Chinese Checkers
Chinese Checkers Intermediate Reply Record: Red B3xF7 River Lane Turn
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13Main mistake: sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge
with this board cue, tie the move to the board, before comparing sources, make a balance note for 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; 2. Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10: what rule is being tested, where Blue K13xH10 changes the answer, how split the line into candidate plan, reply, and timing change before reading further, and which related same-game page should come next.
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13during the first pass, read the reply as evidence, 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 is the first thing to quote; place it beside route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4, then decide whether Red B3xF7 is useful or only busy. The intermediate job is to keep two candidate replies alive until the timing test resolves them. The page is useful only if that first inspection changes how this race and jump strategy turning point: river lane record is read.
at the first branch, check the rule before style, turning point: river lane turns on 5. Red E6-G9 | Blue I11xC4. In this Chinese Checkers turning-point record, this is where the record stops being a label and becomes a reply-by-reply comparison. Write this beside it: The intermediate turn asks whether the ladder still helps the group.
Beside the first line, start from a concrete mark, write a turning-point note beside the middle entry before reading the final conversion. For turning point: river lane, the plan is not to memorize the line; it is to explain why Blue K13xH10 changes the answer.
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13
during the first pass, read the reply as evidence, 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 is the first thing to quote; place it beside route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4, then decide whether Red B3xF7 is useful or only busy. The intermediate job is to keep two candidate replies alive until the timing test resolves them. The page is useful only if that first inspection changes how this race and jump strategy turning point: river lane record is read.
Position cue: a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13Red starts a ladder for the turning-point record; Blue answers by keeping a rear piece connected.
Intermediate records compare bridge-building with a direct jump and ask which move keeps future hops available.
with this board cue, tie the move to the board, after this turning point: river lane record, choose a next record from the same game family instead of jumping to a different ruleset. The record has succeeded when Blue K13xH10 feels like a test rather than another line of notation.
- 1Locate the line
for the reader, write the task in plain words, read 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; 2. Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10 aloud, then stop at the first place the diagram shows route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4 and write that cue in the margin.
- 2Set the rule test
for the reader, write the task in plain words, translate single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency into a question the reply must answer before the plan is accepted as more than activity.
- 3Find the wrong instinct
for the reader, write the task in plain words, ask what Blue K13xH10 changes: timing, safety, route, shape, territory, capture, or hand direction in this exact line.
- 4Carry the cue forward
for the reader, write the task in plain words, before leaving, write how 8. Red D5xI11 | Blue J12-G9 changes the position and why a related same-game article is the next useful comparison.
The entry record task works on candidate moves, tempo, defensive replies, and the moment the plan changes. Board cue: route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4. Level job: the record note compares candidate moves and asks why one move preserves tempo while another only looks active for one move. In Chinese Checkers, practice this habit: build routes that keep the group moving instead of sending one piece alone. The useful test is whether the reader can connect the rule name to the move choice. Replay evidence: the Chinese Checkers route and jump notation line begins move one Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; move two Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10; inspect Red B3xF7.
Beside the first line, start from a concrete mark, write a turning-point note beside the middle entry before reading the final conversion. For turning point: river lane, the plan is not to memorize the line; it is to explain why Blue K13xH10 changes the answer.
at the first branch, check the rule before style, turning point: river lane turns on 5. Red E6-G9 | Blue I11xC4. In this Chinese Checkers turning-point record, this is where the record stops being a label and becomes a reply-by-reply comparison. Write this beside it: The intermediate turn asks whether the ladder still helps the group.
Compare notation and position type after the record line is clear; keep outside scores separate.
a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record
- Key decision
- for the reader, write the task in plain words, ask what Blue K13xH10 changes: timing, safety, route, shape, territory, capture, or hand direction in this exact line.
- Mistake diagnostic
- from the board outward, name the visible demand, the warning sign is narrow. Use route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4 as the local proof point: if it does not matter, the page has drifted into generic strategy. In this Chinese Checkers turning-point record, legality is not enough; the move also has to keep answering single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency.
- After reading
- with this board cue, tie the move to the board, after this turning point: river lane record, choose a next record from the same game family instead of jumping to a different ruleset. The record has succeeded when Blue K13xH10 feels like a test rather than another line of notation.
Intermediate records compare bridge-building with a direct jump and ask which move keeps future hops available.
for the reader, write the task in plain words, read 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; 2. Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10 aloud, then stop at the first place the diagram shows route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4 and write that cue in the margin.
from the board outward, name the visible demand, the warning sign is narrow. Use route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4 as the local proof point: if it does not matter, the page has drifted into generic strategy. In this Chinese Checkers turning-point record, legality is not enough; the move also has to keep answering single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency.
Stay in Chinese Checkers and compare the same intermediate record note topic at advanced level; the rules and notation stay familiar while the record shape gets easier or harder.
What this record looks like
On this page, turn notation into a question, an intermediate turning point: river lane record should show a turning point, so this line pauses at route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4 before judging the active move. Board cue: route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4. Rule check: single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency. The notation uses Chinese Checkers route and jump notation. The first two entries are 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; 2. Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10, which keeps the explanation tied to candidate moves, tempo, defensive replies, and the moment the plan changes.
Position cue
a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record
Unique asset
A self-authored SVG record diagram for this Chinese Checkers turning-point record marks route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4. It is paired with Chinese Checkers route and jump notation beginning 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; 2. Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10. The public reference image pub-chinese-checkers-diamond-game gives readers an open-gallery board or piece reference for the same game family.
Chinese Checkers rule check
Check this before the outside record: read 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13, name the rule source, test the position cue, and keep the mistake visible.
Open Masters Traditional GamesMasters Traditional Games is the rule source to open first; use it for legal vocabulary before comparing this intermediate record.
Route and jump notation makes the path visible: a hyphen marks a step, while an x marks a jump chain. The notation should be read as route geometry, not as a capture record. On this page the first line is 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13.
A piece can usually step to an adjacent empty point or hop over an adjacent occupied point into the empty point beyond. Chained jumps matter because one move can cross several prepared landing points. For this page, apply it to a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder.
The common trap is racing one front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge. The record should show whether the jump helped the whole route or only created one stranded piece. Here the reader's mistake check is sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge.
How to read this record note
First replay: 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13. Keep the line short enough to say aloud before judging whether the move is good.
Then inspect: The entry record task works on candidate moves, tempo, defensive replies, and the moment the plan changes. Board cue: route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4. Level job: the record note compares candidate…
Outside check: Used as a position and rule context, not as a named game-score source. The annotated records stay composed route examples.
Route and jump notation
Read the sample as a route-planning fragment, not as a universal notation standard or official tournament transcript.
1. Red B3-D5 | Blue A1-L15Beginner route records show a short lane, one jump, and why sending a lone front piece can strand the group.
Intermediate records compare bridge-building with a direct jump and ask which move keeps future hops available.
Advanced records track multi-jump timing, blocked center points, and whether a rear group can still join the route.
Annotated Record Fragment
Chinese Checkers record reader
Chinese Checkers intermediate record fragment starts from 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13. It is an annotated record note, not a tournament score; compare outside records for rules, notation, and position type before using it as a comparison example.
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13Red starts a ladder for the turning-point record; Blue answers by keeping a rear piece connected.
Key entry: connect it to a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record.- Position cue
- a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record
- Mistake test
- sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge
| Move | Notation | Annotation | Reader Cue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 | Red starts a ladder for the turning-point record; Blue answers by keeping a rear piece connected. | Key entry: connect it to a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record. |
| 2 | Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10 | The jump is useful in this turning-point record because it leaves a bridge behind it. | Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move. |
| 3 | Red D5-E6 | Blue J12-I11 | Both sides repair the route instead of racing one piece alone. | Compare with the previous reply before moving on. |
| 4 | Red F7xG9 | Blue H10-C4 | Red takes the long jump; Blue blocks the center landing point. | Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move. |
| 5 | Red E6-G9 | Blue I11xC4 | The intermediate turn asks whether the ladder still helps the group. | Compare with the previous reply before moving on. |
| 6 | Red C4xJ12 | Blue G9-H10 | Red converts by moving the rear piece through the route it prepared. | Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move. |
| 7 | Red A1-D5 reserve | Blue L15-J12 | The branch shows why spare bridges matter late. | Compare with the previous reply before moving on. |
| 8 | Red D5xI11 | Blue J12-G9 | Both players compare one long jump with two shorter group moves. | Finish check: explain why sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge is unsafe here. |
- Move 1
Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13Red starts a ladder for the turning-point record; Blue answers by keeping a rear piece connected.
Key entry: connect it to a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record. - Move 2
Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10The jump is useful in this turning-point record because it leaves a bridge behind it.
Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move. - Move 3
Red D5-E6 | Blue J12-I11Both sides repair the route instead of racing one piece alone.
Compare with the previous reply before moving on. - Move 4
Red F7xG9 | Blue H10-C4Red takes the long jump; Blue blocks the center landing point.
Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move. - Move 5
Red E6-G9 | Blue I11xC4The intermediate turn asks whether the ladder still helps the group.
Compare with the previous reply before moving on. - Move 6
Red C4xJ12 | Blue G9-H10Red converts by moving the rear piece through the route it prepared.
Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move. - Move 7
Red A1-D5 reserve | Blue L15-J12The branch shows why spare bridges matter late.
Compare with the previous reply before moving on. - Move 8
Red D5xI11 | Blue J12-G9Both players compare one long jump with two shorter group moves.
Finish check: explain why sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge is unsafe here.
Common Mistake
Mistake to test: sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge. Replay 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 against a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans, then name the rule or reply that prevents it.
CommentaryOpen detailed replay notesFirst reading pass for Chinese Checkers Turning Point: River Lane: Match move one Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13;…
Commentary
First reading pass for Chinese Checkers Turning Point: River Lane: Match move one Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; move two Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10 to route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4. Then name the single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check before reading any branch.
The turning point: river lane record-reading point is not volume of moves. It is whether Red B3xF7 still works after Blue K13xH10 is named.
The tempting move changes the board now, but a long jump can be slow if it removes the bridge that the rest of the group needed. In this record note, that difference is visible at Red B3xF7.
A player importing habits from another board game should slow down at route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4. The safe bridge is single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency.
Exit test: quote move one Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; move two Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10. Then explain why sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge was tempting before opening the next same-game record.
PracticeOpen record questions4 questions for checking the record after replay.
Record Questions
- Which counting detail in 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; 2. Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10 first reveals the turning point: river lane problem?
- What would change in this turning point: river lane record if the reply Blue K13xH10 arrived one move earlier?
- In the turning point: river lane position, which candidate around Red B3xF7 is tempting, and what part of single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency makes Blue K13xH10 punish it?
- Chinese Checkers: How would you explain the single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check to someone who only knows chess or checkers notation?
What different record levels look like
Compare the same game family across level examples before choosing the next record page. The active card marks this page's level.
1. Red B3-D5 | Blue A1-L15- BridgeStart from 1. Red B3-D5 | Blue A1-L15 and name the shared cue: a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing.
- LandingCompare the reply around a two-hop bridge, an exit lane, and a landing point before trusting the first plan.
- RouteCarry the branch to the mistake test: leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group.
6 entries, 1 plan + 1 reject: one visible plan, one rule cue, and one mistake to stop before.
- Length
- 6 annotated entries
- Branch load
- Single line, no side branch
- Candidates
- 1 plan + 1 reject
- Judgment
- Legal cue first: route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points
- Depth
- Two-move window
- Read for
- Read one plan aloud, match it to the board cue, and stop at the first unsafe reply.
- Watch
- leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group
- Next cue
- Move up after you can name the rule cue without rereading the note.
Replay 1. Red B3-D5 | Blue A1-L15, name a two-hop bridge, an exit lane, and a landing point reserved for the, then reject leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group.
Beginner Chinese Checkers records are a short line built from 1. Red B3-D5 | Blue A1-L15: one rule cue, one visible plan, and one obvious mistake around a two-hop bridge, an exit lane, and a landing point reserved for the next piece; one.
- Opening line
- Start with 1. Red B3-D5 | Blue A1-L15; keep the first reply visible.
- Rule cue
- Point to route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points before judging the move.
- First trap
- Stop at leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group instead of exploring side branches.
- Ready check
- Move on only after the rule cue can be named from memory.
Beginner route records show a short lane, one jump, and why sending a lone front piece can strand the group.
Intermediate recordChinese Checkers Intermediate Reply Record: Red A1xD5 Final Tempo Turn1. Red L15-A1 | Blue K13-J12- BridgeStart from 1. Red L15-A1 | Blue K13-J12 and name the shared cue: a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing.
- LandingCompare the reply around a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing before trusting the first plan.
- RouteCarry the branch to the mistake test: leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group.
8 entries, 2 candidate replies: add a reply comparison before deciding which plan survives.
- Length
- 8 annotated entries
- Branch load
- Main line plus reply branch
- Candidates
- 2 candidate replies
- Judgment
- Timing, safety, and shape all get judged
- Depth
- Turning-point window
- Read for
- Compare two candidate plans, then explain why the reply changes timing or safety.
- Watch
- leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group
- Next cue
- Move up after you can compare both plans before seeing the answer.
Compare both replies around a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must; explain where leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group changes the plan.
Intermediate Chinese Checkers records keep the same cue near a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two, then add candidate replies, a turning point, and one comparison line after 1. Red L15-A1 | Blue K13-J12.
- Main line
- Anchor the comparison at 1. Red L15-A1 | Blue K13-J12, not at a loose theme name.
- Candidate pair
- Keep two replies alive until the timing or safety test resolves them.
- Turning point
- Explain how leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group changes the value of the first plan.
- Replay task
- Before opening the answer, say which candidate survives and why.
Intermediate records compare bridge-building with a direct jump and ask which move keeps future hops available.
Advanced recordChinese Checkers Advanced Reply Record: Red K13xA1 Route Repair Turn1. Red J12-K13 | Blue H10-I11- BridgeStart from 1. Red J12-K13 | Blue H10-I11 and name the shared cue: a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing.
- LandingCompare the reply around a cross-board route, a blocked center, and a group-movement tempo before trusting the first plan.
- RouteCarry the branch to the mistake test: leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group.
10 entries, 3+ candidate points: hold the branch, quiet preparation, and conversion test together.
- Length
- 10 annotated entries
- Branch load
- Forcing branch, quiet prep, conversion
- Candidates
- 3+ candidate points
- Judgment
- Every move can change the final evaluation
- Depth
- Full branch with source comparison
- Read for
- Hold the forcing branch, quiet preparation, and conversion test in the same replay.
- Watch
- leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group
- Next cue
- Stay here when you want dense branches, not just legal-move recognition.
Annotate the quiet move after 1. Red J12-K13 | Blue H10-I11; prove the conversion still survives leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group.
Advanced Chinese Checkers records turn 1. Red J12-K13 | Blue H10-I11 into a branch: forcing move, quiet preparation, conversion test, and source comparison around a cross-board route, a blocked center, and a group-movement tempo choice; a forcing branch, a quiet.
- Forcing branch
- Track the pressure line from 1. Red J12-K13 | Blue H10-I11 without skipping replies.
- Quiet move
- Mark the preparation move that does not look urgent but keeps the branch alive.
- Conversion test
- Check whether leaving the rear camp without a return bridge for the group appears only after the defender's best reply.
- Review task
- Write the moment pressure becomes conversion, then compare an outside record.
Advanced records track multi-jump timing, blocked center points, and whether a rear group can still join the route.
Chinese Checkers intermediate record fragment starts from 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13. It is an annotated record note, not a tournament score; compare outside records for rules, notation, and position type before using it as a comparison example.
Compare this Chinese Checkers record note with real records
Use Masters Traditional Games to compare route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points. This intermediate record note stays an original annotated record example, not a copied score, table log, SGF file, or named-player record.
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points
- AMatch the source type
Open Masters Traditional Games as a rule and position source and decide whether you are comparing a real record index, a rule source, or a position reference before judging the note.
- BMatch notation before quality
Hold the article sample 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 beside the outside source. Compare notation shape, turn order, and record length before deciding whether the moves explain the same problem.
- CMatch the position job
Use the cue a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point;. The outside material only helps if it trains the same board, route, tile, threat, capture, or rule-position job.
- DKeep the record note original
Use outside move lists, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, or database commentary only as context checks; then return to the article's own mistake check: sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge.
Chinese Checkers classic record bridge
Use 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 as the page's working line, then compare intermediate record shape against Masters Traditional Games, the classic anchor, and the trained mistake before opening a full outside score.
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record
Mistake checksending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge
Open Masters Traditional GamesCompare starting camp, route continuity, hop legality, center blockage, and whether the line keeps rear pieces connected.
Open Masters Traditional GamesBeginner pages compare one route and one stranded rear piece; intermediate pages compare bridge-building with direct jumping; advanced pages compare multi-jump timing and blocked center points.
Open Masters Traditional GamesIn the outside source, look only for the same first plan around 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; ignore long branches until the mistake can be named plainly.
Compare whether the outside line tests the same reply choice and whether sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge appears one exchange later.
Use outside records to compare branch discipline and conversion timing, then keep this original annotated record example separate from outside scores.
This bridge is a reader-facing comparison guide. The article remains an annotated record note and original annotated record example, separate from outside scores, player metadata, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database commentary, and source commentary.
Chinese Checkers real record check plan
Use this plan after the article replay: compare 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 with Masters Traditional Games, then match the position terms, level job, and mistake pattern before trusting an outside record as a useful comparison.
1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13camp exit shared landing point trailing piece stay connected two candidate plans turning point route ladder
A useful outside Chinese Checkers record should share the notation shape 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13, the same position job around camp exit shared landing point trailing piece stay connected two candidate plans turning point route ladder, and the trained mistake sending front piece ahead rear group loses bridge.
Keep outside scores, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database notes, and source commentary separate from the article body.
Masters Traditional Games can prove board, route, tile, trap, threat, or position vocabulary for Chinese Checkers. Use it to compare the shape of route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points; it does not prove that this compact record note is an external game record.
This page uses 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 as a compact Chinese Checkers record line for camp exit shared landing point trailing piece stay connected two candidate plans turning point route ladder. It explains a level-specific record shape and a mistake check; it is not presented as a copied score from Masters Traditional Games.
Compare notation family, turn order, route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points, record level, and the mistake cue sending front piece ahead rear group loses bridge. A useful outside record may share the same problem without sharing every move.
Keep outside scores, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database notes, and source commentary separate from the article body. Use Masters Traditional Games to check record reality, then return to the article's own annotation rather than mixing outside metadata into the article.
- SourceOpen the right kind of record source
Start with Masters Traditional Games as a rule and position source. Decide whether the outside page is a real record index, rule document, position reference, table log, or SGF-style record before comparing moves.
- LineMatch the first notation line
Hold 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 beside the outside source. The first check is notation family, turn order, and record length, not whether the whole outside score is identical.
- PositionMatch the position terms
Search by camp exit shared landing point trailing piece stay connected two candidate plans turning point route ladder. The outside material helps only when it trains the same route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points.
- LevelMatch the record level
Look for a Chinese Checkers record with candidate replies around camp exit shared landing point trailing piece stay connected two candidate plans turning point route ladder; compare where timing or safety changes after 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13.
- SeparateKeep the record line separate
Treat this intermediate record note as an original annotated record example, not a named game record or copied match score. Keep outside scores, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database notes, and source commentary separate from the article body.
Treat this intermediate record note as an original annotated record example, not a named game record or copied match score.
Chinese Checkers record references
Chinese Checkers intermediate record starts from 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; compare rule language, record context, classic position shape, and public image evidence before using outside material.
Use Masters Traditional Games to check legal vocabulary and Route and jump notation before reading 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13.
- Compare
- Compare the rule cue in a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record with route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points; the article's notation sample is the first thing to keep stable.
- Keep separate
- The rule source supports vocabulary and legality checks while this page stays an annotated record note for Chinese Checkers.
Use Masters Traditional Games to compare record shape, source type, and the trained mistake: sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge.
- Compare
- Match 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13, turn order, record length, and the position job before judging whether an outside record trains the same decision.
- Keep separate
- Outside records are context checks; the move line here remains an original annotated record example, not a named-player score.
Center route bridge with chained hops keeps a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record connected to a stable board, route, tile, or threat shape.
- Compare
- Compare starting camp, route continuity, hop legality, center blockage, and whether the line keeps rear pieces connected.
- Keep separate
- The anchor is a lookup guide for record shape; it does not turn this annotated record note into a copied score.
Wikimedia Commons diamond game diagram is the public visual reference for this Chinese Checkers page; as the rule cue appears, write the task in plain words, Wikimedia Commons diamond game diagram works as the open-gallery companion image because readers can compare it with a related diamond-game board diagram, matching cross-board route planning and camp-to-camp movement comparisons; used as game-material context before the reader checks the article-specific record diagram. The self-authored record diagram handles route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; the public image stays contextual rather than exact. The page keeps the open reference image contextual rather than exact. This public-library context remains separate from the self-authored article-specific diagram.
- Compare
- Use the image for board, piece, route, tile, or surface context, then use the article diagram and 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 for the exact composed line.
- Keep separate
- The public image supports context and license transparency; it is separate from the article-specific record diagram and move sequence.
Before using a source, read the reply as evidence, for turning-point record, 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13; 2. Red B3xF7 | Blue K13xH10 supplies the working record line and single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency supplies the check. Treat it as an intermediate annotated-record example: an annotated record note, not a tournament score, built to compare candidate replies. Use outside sources to compare notation and position type, not to rename this example as a copied game. The page-specific mistake check is sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge.
- Compare
- Use outside material to check route notation, step-or-hop legality, bridge continuity, camp congestion, and landing points, source type, and position similarity before returning to the article line.
- Keep separate
- Keep tournament metadata or present the route fragment as an official recorded game only as context checks; this intermediate record note stays an original annotated record example, separate from outside scores, player metadata, and source commentary.
- Notation and turn order: 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13.
- Position job and trained mistake: a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record / sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge.
- Image fit, source URL, license label, and whether the public image matches the same game family.
- Outside scores, player metadata, event labels, table logs, SGF files, and database commentary stay outside the article body.
- A public image is visual context, not proof that the composed move sequence happened in a real match.
- A classic position anchor helps comparison; it is not a claim that this page reproduces that exact external record.
Classic lookup cueClassic lookup cue for Chinese CheckersMasters Traditional Games: search cue and four comparison checks.
Classic lookup cue for Chinese Checkers
Use Masters Traditional Games as a real-record or position lookup context. This page remains an annotated record note and is not a copied tournament score, named-player record, table log, or external database entry.
Masters Traditional Games: Chinese Checkers Intermediate record note + camp exit shared landing point trailing piece stay connected two + 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 + sending front piece ahead rear group loses bridgeOpen Masters Traditional GamesStart with camp exit shared landing point trailing piece stay connected two. The goal is to find the same kind of board, tile, route, or threat problem before looking for an exact score.
Use the sample 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13 to compare notation form, move length, and record density against external material.
Keep this mistake visible while comparing: sending front piece ahead rear group loses bridge. A useful outside record should make that decision easier to discuss.
Open Masters Traditional Games for real records or position context, but keep this record note separate from copied match scores and named-player claims.
Record exemplarCompare the record note with a real source type2 source-backed exemplars for this game family.
Compare the record note with a real source type
These exemplars explain what to compare in a real record index, rules source, or position reference before judging this annotated record note. They keep source lookup useful without copying outside records.
Use starting positions, single-step movement, jump chains, and route efficiency as the comparable object because stable public match-score corpora are scarce.
Beginner: one hop and the rear group. Intermediate: bridge or direct route. Advanced: multi-hop timing, center blocks, and camp-exit efficiency.classic position referenceStep-Hop Movement ExemplarUse the public movement diagram to compare whether a record line is a single step, a jump, or a multi-hop route before judging route efficiency.
Beginner: one step or hop. Intermediate: bridge versus direct route. Advanced: multi-hop timing, landing-point control, and camp-exit rhythm.Classic position anchorsUse known record shapes before searching for exact scores2 anchors; compare without copying a real score.
Use known record shapes before searching for exact scores
These anchors name stable rule, opening, route, tile, or board-position shapes for this game family. They help readers compare this annotated record note with external material without copying a real score.
Use this anchor when a Chinese Checkers page compares why a route bridge matters more than sending one front piece ahead.
Compare starting camp, route continuity, hop legality, center blockage, and whether the line keeps rear pieces connected.Single step, jump, and multi-hop route distinctionStep Versus Hop AnchorUse this anchor when the record note asks readers to distinguish a legal step from a useful jump chain.
Compare whether the notation describes a step, hop, or multi-hop route and whether the public diagram shows the same movement category.Curated reference packWhere to verify the record context2 game-specific references kept separate from the article line.
Where to verify the record context
These links give the reader a small, game-specific reference trail before using a real database, rule source, or public board reference. They support comparison; they are not copied into this article.
Use this when a Chinese Checkers page depends on starting areas, hops, route bridges, center blocking, or why a lone front piece can strand the group.
Compare starting setup, jump legality, route continuity, and whether the record line preserves future hops rather than chasing a copied match score.public board referenceChinese Checkers Move Diagram ContextUse this when a page needs a visual check for step moves, jumps, and route diagrams before comparing an annotated record note.
Compare whether the record note's route notation describes a legal step, hop, or multi-hop pattern; do not look for a tournament score.Comparison pathHow to compare this fragment with external records4 lookup steps; compare, do not copy a real score.
How to compare this fragment with external records
Use this as a reading path before opening external databases or classic-position references. The goal is comparison, not copying a real score into this article.
- 1Match the notation shape
Start with Route and jump notation and the sample 1. Red A1-B3 | Blue L15-K13. Compare outside records only for notation shape before judging move quality.
- 2Anchor the same kind of position
Use this page cue: a camp exit, a shared landing point, and a trailing piece that must stay connected; two candidate plans and a turning point; route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; single steps, chained jumps, landing points, and group-route efficiency check for the turning-point record Look for a similar board, tile, route, or threat problem, not an identical copied position.
- 3Read it as a intermediate record note
Compare record length, annotation density, and the trained mistake: sending the front piece ahead while the rear group loses its bridge. That is how this page explains what a intermediate record is for.
- 4Keep record note and outside record separate
Use Masters Traditional Games for real record lookup. This page remains an annotated record note and is not a copied tournament score or named-player record.
Reference layerRules checked separately from the record note1 rule source link for notation and boundary checks.
Rules checked separately from the record note
These links support rule vocabulary, notation boundaries, and game-family context. They do not turn this annotated record note into a tournament score or named-player record.
Record contextExternal records stay separate from this record noteMasters Traditional Games: context only, not copied-score proof.
External records stay separate from this record note
Starting positions, movement, hopping, and route-building context where public match-score corpora are not a stable source.
Used as a position and rule context, not as a named game-score source. The annotated records stay composed route examples.

Public reference: as the rule cue appears, write the task in plain words, Wikimedia Commons diamond game diagram works as the open-gallery companion image because readers can compare it with a related diamond-game board diagram, matching cross-board route planning and camp-to-camp movement comparisons; used as game-material context before the reader checks the article-specific record diagram. The self-authored record diagram handles route ladder from A1 through F7 with a center block at C4; the public image stays contextual rather than exact. The page keeps the open reference image contextual rather than exact. This public-library context remains separate from the self-authored article-specific diagram. Source: Wikimedia Commons diamond game diagram. License: Wikimedia Commons freely licensed file. Source page. Source file