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JENGA and other wooden block games
Uri Zwick Tel Aviv University
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JENGA A real-life game with a surprisingly simple analysis.
We consider, of course, an idealized version of the game. Many interesting open problems. Purely of recreational value.
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JENGA is a very popular game!
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JENGA – The rules of the game
The game starts with an alternating n-story tower of wooden blocks, three at each level. In the real-life game, n=18.
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JENGA – The rules of the game
Each player, in her turn, removes a block from anywhere below the highest completed level and stacks it on top. The player that topples the tower loses.
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Who wins? How?
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Everything else is stable!
Instability Everything else is stable!
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Implications Top most level, or the level just below it, is always full. The tower is stable, unless it contains the forbidden level: Two towers that differ only in the order of the levels are equivalent!
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Possible Moves *2 *1
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Configurations (x,y,z) x - # of full levels
y - # of levels with two adjacent blocks z - # of blocks on top. x≥0 y≥0 0≤z<3 x=2 y=6 z=2
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Possible Moves I-I -II -I- (x,y,z) (x-1,y,z+1) (x,y,z) (x-1,y+1,z+1)
(x,y,3) → (x+1,y,0)
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Analysis I
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Analysis II
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Solution
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Nim values of JENGA
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Optimal Moves
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JENGA is a win for the first player iff n1,2(mod 3) and n≥2.
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What next?
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JENGA - Truth or Dare
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Who wins in JENGAk? k=5
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JENGA2k is a win for the second player!
A simple symmetry argument.
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Some interesting JENGA5 positions
*15 *17
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Which towers are stable?
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“Simple” towers The center of gravity of each upper part of the tower should be above the area of contact between the upper and lower parts of the tower
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Does this hold for more general towers?
Of course NOT!
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Is this simple necessary condition sufficient for JENGAk towers?
YES, for k=3,4 and 6. NO, otherwise.
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Unstable JENGA5 towers
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Rigid body in equilibrium
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Forces acting on towers
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Equivalent systems of forces
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Stability and linear programming
A tower is weakly stable if and only if its corresponding linear program is feasible. A tower is stable if and only if its corresponding linear has a strictly positive feasible point.
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Simple Variations of JENGA
Remove a block from anywhere and put it anywhere on the top level. If the top level is full, then start a new level. Remove a block from anywhere and put it anywhere on top, or start a new level. If a block from the top level is removed, then it must start a new level.
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More complicated variations of JENGA
Remove a block from anywhere, and put it anywhere higher. (Filling in gaps is allowed.) Remove a block, or slide it outward by a multiple of 1/k of the length of a block. If a block is completely removed, then put it anywhere on top.
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Free Play JENGAk Remove a block from anywhere, and put it in an arbitrary position at the top level, or start a new level, not necessarily in one of the fixed k positions of standard JENGAk games.
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More basic open problems
Which positions in JENGAk are: REACHABLE? CONSTRUCTIBLE? SCULPTUREABLE?
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