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Fun traditional Korean games, part 2

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By Korea.net Honorary Reporter Cintia Mancilla


Paper & pencil and table games 

Gonu (고누)

Gonu is an abstract strategy board game. (Cintia Mancilla)

A variation of pong hau k'i (裤裆棋), gonu is a two person board game that varies by region. The game is commonly played on a small four-by-four board. Based on the version of gonu, each player has an established quantity of pieces, black or white, and different diagram board .It could be easily played with a paper and pencil while using some coins or beans as pieces. The objective is to freeze the opponent's counters. Players take turns moving their pieces to the closest free spot, trying to block their rival’s potential moves on the next turn. The first player to block all the opponent's pieces is the winner.

Omok (오목)

This Korean game is played on a 19-by-19 board and does not include the rule of “three and three.” The goal is to form a line of five pieces in a row. It can be vertical, horizontal or diagonal, using the intersection points and not inside the squares. 

Alkkagi (알까기)

This is the name of a table board game popular around the yearly Chuseok Mid-Autumn Harvest Festival. It's often played on a go board, but can be played on any smooth surface with a grid pattern. It is a two-player game. They place white and black stones at the end of the board, spreading out at the two ends of the board again. Both players try to flick their pieces into the rival's area, knocking them off the board. The winner is the person who keeps safe at least one piece of their own.


Outdoor games

Juldarigi (줄다리기)

Juldarigi bears a strong resemblance to a tug of war. Many agriculture communities have turned this traditional sport into a ritual and give it divinatory meaning. It's played at festivals and public gatherings, such as at Daeboreum (대보름), the Great Full Moon Festival.

Villagers use two huge rice-straw ropes connected by a central peg that are pulled by teams representing the east and the west of the town.

Hoop-rolling (굴렁쇠)

This game has been played by generations and generations of children all around the world. The materials might vary according to the country, but the objective is the same: try to make a hoop, made of wood or metal, roll with the help of a stick for long periods of time, or attempt tricks. In the Opening Ceremony for the Seoul 1988 Olympics, a young child named Yoon Tae-woong rolled a hoop across the Olympic Stadium in front a huge crowd, touching people's hearts.

There's a video of the Opening Ceremony on YouTube.


Team and hand games

Di bi di bi dip or Cham cham cham (디비디비딮, 참참참) 

This popular hand game can be seen on many TV shows. The main goal is to persuade your opponent to face the same direction you want them to face (cham cham cham) or do the same pose as the leader does (di bi di bi dip). First, a challenger will point either left or right with his finger or arm and say, "Di bi di bi dip," or, "Cham cham cham." Your aim is to turn your head to the opposite direction. Sometimes, people use these phrases with variations.

Muk jji ppa (묵찌빠)

Rock-paper-scissors is well known around the world. The Korean version adds an interesting change. The game begins with the regular rock-paper-scissors. The goal of the winner is to match what the loser will show on the next turn.

The rules for muk jji ppa are explained by Korea.net Honorary Reporter Cintia Mancilla.

Human zero game (인간제로)

Similar to a thumb war, you can have two people play this game any amount you want. All the players put their fists together while one person will call out a number from zero to four. If the number of thumbs raised is the same that the number shouted, that person is the winner and gains one point. When the caller shouts, "Zero," none of the players should raise their thumbs, making the caller the loser. A variation of this game is, instead of using thumbs, the players remain crouched down or standing up, depending on what the leader calls.

Sense games (눈치게임)

Nunchi (눈치) is a Korean word that means the ability to guess another person's feelings or desired actions. If you don’t have nunchi (눈치가 없다), it means that you're clueless. The "sense game" is perfect with more than three people. Everybody sits or crouches down in one place ready to go. First, one person will call out, “Start.” Each person will stand up and shout a number from one according to the number of people playing. Players lose if two people say the same number.

Perfect pitch (절대음감게임)

This tongue twister game consists of a five syllable phrase said five times only, although the numbers of syllables could be fewer or more than five, according to the difficulty desired. This is usually a relay game. At each repetition of the phrase, the intonation must begin from the first syllable to the last. It's a good game to help improve one's Korean pronunciation.

Here are some examples.

4 syllables

낙지볶음Nak-ji –bo-kkeum (spicy stir fried octopus)
법학박사Beop-hak-bak-sa (a Ph.D. in law)

5 syllables

샥스핀스프 shak-seu-pin-seu-peu (shark fin soup)
괄라룸푸르 kwal-la-lum-pu-reu (Kuala Lumpur)

6 syllables

막국수닭갈비 mak-guk-su-dak-kal-bi (buckwheat noodles with grilled chicken)
왕안흥팥찐빵wang-an-heung-pat-jjin-bbang (king-sized Anheung-styled red bean steamed bun)


Chicken fight (닭싸움)

In this popular game, you have to fight as a chicken would. The players are separated into two equal groups, where each player grabs the ankle of one of their feet letting your knee poke out .While standing on one leg you have to try to knock the other person over, making both their feet touch the ground. This game will go on until only one person is the survivor.

369 (삼육구)

The game 369 is perfect to play with a lot of people. The rules are easy to follow. One player begins counting from one, passing the turn to the next player. They must count that number plus one more, repeating this rules until one person fails. However, when a player encounters a number that includes the digits 3, 6 or 9, the person has to do a clap for that number.

Example:
1, 2, clap, 4, 5, clap, 7, 8, clap, 10, 11, 12, clap, 14, 15, clap, 17, 18, clap, 20, 21, 22, clap, 24, 25, clap, 27, 28, clap, and so on


wisdom117@korea.kr



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