Chinese checkers (called boziqi in Hong Kong) is a kind of chess that can be played by two to six people at the same time. The board is in the shape of a six-star, and the pieces are divided into six colors, with 10 pieces in each color. Each player occupies a corner and has one color of chess pieces. Sometimes when the number of people is small, each player can also play with two colors of chess pieces. History: Chinese checkers invented checkers Halma (Halma, Greek for "jump") around the Victorian era (about 1880). The original chessboard was square, with 256 squares in total. At the beginning, the chess pieces were distributed in the four corners. The goal is to jump to the opposite corner as quickly as possible. The rules are similar to the current Chinese checkers. Soon someone changed it to a star-shaped chessboard, patented by a German company Ravensburger, called Stern-Halma. It became popular in the United States in the 1930s and changed its name to Chinese Checkers. When this kind of chess piece was introduced to China, it was called bozi chess. In fact, Chinese checkers did not originate in China. How to play: First place all the chess pieces of one color on one corner. Everyone takes turns moving the pieces in a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. Each time they move one piece, the winner is the one who reaches the opposite corner first with all the pieces. There are two ways for chess pieces to move: 1. A chess piece moves to one of the six adjacent squares. 2. "Building a bridge": There is another chess piece (B) on the same straight line as your own chess piece (A). It is not limited to which side it belongs to. There is no chess piece blocking the way between you. If there is no chess block on the other side of B, A can jump to the opposite direction of B, and the original distance between the two chess pieces will be the same. Jumping can be performed continuously until there are no more jumps left. If a loop occurs, choose one of the places to stop. Because of the symmetry of the board, the number of players is rarely 5, but is usually one of 2, 3, 4, or 6. Rule changes in current online games can often be seen to be different from the formal rules: Originally, the distance between the bridging chess pieces and the jumping chess pieces can be farther (it just cannot exceed half the distance of the chessboard), but in the Internet If so, the two chess pieces must be adjacent and can only take one step to reach the bridge chess piece