Quinto (grid game): Difference between revisions

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See also: Quinto (card game)

Quinto is a two-player board game, sometimes also called "Game of Fives". It's rules resemble those of Scrabble, except the tiles are numbers rather than letters. The vertical and horizontal total must always be a multiple of five, and five is the maximum tiles that can be in a contiguous run. Each play can be horizontal or vertical, but not both. The score of each play, as in Scrabble, is the sum of all numerical totals of each vertical or horizontal run created by the play.

Editions of the board game

The original board game was sold in the 1960's by 3M (as a "3M Bookshelf" game), and is no longer being manufactured. As of 2020, a lively online trade exists in old, used Quinto board games. There are two editions being traded.

1964 edition

Game board and tiles for the 1964 game

The 1964 edition had 90 black tiles, and a marble-gray board with 13 rows and 17 columns. The numerical distribution for the ninety tiles was as follows:

 Tile : how many
  1 : six
  2 : six
  3 : seven
  4 : ten
  5 : six
  6 : ten
  7 : fourteen
  8 : twelve
  9 : twelve
  0 : seven

1968 edition

The 1968 edition has ? brown tiles and 5 red tiles[1], and a white board with 13 rows and 18 columns (one more than the 1964 game). Note that the number distributions in the two editions differs, as well as board size and the color and numerical distribution of the tiles.


Online game (since 2018)

Quinto played in a web browser (game written by J. R. Heard)

In 2018, programmer J. R. Heard created an addictive online version of Quinto. Heard provided an "AI opponent" that is virtually unbeatable by humans, and also play hints that help a human increase their skills. The browser game uses the 90-tile numerical distribution of the 1964 edition of the Quinto board game, but that the board consists of four less vertical columns, making it a 13x13 grid. The game is powered by Javascript, which means it executes locally in your web browser and the page can be saved locally on your computer for offline use. The details about the source code are also online.

There is also an older card game named Quinto available through online trade; it has little resemblance to the tile game.

  1. Unfortunately, it is unclear how the five red tiles in the 1968 edition, called "multiles", are scored.