Circular Nim CN(7,4)
Abstract
Circular Nim is a two-player impartial combinatorial game consisting of stacks of tokens placed in a circle. A move consists of choosing consecutive stacks and taking at least one token from one or more of the stacks. The last player able to make a move wins. The question of interest is: Who can win from a given position if both players play optimally? In an impartial combinatorial game, there are only two types of positions. An -position is one from which the next player to move has a winning strategy. A -position is one from which the next player is bound to lose, no matter what moves s/he makes. Therefore, the question who wins is answered by identifying the -positions. We will prove results on the structure of the -positions for and , extending known results for other games in this family. The interesting feature of the set of -positions of this game is that it splits into different subsets, unlike the structure for the known games in this family.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2103.09920,
title = {Circular Nim CN(7,4)},
author = {Matthieu Dufour and Silvia Heubach},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.09920},
year = {2024}
}