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Wythoff's game is a classical take-away combinatorial game played with two piles of tokens. Fraenkel introduced a generalization of this game, called \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game where a player may remove a positive number of token from one pile (this is the usual game of Nim) or, remove \(k\) tokens from one pile and simultaneously \(\ell\) tokens from the other pile provided that the following affine condition \(0<k\leq\ell<sk+t\) is fulfilled. In this paper, four restrictions of \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game (i.e., one has to consider a subset of the original rule-set and play with a restricted set of moves), depending on the parity of the number of tokens that may be removed in a round, are investigated. The authors study both normal and misère conventions. The characterizations of the set of \(P\)-positions of these games are given either in algebraic, recursive form or by explicit formulas. The paper ends with several open problems that may lead to generalizations of the results presented here.
Property / review text: Wythoff's game is a classical take-away combinatorial game played with two piles of tokens. Fraenkel introduced a generalization of this game, called \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game where a player may remove a positive number of token from one pile (this is the usual game of Nim) or, remove \(k\) tokens from one pile and simultaneously \(\ell\) tokens from the other pile provided that the following affine condition \(0<k\leq\ell<sk+t\) is fulfilled. In this paper, four restrictions of \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game (i.e., one has to consider a subset of the original rule-set and play with a restricted set of moves), depending on the parity of the number of tokens that may be removed in a round, are investigated. The authors study both normal and misère conventions. The characterizations of the set of \(P\)-positions of these games are given either in algebraic, recursive form or by explicit formulas. The paper ends with several open problems that may lead to generalizations of the results presented here. / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Michel Rigo / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 91A46 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 91A05 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6340211 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
impartial combinatorial game
Property / zbMATH Keywords: impartial combinatorial game / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
misère convention
Property / zbMATH Keywords: misère convention / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
normal convention
Property / zbMATH Keywords: normal convention / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
Wythoff's game
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Wythoff's game / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
\(P\)-position
Property / zbMATH Keywords: \(P\)-position / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 18:18, 29 June 2023

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General restriction of \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game
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    General restriction of \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game (English)
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    4 September 2014
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    Wythoff's game is a classical take-away combinatorial game played with two piles of tokens. Fraenkel introduced a generalization of this game, called \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game where a player may remove a positive number of token from one pile (this is the usual game of Nim) or, remove \(k\) tokens from one pile and simultaneously \(\ell\) tokens from the other pile provided that the following affine condition \(0<k\leq\ell<sk+t\) is fulfilled. In this paper, four restrictions of \((s,t)\)-Wythoff's game (i.e., one has to consider a subset of the original rule-set and play with a restricted set of moves), depending on the parity of the number of tokens that may be removed in a round, are investigated. The authors study both normal and misère conventions. The characterizations of the set of \(P\)-positions of these games are given either in algebraic, recursive form or by explicit formulas. The paper ends with several open problems that may lead to generalizations of the results presented here.
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    impartial combinatorial game
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    misère convention
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    normal convention
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    Wythoff's game
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    \(P\)-position
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