Memory Alpha
Memory Alpha
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-{{ShipClass| +{{Class|))
Line 14: Line 14:
   
 
[[File:3D checkers.jpg|thumb|3D game with checkers-pieces]]
 
[[File:3D checkers.jpg|thumb|3D game with checkers-pieces]]
The recreation room on the {{ShipClass|Constitution}} ''Enterprise'' was also equipped with a 3D board game consisting of four vertical acrylic rods in a quadratic arrangement, where each rod supported three 2x2 game boards which closely resembled the moving boards on a 3D chess set, so that there were twelve boards with a total of forty-eight squares (twenty-four white and twenty-four transparent). The game was played with red and black [[checkers]] pieces, eight of each color. ({{TOS|The Naked Time}}; {{DS9|Trials and Tribble-ations}})
+
The recreation room on the {{Class|Constitution}} ''Enterprise'' was also equipped with a 3D board game consisting of four vertical acrylic rods in a quadratic arrangement, where each rod supported three 2x2 game boards which closely resembled the moving boards on a 3D chess set, so that there were twelve boards with a total of forty-eight squares (twenty-four white and twenty-four transparent). The game was played with red and black [[checkers]] pieces, eight of each color. ({{TOS|The Naked Time}}; {{DS9|Trials and Tribble-ations}})
 
{{bginfo|This prop was an actual marketed game called "[[Space Checkers]]".}}
 
{{bginfo|This prop was an actual marketed game called "[[Space Checkers]]".}}
   

Revision as of 21:47, 2 May 2012

3D board games

3D games

The recreation facilities on Starfleet vessels were typically equipped with several board games of Terran or alien origin. These games were quite popular among Starfleet crews as an off-duty pastime. There were two-dimensional as well as three-dimensional board games. 2D games were played on a single, flat game board, whereas 3D games usually featured several flat game boards on different planes.

2D board games

The recreation room on the Enterprise NX-01 was equipped with a standard Terran chess set. (ENT: "Observer Effect") Ensign Jean-Luc Picard also kept a chess set with large, frosted glass pieces in his quarters at Starbase Earhart. (TNG: "Tapestry")

Trip Tucker kept the equipment to play Go in his quarters aboard the Enterprise NX-01. (ENT: "Cogenitor")

Kadis-kot was frequently played in the mess hall of the USS Voyager. (VOY: "Endgame", et al.)


3D board games

A very popular 3D board game in Starfleet was three-dimensional chess. 3D chess sets were present in the recreational facilities aboard the USS Enterprise, the USS Defiant, and the USS Enterprise-D, here most notably in Ten Forward. (TOS: "Where No Man Has Gone Before"; ENT: "In a Mirror, Darkly"; TNG: "Q Who")

3D checkers

3D game with checkers-pieces

The recreation room on the Constitution-class Enterprise was also equipped with a 3D board game consisting of four vertical acrylic rods in a quadratic arrangement, where each rod supported three 2x2 game boards which closely resembled the moving boards on a 3D chess set, so that there were twelve boards with a total of forty-eight squares (twenty-four white and twenty-four transparent). The game was played with red and black checkers pieces, eight of each color. (TOS: "The Naked Time"; DS9: "Trials and Tribble-ations")

This prop was an actual marketed game called "Space Checkers".
File:3dchess 24thcentury.jpg

3D game in Ten Forward

Ten forward on the Enterprise-D was equipped with a three-leveled board game. The game set consisted of two chess-like 7x7 checkered boards on the upper two levels, and a lower board of the same overall size, but closely resembling a Nine Men Morris board. The three levels were arranged stair-like. The game was played with silver and gold game pieces which were all alike. (TNG: "Pen Pals")

The fact that the game pieces of this board game are all alike makes it unlikely that the game was a variant of 3D chess.

Ten Forward also provided the facilities to play Strategema, a 3D board game which was played with a holographic projection of three game boards instead of a solid game set. (TNG: "Peak Performance")