The Backgammon Family

Backgammon isn’t one game — it’s a family of games with variants played across the globe. All share the core concept of racing pieces around a board using dice, but the details vary significantly.


Major Variants

Tavla (Turkish Backgammon)

The most widely played variant in Turkey and the Middle East:

  • Essentially the same as standard backgammon
  • Traditionally played without the doubling cube
  • The starting position and movement rules are identical
  • Cultural differences: Tavla is deeply woven into Turkish social life

Narde (Russian Backgammon)

A strategic variant popular in Russia and Central Asia:

  • No hitting — you cannot capture opponent checkers
  • Instead, you block by occupying points
  • Both players move in the same direction around the board
  • All 15 checkers start stacked on the same point
  • Strategy focuses entirely on blocking and priming

Plakoto (Greek Backgammon)

A trapping variant popular in Greece:

  • Instead of hitting, you trap an opponent’s single checker by landing on it
  • The trapped checker is pinned on that point until your checker moves
  • All checkers start on the same point (opposite corners)
  • Creates intense positional battles

Fevga (Greek/Turkish Variant)

Similar to Narde:

  • No hitting
  • Both players move in the same direction
  • All checkers start on one point
  • A player cannot completely block all 6 home board points if the opponent still has checkers to pass through

Acey-Deucey (American Military)

A high-action variant popular with U.S. military personnel:

  • All checkers start off the board and must be entered
  • Rolling 1-2 (Acey-Deucey) is special: play the 1-2, then pick any doubles you want, then roll again
  • Much more luck-dependent but faster-paced
  • The Acey-Deucey roll can be game-changing

Hypergammon

A speed variant played on a standard board:

  • Each player has only 3 checkers (instead of 15)
  • Starting position: one checker each on the 24, 23, and 22 points
  • Games are very short and tactical
  • Completely solved by computers (all 18 billion positions analyzed)

Chouette (Multiplayer Backgammon)

Not a rule variant but a multiplayer format:

  • One player (the “box”) plays against a team of players
  • The team captain makes moves, but team members can consult
  • If the box wins, they stay as box; if they lose, the next player takes over
  • Popular in social settings and club play

Trictrac

A historical French variant:

  • Played on a standard backgammon board
  • Points are scored for specific achievements during play (not just bearing off)
  • Largely historical — rarely played today but important in backgammon’s history

Russian Backgammon (Long Backgammon)

Different from Narde despite the similar name:

  • All 15 checkers start on the same point
  • Hitting is allowed
  • More interaction than Narde but less than standard backgammon

Comparing Variants

Feature Standard Narde Plakoto Acey-Deucey
Hitting Yes No Trapping Yes
Starting position Split One point One point Off board
Direction Opposite Same Opposite Same
Doubling cube Yes Optional Optional No
Luck factor Medium Low Medium High

Tavli: The Greek Multi-Game

In Greece, Tavli is played as a set of three games:

  1. Portes (standard backgammon)
  2. Plakoto (trapping variant)
  3. Fevga (blocking variant)

A complete Tavli session includes rounds of all three games, testing different skills.