Play Backgammon Online

Posted onby

Backgammon online game

Welcome to ZooEscape! A website for playing fun online games by yourself or with your friends. Currently, we have word games, Sudoku, Backgammon, Nackgammon, and Acey-Deucey but will continue to introduce exciting new features and games for you to play. So, bookmark us (hint: press Ctrl+D at the same time) and check back often! 247 Games offers a full lineup of seasonal Backgammon games. Click on any of the games below to play directly in your browser. All of our Backgammon games are 100% free, all day, every day! Join the 247 Games Fam! And get the latest news on game releases and daily challenges. Backgammon and better than ever! Easy to play but hard to master, put your skills to the test in one of history’s oldest and most celebrated board games.

Play

About Backgammon

Play a free online Backgammon game against the computer or jump into a Quick Match.

Backgammon is one of the oldest games for two players and has been enjoyed for over 5000 years.

Play the Classic Backgammon board game

Play Backgammon online against the computer or versus a friend:

This free game opens as a web page. No installation. Mobile friendly.
The online Backgammon game has a low difficulty level and is suited for beginners.
↓ Scroll down for instructions.

Get Backgammon for your device:

Download Backgammon for iPhone/iPad:

Play Backgammon Online Against Computer

How to play Backgammon

To win at backgammon, you have to move all of your checkers into your own home board and then bear them off.

A quick introduction to Backgammon for beginners:

Backgammon is a game for two players. There is some luck involved (from rolling dices) but it is usually played in a series of games, and in the end the player that displays superior skill and tactics will win the series by choosing the best moves and by anticipating the opponent’s counter-moves.

The Backgammon board

The Backgammon board has 24 long triangles, called “points” (12 on each side in red/white). The points are numbered from 1 to 24.
In the illustration below, the Backgammon board is viewed from the white player’s side (your side), and the points (long triangles) are marked with their values from 1-24:

Fig.1 How to play backgammon: The backgammon board with points marked.

Online

How to win the Backgammon game

The objective of the game is to move your pieces (small discs often called “checkers” or “chips”) around the board in the direction of the arrows shown in the illustration below, from the 24-point triangle to the 1-point triangle, and then off the board completely (remove them). The first player to move all his/her checkers off the board, is the winner of the game.

Fig.2 How to play backgammon: The movement of your pieces.

BUT you cannot start moving your checkers off the board until ALL your checkers are in your “HOME BOARD”:

Fig.3 How to play backgammon: The home board (also called The inner board).

As shown in the illustration, the points 1 through 6 constitutes your HOME BOARD (also called “inner board”). Other parts of the board also have names: The points 7 through 12 constitutes your “outer board”, the 7-point is called “the bar point”, and the 13-point is called “the midpoint”.

Backgammon setup

Each player starts with 15 checkers placed on the Backgammon board as shown in the illustration below. As you can see, you do not start with all your white checkers placed at the 24-point triangle as you might expect. At the start of the game, all your checkers are placed in a determined pattern across the board as follows: Five on the 6-point, 3 on the 8-point, 5 on the 13-point and 2 on the-24 point. Your opponent’s pieces (Red pieces in this online game) will mirror yours, as he sits on the opposite side of the board, and the points on the triangles goes in the opposite direction for him. He will move his checkers in the opposite direction of yours, so his 24-point is the same as your 1-point triangle.

Fig.4 Backgammon setup: The starting positions

Backgammon rules

Play Backgammon Online With Friends Free

The game begins with each player rolling one dice. The player with the higher number rolled gets to use both dices for the first move.
Each checker is moved separately and can be moved to any point that is not BLOCKED:

When your opponent has two or more checkers on a point, then that point is blocked. (If the point has your own checkers, no checkers, or only one opponent checker, then that point is not blocked, or open.)

A player who rolls two of a kind (both dices show the same number) gets to move double the numbers on the dices.

When moving the same checker with both dice numbers, the intermediate points must be open (not blocked). For example: if you roll a 3 and a 4, you can only move your checker 7 points if point 3 and 4 is not blocked.

A player who moves his checker to a point occupied by only one of the opponent’s checkers (called a “blot”), can “hit” (take) the opponent’s checker and place it on the bar in the middle of the board. When this happens, the opponent is required to return that checker into the game before making any other moves. The checker must be entered back into the game via his/her point 24. If the checker is blocked from being returned into the game, no moves can be made, and the turn goes back to the other player.

Winning the game: “Bearing off”

When you finally have moved all your checkers into your home board, you are able to begin removing them from the board by moving them past the 1-point. This is also known as “bearing off”. The first player to remove all his/her checkers from the board wins the game.
But if one of your checkers is hit by your opponent and placed on the middle bar while you are bearing off, you must move that checker back into the game and all the way to your home board before you can continue removing your checkers.
If a higher number is rolled than you have while bearing off, the farthest checker can be removed.

If a player has no checkers off the board when his opponent has removed all his checkers, it is known as a gammon and is worth a double game.

If a player still has a checker in his/her opponents home board or on the bar and the opponent has removed all his/her checkers, it is known as a backgammon and is worth a triple game.

Let’s play!

Backgammon history

Backgammon is a very old game that can be traced back through almost 5000 years of history. Archaeologists conducting scientific excavations in search for Persian and Mesopotamian artefacts have found remains of board games dating back to 3000 BC. The game was spread into Europe by the Roman and Byzantine Empires.

Backgammon from the “Libro de axedrez, dados e tablas” (“Book of chess, dice and tables”, 13th century)

Backgammon from the “Carmina Burana” (“Songs from Benediktbeuern”, 11th – 13th century)

Backgammon from the “Codex Manesse” (book of songs/poetry, 1304-1340)

The Playpager free Backgammon app is programmed in html5/Js. No flash player needed. Suited for mobile, PC and tablet. No installation or registration. Enjoy. If you like this game, please share. Thanks!

247 Backgammon offers the best backgammon game online. Play with an artificially intellegent opponent or play with a friend with Pass & Play! 247 Backgammon has games in five difficulites, ranging from easy to expert! You'll be sure to find a difficulty you feel comfortable playing, whether you are a beginner or seasoned backgammon player. Options only on 247 Backgammon include doubling cube, highlights, match points, and chip color! This backgammon site even remembers your preferences every time you come back so you'll be set to play immediately! The gameplay on 247 Backgammon is seamless and you'll quickly become addicted to the beautiful artwork and perfect puzzle game.

Backgammon is a popular ancient board game. It is played with two players (lucky you, we have a computer player to enjoy!). The object of backgammon is to move all your checkers around the board in a clockwise motion and ultimately bear off the checkers from the board. The first player to remove all their checkers is the winner.

Alternate turns with your opponent moving checkers toward your home in the upper right hand quadrant of the backgammon board. Move checkers by rolling the dice. The numbers on the dice refer to how many spaces you may move with one or more checkers. Highlights show you where the checkers can possibly move. If you roll doubles, you get to move each die twice, concluding in four moves for that turn. You may move your checkers onto any Point so long as it is occupied by your checkers, is empty, or has 1 opponent checker. You may not move your checkers onto a Point with two or more opponent checkers. If you land on a Point with one opponent checker, you knock the opponent's checker off the board and send it back to the beginning. The opponent must now roll and move into an empty spot in your home territory to get that checker back into gameplay. They may not move any other checkers until that knocked off checker is returned. Beware though! Leaving your checkers open with only one on a point leaves them open to be knocked off by your opponent as well!

Once you move all your checkers into the upper right quadrant (in the single player backgammon game), you may start bearing off. This means you can place your checkers into the slot on the right, removing them from the board. Whoever manages to do this first wins!

One to three points can be awarded during the backgammon game dependant on where the loser's checkers are on the board when the winner wins. If the losing player has not borne off any of their checkers by the time the winner has won, the winner will achieve 2 points, and is known as losing a gammon. If the losing player has not borne off any of their checkers and has checkers in the opponent's home board (lower right quadrant) or are still knocked off, the winner scores three points, which is known as losing a backgammon. The winner is awarded one point (most common) if the opponent has started to bear off their checkers and/or has all of their checkers out of the winner's home territory.

The doubling cube is a fun option for players who are seasoned backgammon aficionados. Turn this option on or off in the menu at the start of the game. It is a marker, instead of a die. At any time during gameplay a player may before his/her turn propose the game be played for twice the current stake (beginning at 2). The opponent must either accept th doubled stake or resign to defeat immediately (thus ending the game). The option to redouble belongs exclusively to the player who accepted the double. Technically, the game can be doubled up to 64 times the score, but it rarely goes beyond 4. If the 'double' is declined, the doubler wins however many points the doubling cube is showing (1 x doubling cube). If the game is played, the resulting score will then be multiplied by the doubling cube number. This little die adds a lot of fun strategy to the game. We recommend trying it on for size!

  • Fortify your checkers in backgammon by ensuring all remain in stacks of two or more at all times.
  • Knock opponent backgammon checkers off as much as possible.
  • Build up your home territory with two checkers + in each spot. This makes it more difficult for the opponent to roll to get back into the game after being knocked off.
  • Feeling fiesty? Intentionally leave some checkers back to try and knock the opponent off the board as they make a run for their home territory!

DISCLAIMER: The games on this website are using PLAY (fake) money. No payouts will be awarded, there are no 'winnings', as all games represented by 247 Games LLC are free to play. Play strictly for fun.