Flat Marbles (Ohajiki, 御弾き)

ohajiki3.jpgFlat Marbles (Ohajiki, 御弾き, おはじき)

ohajiki6.jpgOhajiki is a traditional game for Japanese children, especially girls. In the past, they used roll shells, pebbles or pieces from another game, but now they use flat ball made with small coin-shaped colures ceramic, glass or plastic, and whose diameter is 1-1.5 cm The name of game came from playing by snapping or flicking (“hajiki” in Japanese word) with the fingers.a game similar to marbles. This game became very popular as an indoor game for girls during the Edo period (from 1603 to 1867).

How to play

1. All players sit down on the floor and all players place the same number of ohajiki on the floor, and then do jan ken pon (rock, paper, scissors) to determine who goes first.

2. The first player gathers everyone’s pieces using one hand and then scatters ohajiki 20 pieces on a table or on the floor.

3. The player can only touch the disc, Shoot (flipping or snapping) one of the two pieces to hit another. If the player successfully hits one of the other players’ discs she can keep it.

4. But if player cannot hit, player does not get to keep any of them, then it is the next player’s turn. The person who acquires the most pieces is the winner.

admin on May 2nd, 2009 | File Under Japanese Game | No Comments -

Lucky Laugh or Funny Face Game (Fukuwarai)

Lucky Laugh or Funny Face Game (Fukuwarai)

oshogatu21.jpgFukuwarai is a Japanese traditional game which is usually played during New Year holiday  in Japan. The game can help you to learn directions and parts of the face.

Fukuwarai means “happy laugh.” Fuku means fortune, and warai means laughing, which is also a popular indoor game on the New Years. The game is usually played by children, but adults may sometimes play also. The game is similar to that of Pin the Tail on the Donkey.

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How to play
 
1. Draw two same pictures of a person’s face.
2. Cut the eyes, eyebrows, nose, ears, and mouth out of one picture.
3. Then one player is blindfolded with a handkerchief or some other type of cloth.
4. The blindfolded player tries to place cutouts of the eyes, eyebrows, mouth, and nose on the face, while the other players shout instructions–for example, “Higher!” “To the left!” “There!”
5. After the player places the pieces, the blindfold is removed so the player can view his or her handiwork.
6. Most of the time, the face comes out looking ridiculous, and the players can’t keep from laughing and let the next player take a turn.

Originally, only one style of face was used for the game – a comical, round face of Otafuku. Otafuku is a homely looking woman. Nowadays, other faces are sometimes used, such as those of popular actors and comic book characters or popular anime characters.

 

 

admin on July 22nd, 2008 | File Under Japanese Culture, Japanese Game, Japanese stuff | 1 Comment -

Japanese badminton (Hanetsuki)

 

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Japanese badminton (Hanetsuki) nandm012_hanetsuki.gif

gf1420023878.jpgHanetsuki is a Japanese traditional game, similar to badminton, played without a net, and is played with a wooden paddle called hagoita and a shuttlecock called hane and is made from colorful feathers. This game is a young girls game that is played at New Years.

The game can be played in two fashions, by one person attempting to keep the shuttlecock aloft as long as possible, or by the two people batting it back and forth. Girls who fail to hit the shuttlecock get marked on the face with India Ink by a stroke of a brush. While the game’s popularity has declined in recent times, beautifully ornamented hagoita are still a popular collection item, it has since become a custom to give a hagoita as a gift to celebrate the birth of a girl.

 

admin on July 20th, 2008 | File Under Japanese Game, Japanese stuff | No Comments -

Rock Paper Scissors (Jan-ken-pon or Janken)

Rock Paper Scissors (Jan-ken-pon or Janken)
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Jan-ken-pon  is the most popular game among Japanese children and it is  a subset of games played using only the hands, symbolizes both the spirit, theme and the categories of this competition.

The hand in the game


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 -“Rock (Gu)” for a fist.

 
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 -“Scissors (Paa)” for the index and middle fingers, parted and extended.

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-“Paper  (Choki)” for  an open hand

Rules
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The exchange is won as determined by the rules:

1. rock breaks scissors

2. scissors cut paper

3. paper wraps rock.

 
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Jan Ken Pon Song

A Japanese version of “Rock, Paper, Scissors”
Played with hands behind back until final line.

Japanese Translation:

Jan-Ken-Pon
Jan-ken-pon yo, jan-ken-pon
Jan-ken-pon yo, Goo, cho-ki, pa

English Translation:

Rock, Paper Scissors
Rock, paper, scissors
One, two, three

 

admin on June 22nd, 2008 | File Under Japanese Game | No Comments -

Japanese card game (Karuta game)

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Japanese card game (Karuta game)

Karuta is a game traditionally played by the Japanese during the New Year holidays. There are two variations of the game, Irohagaruta and Hyakunin-ishu. Both of these are played with two decks of cards.

One of the decks has pictures on it; the other has sayings and phrases or poems. Irohagaruta, Japanese alphabet cards, number ninety-two. Irohagaruta is most frequently played by children while Hyakunin-ishu is an adult version of Karuta. Hyakunin means “one hundred people” and ishu means “one poem”. These words refer to the one hundred poems penned by Japanese poets during the seventh and eighth centuries.

Each year master Hyakunin-ishu players gather to test their memory skills in a national competition held on New Year’s Day. This eventhas helped make Hyakunin-ishu a type of national game among the Japanese.

The directions that follow are for making and playing an American adaptation of Irohagaruta, the children’s version of Karuta.

Making a Karuta Game

Using Japanese and/or American proverbs, make two decks of cards with 15 cards in each deck. There will be 15 pictures to illustrate the 15 proverbs (kotowaza). Cards can be the size of regular American cards or bigger. On one set of cards copy the proverbs. This will be the deck the reader uses. The picture cards will have to be drawn to illustrate each of the proverbs
(kotowaza).

Game Rules

1. A minimum of three people is necessary to play the game.
2. Players must remain quiet throughout the game so that everyone can hear the reader.
3. Players must keep their hands folded in their laps unless they are touching or reaching for a picture.
4. If a player touches the wrong picture card after the reader has read the card, then that player automatically loses any further chances for that round.

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Playing the Game

1. Select the reader for the game.
2. The reader spreads out the picture cards face up.
3. The reader mixes the word cards and then reads one card.
4. The player who first finds and touches the corresponding picture card gets to keep both cards.
5. The game continues until all the picture cards have been retrieved.
6. The player with the most cards at the end of the game is the winner.

admin on May 28th, 2008 | File Under Japanese Game, Japanese stuff | No Comments -
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