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  1. Oware - Wikipedia

    A typical oware board has two straight rows of six pits, called "houses", and optionally one large "score" house at each end. Each player controls the six houses on their side of the board, and …

  2. The Rules & Play Instructions for Mancala, Oware & Bao

    The first game listed here is Oware which is played on a two-rank Mancala board and which is common to West Africa and the Caribbean. Oware (or variants of it) is the most commonly …

  3. Oware | Mancala World | Fandom

    Oware is the national mancala game of Ghana, and the particular name "Ɔware" is that given by the Akan speaking people there.

  4. Oware | Board Game | BoardGameGeek

    Oware is one of the most played games in the Mancala Family of pit and pebbles games. It is the National game of Ghana and the word "oware" means "He She Marries".

  5. Mancala / Oware African Board Games - Africa Heartwood Project

    Mancala (also known as Oware) is a popular “sowing” or “count-and-capture” game that originated on the continent of Africa. Played around the world, the game is fun and easy to learn, yet …

  6. How to play Oware and Wari | Official Rules - UltraBoardGames

    Reviews, tips, game rules, videos and links to the best board games, tabletop and card games.

  7. Oware • Capture the most stones to win • playstrategy.org

    Oware is an abstract strategy game among the bigger Mancala family of board games (or Pit and Pebbles Games) played all over the world with slight variations across different societies with …

  8. How to play - Oware

    Oware history, game board, rules and everything you need to know to start playing all in one place

  9. Oware - Rules and strategy of mancala games - gambiter.com

    Oware is an abstract strategy game among the Mancala family of board games (pit and pebble games) played world-wide with slight variations as to the layout of the game, number of …

  10. Oware / Ouril / Mancala - GitHub Pages

    The term Oware is an Akan language term as spoken in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Western Africa. The authorship for Ouril is unknown and due to its age in the public domain, too.