h a l f b a k e r yI didn't say you were on to something, I said you were on something.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
So my asian friend told me the other day that there was no such thing as Scrabble in Taiwan. I wasn't surprised. But then I remembered that Chinese characters were made from a set of standard brush strokes.
In this game, you would receive a bunch of brush strokes, which you would then arrange
into words and place upon the playing surface. The first player would form a word in the middle of the board. The next player would then have to use a brush stroke on the board to form part of his word.
I don't know much about Asian languages, so I'm not sure if this would work.
Parts is parts
http://www.uoregon....d/cjkdictframes.htm 214 standard radicals, good starting point [lurch, Aug 20 2005]
[link]
|
|
I think it could work. Some word are even combinations of other words, so you could even build on what's already there. |
|
|
It would probably not be much like scrabble, but it sounds like a workable premise for a game. |
|
|
More like the game Upwords. Good stuff. |
|
|
Nice idea. Have you figured out how to handle the blanks? I dont think it will work to have a fully transparent piece laid over the rest. |
|
|
This would probably only work with a few Chinese characters, for example the ideograms for the numbers one to three, unless the phonetic and the radical were used rather than individual strokes. This doesn't work at all for Japanese kana, Korean script or the various South Asian-based scripts, but for some of these conventional scrabble might work. Another thing that might work is to use Chinese proverbs instead of words with coinciding words instead of letters. |
|
|
[nineteenthly] is quite correct, as there is a nicely defined square area in which your completed character needs to be centered and balanced, with strokes placed in combinations related to each other. However, if you don't mind a layer of electronics, your playing piece can float its ideogram into the ones represented by the ones underneath and display the properly formed compound character. |
|
|
Only valid characters permitted, but there's a bonus for high stroke counts. |
|
|
I like this, good points in the annos too. |
|
|
//no such thing as Scrabble in Taiwan//
They do have crosswords, however. Except instead of words they use proverbs and sayings. |
|
|
When I was teaching English in China, it was a common sight to see people sitting around tables along the pavement, playing Chinese Chess or Mahjong. One day, a few of the other teachers and I took a table down to the street, and sat around it playing Scrabble. We attracted quite a bit of interest as bemused locals gathered round to watch us, asking "Jaega meiguo mahjong ma?" ("Is this American Mahjong?"). |
|
|
You could use a projector with transparencies that can be slid to different distances (to change the size of the projected image). This lets you fit your stroke on top of the picture regardless of the needed scaling. |
|
|
This idea already had my bun, but I love the poverbs idea. These should be a rule governing a proverb, and proverb components could be rearranged. This would be fun in english too. |
|
|
"Dammit, all I have is moons." |
|
| |