If you like challenges and your mind hosts a brushstroke of Sherlock Holmes and a twist to Indiana Jones, today in Mysterious we pose a challenge:
Would you be able to describe the rules of this ancient Chinese game that has more than 1,500 years old?
The truth is that the specialists have not yet agreed on how such a strategy would be carried out, but what seems clear is that is a board game, and that it belonged to a member of the Qi aristocracy.
We give you more information in the following article, always waiting for your help and comments.
The game that the rules are unknown
The grave has been discovered this year in the Qingzhou city in China .It is really not one, but 5 graves belonging, surely , to dignitaries of Chinese high society.The remains, according to experts, belong to the D Inastia Zhou who was conquered by the first emperor about 221 BC

If something is clear, we all love mysteries and challenges, and this discovery would have surely gone unnoticed, if it weren't for the "subtle detail" of the game...Media and newspapers around the world did not take long to echo the news last November.

Now, we know that what really interests you is to know more information about this game, so here are the main features that archaeologists have given us:
- A 14-sided die made of animal teeth is available .All faces are numbered in the form of a stamp deed (zhuanshū), except for TWO of them.
- There are also 12 rectangular tokens with a number painted on each one of them.
- 1 rectangular board.And on on each side there is an eye surrounded by THUNDERS AND CLOUDS.
- Expert speculation: It could be a variation of another very old game called LIUBO (6-stick game) which is rooted in the Shang dynasty in China, and of which, speculations continue to be made today about its rules.
- Other curious people say that it has nothing to to see with the Liubo, and that would be nothing more than a game where the dice would be thrown to go accumulating points.
- As a curious fact we will tell you that this grave where the game was, he tried to plunder without success. The body of the thief with his tools tas lies next to it, and archaeologists have not yet been able to give data on how it could die.

The only thing that seems to be unanimous is that this game It had not been seen before, and that today there is no other playful or strategic activity that has to do with it. In today's China no board game starts with a 14-sided die , nor has a board with two striking eyes surrounded by thunder.

The challenge is well served.If your mind and your ingenuity give any probability about it, do not hesitate to contact with the Shandong Institute of Relics and Archeology.
And remember, if you have gu In this article, discover also 10 curiosities of Chinese culture.
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