Board Cricket Description
Board Cricket is a simple board game based on dice the game rules are similar to Snakes and Ladder’s.
The game is played between two players, you and droid bot.
You score runs equal to the score on the dice, your pawns move on the board according to your dice score. There are some Special homes –
Which can affect the tone of the game, once the batsman lands on these
Homes.
Bold & LBW– You lose a wicket, plus you go back to the home where you started the move from.
Caught & Runout - You lose a wicket, plus you go back to one home.
No Ball - You move forward one home, plus you get and extra turn.
Wide – You move forward one home.
Miss Field and Overthrow - You move forward few random homes from 1-6 on top of your dice score.
The game goes on till the maximum selected number of balls (excluding No Balls) are over, if you cross 100 the play continues from the home 1 but your score is counted as position on the board plus 100.
You can choose number of overs to play – 5, 10 or 20.
At the end of the maximum overs chosen player with the highest score wins. If one loses all his 10 wickets the other one is declared winner if his score is more than the players who lost all his wickets.
The game is played between two players, you and droid bot.
You score runs equal to the score on the dice, your pawns move on the board according to your dice score. There are some Special homes –
Which can affect the tone of the game, once the batsman lands on these
Homes.
Bold & LBW– You lose a wicket, plus you go back to the home where you started the move from.
Caught & Runout - You lose a wicket, plus you go back to one home.
No Ball - You move forward one home, plus you get and extra turn.
Wide – You move forward one home.
Miss Field and Overthrow - You move forward few random homes from 1-6 on top of your dice score.
The game goes on till the maximum selected number of balls (excluding No Balls) are over, if you cross 100 the play continues from the home 1 but your score is counted as position on the board plus 100.
You can choose number of overs to play – 5, 10 or 20.
At the end of the maximum overs chosen player with the highest score wins. If one loses all his 10 wickets the other one is declared winner if his score is more than the players who lost all his wickets.
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