, 5:2-5:4, 5:4-3:4, 3:4-1:4, 1:5-1:3]

Board variants[edit]

Peg solitaire has been played on other size boards, although the two given above are the most popular. It has also been played on a triangular board, with jumps allowed in all 3 directions. As long as the variant has the proper 'parity' and is large enough, it will probably be solvable.

Peg solitaire game board shapes:
(1) French (European) style, 37 holes, 17th century;
(2) J. C. Wiegleb, 1779, Germany, 45 holes;
(3) Asymmetrical 3-3-2-2 as described by George Bell, 20th century;
(4) English style (standard), 33 holes;
(5) Diamond, 41 holes;
(6) Triangular, 15 holes.
Grey = the hole for the survivor.

A common triangular variant has five pegs on a side. A solution where the final peg arrives at the initial empty hole is not possible for a hole in one of the three central positions. An empty corner-hole setup can be solved in ten moves, and an empty midside-hole setup in nine (Bell 2008):

Shortest solution to triangular variant

* = peg to move next; ¤ = hole created by move; o = jumped peg removed; * = hole filled by jumping;

Video game[edit]

On June 26th, 1992, a video game based on peg solitaire was released for the Game Boy. Titled simply 'Solitaire', the game was developed by Hect. In North America, DTMC released the game as 'Lazlos' Leap'.

References[edit]

  1. ^Berlekamp, E. R.; Conway, J. H.; Guy, R. K. (2001) [1981], Winning Ways for your Mathematical Plays(paperback)|format= requires |url= (help) (2nd ed.), A K Peters/CRC Press, ISBN978-1568811307, OCLC316054929
  2. ^ abKiyomi, M.; Matsui, T. (2001), 'Integer Programming Based Algorithms for Peg Solitaire Problems', Proc. 2nd Int. Conf. Computers and Games (CG 2000): Integer programming based algorithms for peg solitaire problems, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2063, pp. 229–240, CiteSeerX10.1.1.65.6244, doi:10.1007/3-540-45579-5_15, ISBN978-3-540-43080-3
  3. ^Uehara, R.; Iwata, S. (1990). 'Generalized Hi-Q is NP-complete'. Trans. IEICE. 73: 270–273.
  4. ^Avis, D.; Deza, A. (2001), 'On the solitaire cone and its relationship to multi-commodity flows', Mathematical Programming, 90 (1): 27–57, doi:10.1007/PL00011419
  5. ^Eichler; Jäger; Ludwig (1999), c't 07/1999 Spielverderber, Solitaire mit dem Computer lösen (in German), 7, p. 218
  6. ^'Mathematics and brainvita', Notes on Mathematics, 28 August 2012, retrieved 6 September 2018
  7. ^For Beasley's proof see Winning Ways, volume #4 (second edition).
  8. ^Brassine, Michel (December 1981), 'Découvrez... le solitaire', Jeux et Stratégie (in French)

Further reading[edit]

  • Beasley, John D. (1985), The Ins & Outs of Peg Solitaire, Oxford University Press, ISBN978-0198532033
  • Bell, G. I. (2008), 'Solving triangular peg solitaire', Journal of Integer Sequences, 11: Article 08.4.8, arXiv:math.CO/0703865, Bibcode:2007math......3865B.
  • Bruijn, N.G. de (1972), 'A solitaire game and its relation to a finite field'(PDF), Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 5: 133–137
  • Cross, D. C. (1968), 'Square solitaire and variations', Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 1: 121–123
  • Gardner, M., 'Mathematical games', Scientific American206 (6): 156–166, June 1962; 214 (2): 112–113, Feb. 1966; 214 (5): 127, May 1966.
  • Jefferson, Chris; et al. (October 2006), 'Modelling and Solving English Peg Solitairet', Computers & Operations Research, 33 (10): 2935–2959, CiteSeerX10.1.1.5.7805, doi:10.1016/j.cor.2005.01.018

Play Free Peg Game

External links[edit]

Starburst Peg Game Instructions

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Peg solitaire.

Cracker Barrel Peg Game Instructions

  • Bogomolny, Alexander, 'Peg Solitaire and Group Theory', Interactive Mathematics Miscellany and Puzzles, retrieved 7 September 2018
  • White Pixels (24 October 2017), Peg Solitaire: Easy to remember symmetrical solution (video), Youtube
  • Play Multiple Versions of Peg Solitaire including English, European, Triangular, Hexagonal, Propeller, Minimum, 4Holes, 5Holes, Easy Pinwheel, Banzai7, Megaphone, Owl, Star and Arrow at pegsolitaire.org

Peg Game Instructions

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