MeeplePulse
YINSH background banner
YINSH box art
2003DiceTree GamesSchmidt Spiele

YINSH

A dynamic duel of strategic sacrifice and shifting control.

Pulse Score
BGG Rating7.7
Overall Rank
#256
Players
2
Time
30-60m
Complexity
2.8
Age
9+

Track your board game life

Sign in to rate games, log plays, and manage your personal collection shelf.

Sign In to Track

Overview

YINSH stands as a celebrated entry in Kris Burm's renowned GIPF Project, offering a masterful two-player abstract strategy experience. The game is a pure contest of tactical foresight, where players, designated as black and white, compete on a hexagonal board. The objective is deceptively simple: be the first player to achieve victory by removing three of your five personal rings from play. This is accomplished by strategically maneuvering your pieces to form an unbroken line of five markers of your own color. Each time such a line is created, a ring is removed, creating a fascinating countdown to victory that also diminishes a player's power on the board.

The game unfolds in two distinct phases. Initially, players take turns strategically placing their five rings onto the intersections of the board. Once all ten rings are positioned, the main phase begins. On each turn, a player must first select one of their rings and place a marker of their color inside it. This marker joins a constantly evolving landscape of black and white pieces. Next, the player moves that same ring in a straight line to any unoccupied spot. The most critical mechanic is introduced when a ring jumps over a continuous line of markers. The ring must land on the first empty space immediately following the jumped markers, and crucially, all markers that were leaped over are flipped to their opposite color. This constant, dramatic shift in board control is the strategic heart of YINSH.

Successfully forming a row of five friendly markers is a moment of triumph, but it comes with a strategic cost. A player who achieves this must remove the five markers from the board and, as their reward, also removes one of their own rings. While this action brings them one step closer to the three-ring victory condition, it simultaneously reduces their presence and mobility on the board. This creates a compelling strategic dilemma: pursuing victory weakens your operational capacity. This tension defines the game's arc, forcing players to weigh every move carefully. YINSH is adored for this elegant balance of simple rules and profound, emergent depth. It is a game of pure skill with zero luck, where the dynamic, ever-changing board state ensures that no two games are ever alike, offering nearly limitless replayability for those who appreciate a true strategic challenge.

Community Activity & News

Latest Media

No media found