All about the revised Green India Mission to increase forest cover, address climate change
International Yoga Day: Why is it hard to pinpoint the origin of yoga?
QA::Why Madhya Pradesh CM's wish to count snakes and rear king cobras is unfeasible
What new Registration Bill says, why it was introduced
A newly released Hindi film, titled Ludo, premiered on Netflix this week. The film, directed by Anurag Basu, is a comedy around the popular board game. Members of the cast, including Pankaj Tripathi, Abhishek Bachchan, Rajkummar Rao, Aditya Roy Kapur, and Fatima Sana Sheikh, get into a variety of situations in which they cross each other’s paths, rather like the tokens in ludo. One character says: “Life is ludo, and ludo is life.”
The game found in almost all Indian homes – and whose popularity surged during the recent days and nights of Covid
The version in our homes today typically has four colours: red, yellow, green and blue. Two or four players can play. Tokens move around the cross-shaped playing area with the throw of the dice, trying to get to the designated safe house. The player who gets all four tokens into the safe house wins.
The board can be of humble, foldable cardboard with plastic tokens, or an ornate wooden, hand-carved one that costs upwards of Rs 5,000. With applications like Ludo King and Ludo Online, enthusiasts can play the game online with other players.
Patented Glory
The game as we see it today, can be credited to Alfred Collier who patented it in England as ludo, which forbade replicas of the game and its paraphernalia. Old Collier ludo boards are now collectors’ items.
Story in History
The earliest verified version of the game, which was called Pacheesi, can be found in the cave painting of Ellora. There are references in the Mahabharata to Pacheesi, which was played with cowrie shells; 25 was the highest score you could get from the throw.
In the well known Mahabharata incident, the Pandavas were challenged to a game of Pacheesi by the Kauravas, who used the special ‘cursed’ set of dice made by Shakuni, which could never lose a hand. Yudhisthir ended up gambling away his kingdom, his brothers, and finally put Draupadi up for grabs. Later, when the Pandavas were in anonymous exile, Yudhisthir adopted the identity of Kank, and played dice with the king of Matsya. 📣 Express Explained is now on Telegram
Mughal Version
Emperor Akbar enjoyed the game, and the courtyard of his palace at Fatehpur Sikri had red and white squares. Women from the harem would dress up in colours of the patron, and move around as the roll of the dice dictated.
Abul Fazl, Akbar’s grand vizier and his court historian, wrote that “From times of old, the people of Hindustan have been fond of this game”, and that Chaupar/ Pacheesi was popular with the masses.
Also read | Ludo review: Hijinks in the time of Corona
Western Versions
Most western versions such as ludo are considered to have been inspired by versions of the ancient Pacheesi. A similar board game was played in China during the reign of the Wei dynasty c.250 AD.
In the Levant, a game called Barjis was popular, and in Morocco and Spain, a version called Parchis was played.
The Swedish board game is called Fia; the Swiss version, Eile mit Weile, literally meaning ‘Haste makes Pace’. The Colombians play Parques.
A Pakistani variant uses a pair of dice, and allows for backward movement of the tokens. The Vietnamese version, C? cá ng?a, is based on the principle of a horse race, and even the tokens are modelled as horse heads. The horse reference is also invoked in the French variant Jeu des petits chevaux or the Game of Little Horses.
Pandemic Popularity
The Covid-19
Don’t miss from Explained | ‘Lockdown’ is Collins Dictionary’s word of the year: A history of lockdowns before Covid-19