Quarto (board game)

Two-player board game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quarto is a board game for two players invented by Swiss mathematician Blaise Muller.[1] It is published and copyrighted by Gigamic.

Quarto board at start of game

The game is played on a 4×4 board.[2] There are 16 unique pieces to play with, each of which is either:

  • tall or short;
  • red or blue (or a different pair of colors, e.g. light- or dark-stained wood);
  • square or circular; and
  • hollow-top or solid-top.

Players take turns choosing a piece which the other player must then place on the board. A player wins by placing a piece on the board which forms a horizontal, vertical, or diagonal row of four pieces, all of which have a common attribute (all short, all circular, etc.). A variant rule included in many editions gives a second way to win by placing four matching pieces in a 2×2 square.

Quarto is distinctive in that there is only one set of common pieces, rather than a set for one player and a different set for the other. It is therefore an impartial game.


Analysis

In 1998 Luc Goossens solved the game (i.e., showed what must occur if both players play perfectly) via computer and found neither player can force a win.[3] He also determined that the earliest winning move (in case the opponent did not play perfectly) can be made when placing the fifth piece and choosing a sixth. The solve was corroborated again in 2026. [4]


Awards

  • Dé d’Or des Créateurs de Jeux 1989 – Paris, France
  • Oscar du Jouet – Toy Oscar 1992 – Paris, France
  • Jouet de l'année – Game of the Year 1992 – Brussels
  • Super As d'Or Festival International des Jeux – Super Golden Ace 1992 – Cannes, France
  • Toy Award 1992 – Benelux
  • Spiel des Jahres – Game of the Year 1993 nominee – Germany[5]
  • Gioco Dell'anno – Game of the Year 1993 – Italy
  • Speelgoed Vant Jaar – Game of the year 1993 – Netherlands
  • Mensa Select Top 5 Best Games 1993 – US
  • Parent's Choice Gold Award 1993 – US
  • Best Bet of the Canadian Toy Testing Council 1994 – Canada
  • Prix d'Excellence des Consommateurs – Consumer's Toy Award 1994 – Quebec, Canada
  • Games Magazine "Games 100 Selection" 1995 – US
  • Games Magazine "Games 100 Selection" 1996 – US
  • Games Magazine "Games 100 Selection" 1997 – US
  • Game of the Year 2004 – Finland
  • Parent's Choice Top 25 games in 25 years 2004 – US

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI