BattleHalma - a spiced up Halma

Introduction
BattleHalma is a new invention. In BattleHalma with promotion rule
you promote to king at the opponent's corner square (in the opposite yard). The
goal of the game is to capture all the opponent's pieces, as in checkers.
Players take turns, moving a single counter at a time. The movement rule is
similar to Halma: movement occurs horizontally, vertically, or diagonally,
either by shifting to an adjacent square or by leaping over an adjacent counter
(of either color). The counter leapt over is not captured. You may not
immediately leap back to the square you came from.
BattleHalma is distinguished by its rule of exchange-capture: if the
counter is moved to a square which is occupied by an enemy counter, then this is
captured. A leaping counter may continue to leap over other counters until there
are no more to leap over or the player decides to stop.
Note: in
Battle Halma it is not allowable to jump or step backwards (i.e. in the
direction of one's own yard). In the above picture it would mean that the red
pieces are not allowed to move east, south, or south-east. The exception to this
is the king, which can jump and move in all directions. The king not
only captures the piece he lands on, he also captures the enemy piece that he
jumps over.
There is also a faster variant of BattleHalma, without
promotion. In BattleHalma with terminal rule you must be the first to
conquer the opponent's corner square (in the opposite yard) by placing a counter
there. The game ends there, so it's not necessary to capture all the opponent's
pieces.
Strategy: keep the "goalkeeper" in its initial position as
long as possible as this counter is important to the defence. Try to conquer
space while looking out for tactical threats. As backwards moves are not allowed
it's generally a good idea to try to position counters behind the enemy line,
where they cannot be challenged.
Original Halma, (the big 16 square
version) was invented in 1883 by
Discussion
Draws are infrequent in BattleHalma as the game is quite
vital in both the strategical and tactical sense. The version where each party
has only 3 counters each (on the 8x8 board) is a good illustration of this. Even
with so few pieces it is a challenging game. In BattleHalma, terminal rule,
depending on the location on the board, a "1 counter vs. 1 counter"
situation is sometimes winning. In BattleHalma with promotion any two
versus one king situation is winning. However, with more kings on the board it
is not easy to realize a material advantage. Four kings against two seems to be
a win, however. The original movement of the king has been researched as
probably the most suitable for this game.
Twelwe variants have been implemented, among them these attractive
variants: 8x8 BattleHalma promotion (10 counters), 10x10 BattleHalma promotion
(15 counters), 8x8 BattleHalma terminal (6 counters), 10x10 BattleHalma
terminal (10 counters).
You can download my free BattleHalma program here (updated 2005-12-21), but you must own the software Zillions of Games to be able to run it.
© M. Winther 2005