Shut the Box, Tric-Trac, Canoga (or Batten down the Hatches) is a dice game for one or more players, mostly played in a group of two to four (possibly for stakes, gambling). Traditionally a counting box is used with tiles numbered 1 to 9 where each can be discreetly covered with a hinged or sliding mechanism. Alternatively it could be played with a sheet of paper. Variations exist where the box has up to 10 or 12 tiles.

Table of contents
1 Play
2 Rules
3 Variants
4 History
5 External links

Play

On a turn a player repeatedly throws the dice to cover the tiles of the box, it ends when no tile can be covered on a throw and the players penalty score gets calculated. The goal is to cover all numbers, that is, "shut the box", which results in a penalty score of zero.

Rules

A round consists of each player playing a turn. At the start of a player's turn all tiles are uncovered. Two dice are rolled and the corresponding tile of partitioned numbers of the sum are covered, e.g., the dice show a 2 and a 3, so 5, 1 + 4 or 2 + 3 tiles could be covered. If every numbered tile higher than 6 is covered you could use one die. The turn ends if no tile could be covered on a throw of the dice.

Several rounds are played till all but one surpass a penalty score of, e.g., 45.

Variants

game ends: penalty point scoring:
  • are added together, e.g., uncovered 1, 5 and 9 equal 15
  • direct read from the uncovered numbers instead of summing them, e.g., uncovered 1, 5 and 9 equal 159.

cover rules:
  • any partitioned number could be turned down, e.g., if you throw a 6 and 3 any of the following sets could be turned down: 9; 1 + 8; 2 + 7; 3 + 6; 4 + 5; 1 + 2 + 6, ..., etc.
  • the tiles of the sum or the single values of the dice are turned down.

  • maybe enforce the single die option when the sum of the remaining numbers is less than six (partitioned number mode).

History

The origin is not known but there exist references from at least the
19th century to the Normandy (northern France) or the Channel Islands (English Channel, United Kingdom), others also mention fur trappers from the Hudson's Bay Company. The game has been popular among sailors and fishermen.

Evidence exists in England from the middle of the 20th century and it is quite sure that it did not originate there. Timothy Finn writes in "Pub Games of England" that it came from the Channel Islands in 1958 by a Mr. 'Chalky' Towbridge. Its said that versions have also been played in Barotseland (Zambia, central Africa).

External links

game museum page of "Shut the Box"