Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To Ben Reiniger wrote on Thu, Oct 21, 2010 08:12 PM UTC:Ah, that reminds me of another thing I was thinking about. Start with a triangular board, then consider playing on the edges. Each edge has six adjacent edges, but two of them lie along the same line as the given edge (and are, under the Euclidean metric, further away). So we have two reasonable ways to play. We can literally treat all adjacent edges as 'orthogonal' moves, which I think should turn the game into fairly standard hex movement. Or we could exclude these two funny edges, perhaps making them into a new type of move. Then we have a hex game which singles out certain kinds of orthogonal moves as special (but these special directions don't seem to be universal; without a drawing I'm having trouble seeing how they work together...) Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID Corners, borders does not match any item.