The Essential Details of Backgammon Strategies – Part One

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Posted by Darien | Posted in Backgammon | Posted on 08-10-2025

The aim of a Backgammon match is to move your chips around the Backgammon board and pull them from the game board faster than your challenger who works harder to do the same buthowever they move in the opposing direction. Winning a match of Backgammon requires both strategy and fortune. How far you will be able to shift your pieces is left to the numbers from rolling a pair of dice, and the way you move your chips are determined by your overall playing plans. Players use different tactics in the different parts of a match dependent on your positions and opponent’s.

The Running Game Technique

The goal of the Running Game plan is to bring all your checkers into your home board and bear them off as quick as you can. This technique concentrates on the speed of shifting your chips with no time spent to hit or stop your competitor’s checkers. The ideal time to use this strategy is when you think you can shift your own pieces a lot faster than your opposing player does: when 1) you have less checkers on the game board; 2) all your pieces have past your competitor’s chips; or 3) the opponent does not use the hitting or blocking strategy.

The Blocking Game Technique

The main aim of the blocking strategy, by its name, is to block the opponent’s pieces, temporarily, while not fretting about shifting your chips quickly. As soon as you’ve established the blockage for the opponent’s movement with a couple of chips, you can move your other checkers rapidly off the game board. The player should also have a clear plan when to back off and move the chips that you employed for the blockade. The game becomes interesting when your competitor uses the same blocking tactic.

The Essential Facts of Backgammon Strategies – Part 2

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Posted by Darien | Posted in Backgammon | Posted on 06-10-2025

As we dicussed in the previous article, Backgammon is a game of talent and good luck. The goal is to move your checkers carefully around the game board to your inner board and at the same time your opposing player moves their checkers toward their inside board in the opposite direction. With opposing player chips heading in opposite directions there is bound to be conflict and the requirement for particular strategies at particular times. Here are the 2 final Backgammon plans to finish off your game.

The Priming Game Plan

If the aim of the blocking strategy is to hamper the opponents ability to shift their chips, the Priming Game plan is to completely block any movement of the opponent by creating a prime – ideally 6 points in a row. The competitor’s pieces will either get hit, or end up in a damaged position if he at all tries to escape the wall. The trap of the prime can be established anywhere between point two and point 11 in your half of the board. Once you’ve successfully built the prime to prevent the movement of your opponent, your opponent does not even get to roll the dice, that means you move your pieces and toss the dice again. You will be a winner for sure.

The Back Game Technique

The aims of the Back Game strategy and the Blocking Game technique are similar – to hurt your opponent’s positions hoping to better your chances of succeeding, however the Back Game strategy utilizes seperate techniques to achieve that. The Back Game plan is generally employed when you are far behind your opponent. To play Backgammon with this plan, you have to control two or more points in table, and to hit a blot (a single piece) late in the game. This technique is more complex than others to play in Backgammon seeing as it needs careful movement of your pieces and how the pieces are moved is partly the result of the dice toss.