Checkers and Draughts

750 installs
15 ratings
40 monthly active users
$<10K monthly revenue est.
IAP 100% · Ad 0%

Checkers and Draughts Summary

Checkers and Draughts is a with in-app purchases iOS app in Games by Uwe Meier. Released in Nov 2010 (15 years ago). It has 15 ratings with a 3.53★ (average) average. Based on AppGoblin estimates, it reaches roughly 40 monthly active users and generates around $<10K monthly revenue (100% IAP / 0% ads). Store metadata: updated Nov 10, 2017.

Store info: Last updated on App Store on Nov 10, 2017 .


3.53★

Ratings: 15

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Screenshots

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App Description

Game Highlights:
- Variety of different Checkers/Draughts games from all over the world
- Play against computer
- Play against others on same device

available games:
(1) Free Package
- American Checkers
- Philippines Draughts
- Pool Checkers

(2) Game Pak 1:
- International Draughts
- Italian Checkers
- Frisian Checkers
- Russian Draughts 8x8
- Russian Draughts 10x8

(3) Game Pak 2:
- Brazilian Draughts
- Spanish Checkers
- Malaysian Checkers 8x8
- Malaysian Checkers 10x10

(4) Game Pak 4: (iPad only)
- Canadian Draughts 12x12
- Malaysian Checkers 12x12


Checkers or Draughts, as it is known in Great Britain, has ancient roots. It is thought that the earliest form of checkers was a game discovered in an archeological dig at Ur in Iraq. Carbon dating makes it appear that this game was played around 3000 B.C. However, the game used a slightly different board, a different number of pieces and no one is quite certain of the exact rules.

In Ancient Egypt a game called Alquerque, which had a 5X5 board was a common and much played game. Historians have traced it as far back as 1400 B.C. It was a game of such popularity that it was played all over the western world for thousands of years.

Around 1100 a Frenchman got the idea of playing the game on a chess board. This meant expanding the number of pieces to 12 on a side. It was then called "Fierges" or "Ferses". It was soon found that making jumps mandatory made the game more challenging. The French called this version "Jeu Force". The older version was considered more of a social game for women and was called "Le Jeu Plaisant De Dames".

Now the rules for checkers were set and the game was exported to England and America. In Great Britain the game was called "Draughts". Books were written on the game in Spain as early as the mid 1500's and in England a mathematician name William Payne wrote his own treatise on Draughts in 1756.

Over the years, many countries developed their own version of checkers/draughts and adjusted the rules, board size and color of pieces. They all share the same principal of rules, but added new rules or modified existing ones.

In Checkers and Draughts you find a variety of different checkers/draught games from all over the world. You can play the games either against the computer, other playes on the same device or you can conn