44 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
44 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: Paper Pyramids
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date: 2024-11-22
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description: DIY pyramid games!
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preview_image: paper-pyramid-nest.webp
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tags:
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- boardgame
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- craft
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- looney-pyramids
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- photo
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- web
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---
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{% css %}
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img {
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float: right;
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clear: right;
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width: 400px;
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padding: 10px 20px;
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}
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{% endcss %}
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<img src="paper-pyramid-nest.webp">
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So apparently I haven't written about [Looney Pyramids](https://www.looneylabs.com/pyramids-home) yet! Formerly known as Icehouse Pyramids, these were invented by Andy Looney in 1987 as a prop for a science fiction setting for his book [The Empty City](http://archive.wunderland.com/WTS/Andy/EmptyCity/emptycity.html). The game was called Icehouse, and it was meant to be a Martian counterpart to Chess, but "alien" in every possible way:
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<img src="paper-pyramid-bottlecap.webp">
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- The game is for 4 players, with no assigned partners. Diplomacy is allowed but [only once play begins](https://ee0r.com/icehouse/hypothermia/07/default.html).
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- Pieces cannot be moved after placing, except in rare circumstances, similar to Go.
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- There is no board! The game is played on any flat surface, typically a coffee table. Each player is allowed a small reserve space for their 'out of play' pieces, and *literally everywhere else* is considered 'in play'.
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- There are *no turns*. You can move whenever you feel like it. You can make lots of quick moves, or you can wait and make lots of late moves.
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- To prevent stalling, there is a timer set to 'about 30 minutes', and placed where nobody can see the remaining time.
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<img src="paper-pyramid-comparison.webp">
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These design concepts were ahead of their time in my opinion. Andy Looney and friends, I think they called themselves the 'Wunderland Toast Society', they absolutely changed board gaming in a way we wouldn't see again until James Ernest started Cheapass Games and started selling cut-and-play titles like [Kill Doctor Lucky](https://crabfragmentlabs.com/shop/p/kill-doctor-lucky) in 1996. In fact, whenever a James Ernest game says to use 'tokens of your choice', I always use Looney Pyramids.
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<img src="paper-pyramid-tree.webp">
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Anyway, I had to blog about this because I found Bill Adams' [Origami Icehouse Pieces](https://web.archive.org/web/20050521082358/http://www.iglou.com/biladams/IceHouse/) page buried in the Internet Archive. I've downloaded a local copy in case anything happens to the Archive and I'll probably mirror it at some point [unless he objects](/blog/2024-09-21-01-ethics-of-reuploading/). I'm not sure if he's still around or how to get in touch with him; if you do then let me know.
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The pieces are a bit tricky to fold! When he says "fold the corner to the right", you actually have to hold the previous fold in place and fold over it. I should take my own pictures honestly. Right now I just want to show off a few pieces I folded for fun though. Ok bye!
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