Welcome to this week’s Math Munch! We’re taking a look at several Tic-Toe-Toe related items.
To the right you can see a little Tic-Tac-Toe puzzle I found here. If the board below shows a real game of Tic-Tac-Toe, then which player moved first? Think. Think!!
Now let’s talk about the basic game itself. Tic-Tac-Toe is fun for new players, but at some point, we can all get really good at it. How good? Well, there’s a strategy, which if you follow without making mistakes, you will never lose! Amazing, right? So what’s the strategy? The picture below shows half of it. Here’s how to play if you’re X and get to move first. (instructions below.)
Strategy for X (1st player)
“Your move is given by the position of the largest red symbol on the grid. When your opponent picks a move, zoom in on the region of the grid where they went. Repeat.” Now find a friend and try it out!
This image comes from xkcd, a sometimes mathematical webcomic by Randall Munroe. (We featured his Sierpinski Heart last Valentine’s Day.) Randall talks about his Tic-Tac-Toe strategy guide and several other mathy comics in this interview with Math Horizons Magazine, which is certainly worth a read.
The existence of strategies like the one above mean that a computer can be perfect at Tic-Tac-Toe. In fact, in Boston’s Museum of Science, there is a computer made entirely of Tinkertoy (a construction system for kids like LEGO) that has never lost a game of tic-tac-toe. It was designed and built by a team of college students in the 1980’s. For more on this impeccable toy computer, read this article by computer scientist A.K. Dewdney.
Finally, I stumbled across a wonderful Tic-Tac-Toe variation game, sometimes called “Ultimate Tic-Tac-Toe,” but here called TicTacToe10. Here’s a video explaining, but basically in this version, you have a Tic-Tac-Toe board of Tic-Tac-Toe boards. That is, you have the 9 little boards, and the one big board that they make together. On your turn you make a move on one of the small boards. Where you decide to go decides which of the nine small boards the next player gets to play in. If you win a small board, it counts as your shape on the big board. Crazy, right!?!? If that’s confusing you’ll have to watch the video tutorial or just start playing.
Here’s a link to a 2-player version of Ultimate Tic-Tac-Toe so that you can play with a friend, although you could also do it on paper, you just have to remember where the last move was.
I hope you found something tasty this week. Bon appetit!