There are a number of 18th Century board games you missed out. I own one of them. 'The New Game of Human Life' from 1790 ... this was essentially a remake of a similar French board game and has a slightly later German remake too ... before that there are tours of England and Europe board games from mid 18th century .... they're all race games, loosely based on the 15th century 'Goose game' where a player traverses the game route and can be pushed forward or sent back depending on the square he occupies ... along with the gain or forfeiture of stakes .... nice to see a board game history video though.
7:17 great video. just a little error the image that you put along chaturanga is actually shatranj. chaturanga was a 4 player game and the the persians i think not sure) transformed into a 2 player game
Wikipedia disagrees. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaturanga Chaturanga is the predecessor to Shatranj it's exact rules are unknown for instance how the elephant moved is not known.
very good video. i think the volume of the music, especialy in the 2nd half of the video,, is too loud and makes it difficult to listen to your voice. thank you for your research.
Great effort and information.. well done... just if you may note that several parts of the video had your voice lost behind the music.... Great job though...
Very nice video, just a note, some of the text parts in the video disappear too fast to be read completely, it would be nice if you let them more time.
Love the Jumanji reference at the end.
There are a number of 18th Century board games you missed out. I own one of them. 'The New Game of Human Life' from 1790 ... this was essentially a remake of a similar French board game and has a slightly later German remake too ... before that there are tours of England and Europe board games from mid 18th century .... they're all race games, loosely based on the 15th century 'Goose game' where a player traverses the game route and can be pushed forward or sent back depending on the square he occupies ... along with the gain or forfeiture of stakes .... nice to see a board game history video though.
7:17 great video. just a little error the image that you put along chaturanga is actually shatranj. chaturanga was a 4 player game and the the persians i think not sure) transformed into a 2 player game
Wikipedia disagrees. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaturanga
Chaturanga is the predecessor to Shatranj it's exact rules are unknown for instance how the elephant moved is not known.
with regards to the game of ur, you left out that if the tile lands on the centeral flower it cannot be removed only moved past it
I will use this video with my students from 11th grade. Thank you.
very good video. i think the volume of the music, especialy in the 2nd half of the video,, is too loud and makes it difficult to listen to your voice. thank you for your research.
Very cool. Thank you.
Great effort and information.. well done... just if you may note that several parts of the video had your voice lost behind the music.... Great job though...
Experience does its job. The newer vids dont have this issue I think. 🤔
Great Info!
My favorite board games is rolling stones rock n roll party game and chess n Checker set .
Why did you leave out backgammon???
So that I can do a separate video on it. Someday.
awesome video! thank you!!!
Man keep coming with this shit. Me like it💯💙💙
you missed a lot where is go or shogi?
Very nice video, just a note, some of the text parts in the video disappear too fast to be read completely, it would be nice if you let them more time.
Click K on keyboard 😋
RISK and WAR are succesors to diplomacy, but not as evil
edit: I THINK
The tafl family was a thing.
Of course the ancient Egyptian board game was about the journey of the soul
10:08
Cool
I think he misrepresented chaturanga