The game of End-Nim
The electronic journal of combinatorics, The Fraenkel Festschrift volume, Tome 8 (2001) no. 2
In the game of End-Nim two players take turns in removing one or more boxes from a string of non-empty stacks. At each move boxes may only be taken from the two stacks which form the ends of the string (unless only one stack remains!). We give a solution for both impartial and partizan versions of the game and explain the significance of the mystic hieroglyphs: $$ \begin{array}{|cc|} \hline \uparrow & \downarrow \\ \downarrow & \uparrow \\ \hline \end{array} $$
DOI :
10.37236/1600
Classification :
91A46, 05B99
Mots-clés : game of End-Nim, impartial and partizan versions
Mots-clés : game of End-Nim, impartial and partizan versions
@article{10_37236_1600,
author = {Michael H. Albert and Richard J. Nowakowski},
title = {The game of {End-Nim}},
journal = {The electronic journal of combinatorics},
year = {2001},
volume = {8},
number = {2},
doi = {10.37236/1600},
zbl = {0984.91022},
url = {http://geodesic.mathdoc.fr/articles/10.37236/1600/}
}
Michael H. Albert; Richard J. Nowakowski. The game of End-Nim. The electronic journal of combinatorics, The Fraenkel Festschrift volume, Tome 8 (2001) no. 2. doi: 10.37236/1600
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