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40 Easy Dart Games.
40 Easy Dart Games.
40 Easy Dart Games.
Ebook83 pages1 hour

40 Easy Dart Games.

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40 Easy Dart Games, to play at home or at a friends house.
For all ages.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherKerry Butters
Release dateJul 23, 2017
ISBN9781370039852
40 Easy Dart Games.
Author

Kerry Butters

Kerry lives in Newcastle Under Lyme in Stoke on Trent- England, with his two dogs Molly and Tasha. He likes reading and writing books about ghosts and American ghost towns, History and real life events, he also likes taking pictures and making videos.Receive notifications of his new releases! Simply visit his profile page at Smashwords and click the button labeled "Subscribe to Author Alerts". When he releases a new book, you will receive an alert, and click the favorite button. Thanks.

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    Book preview

    40 Easy Dart Games. - Kerry Butters

    40 Easy Dart games

    Copyright 2017 Kerry Butters

    Published by Kerry Butters at Smashwords

    Smashwords Edition License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your enjoyment only, then please return to Smashwords.com or your favorite retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    Contents

    1 Rules For Cricket

    2 Rules For x01

    3 Rules For Around The Clock

    4 Rules For Baseball

    5 Rules For Golf

    6 Rules For Mulligan

    7 Rules For Tic-Tac-Toe

    8 Rules For Australian Cricket

    9 Rules For Blind Killers

    10 Rules For Broad Jump

    11 Rules For Bullseye Baseball

    12 Rules For Call Three

    13 Rules For Castle

    14 Rules For Checkout

    15 Rules For Diddle For Middle

    16 Rules For Fifty-One In 5's

    17 Rules For Fifty-One/Fifty-Seven

    18 Rules For Follow The Leader

    19 Rules For Football

    20 Rules For 14 Stop

    21 Rules For Fox Hunt

    22 Rules For Football

    23 Rules For Halvers

    24 Rules For High Jump

    25 Rules For High/Low

    26 Rules For High Score

    27 Rules For Killers

    28 Rules For Looper

    29 Rules For Mickey Mouse

    30 Rules For Nine Lives

    31 Rules For Prisoner

    32 Rules For Road Rally

    33 Rules For Scram

    34 Rules For Shanghai

    35 Rules For Shove Ha'Penny

    36 Rules For 6-14

    37 Rules For Slider

    38 Rules For Soccer

    39 Rules For Steeplechase

    40 Rules For Sudden Death

    1 Rules For Cricket

    Cricket:

    Cricket is a favorite dart game and also the one that I learned first. It is also the most common one played in bars across the U.K and America. Cricket is a game that, unlike x01, requires some strategy that can help a weaker player beat a stronger player.

    The Object: The object of the game is to close all your numbers (20 down through 15 and bulls-eye) and end up with more or equal points to your opponent. To close a number, you must hit three of that number.

    The Scoring: The scoreboard is drawn with the numbers 20 through 15 and bullseye written in descending order down the center of the board. Bullseye is usually abbreviated with a B (or C for cork, another term for the bullseye). Each dart that lands in any of the games numbers count toward closing that number. The thin outer ring counts as two of that number and is called a double. The thin inner ring counts as three of that number and is called a triple. Scoring for one dart is shown by placing a slash ( \ ) next to the number scored. Scoring for two is shown by placing an X next to the number scored. Scoring for three is shown by placing a circle next to the number to indicate it is closed. When three of a number is scored in any combination, it is closed.

    The Play: The players each take a turn throwing one dart at bulls-eye, closest dart to the bull's-eye gets to throw first. The first player throws three darts at any of the scoring numbers to try to close that number and/or score points (points will be explained later, and games can be played without points). The player then scores the darts that he has thrown and play alternates until one person closes all their numbers and has more or equal points to the opponent.

    Now let's talk about points. Points is what makes the game of Cricket very interesting. After you close a number, if your opponent does not have the same number closed, any darts that land in that number count as points for you and are totaled on your side of the board. For example, you have your 18 closed and your opponent only has one 18. If you throw a triple 18, you now have 54 points added to any points you may have already scored. If your opponent now throws a triple 18, only two count to close the number. The third does not count for points because your 18 is already closed. If a player has all of their numbers closed including bull's-eyes but has less points, that player has not yet won the game. He must throw enough points to be even or ahead of the opponent. If the only number the opponent has open is bull's-eyes, then the player must throw extra bull's-eyes at 25 points each (or 50 points for the double bulls-eye).

    Strategy: The best strategy is to close the highest numbers first in descending order (this is the reason they are written that way on the scoreboard). The reason for this is that if points are scored, the player with the higher number closed has a big advantage. If you closed your 20 and scored 20 points in your first round, your opponent

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