Celebrity Online Checkers Games
Custom games are available - just
send pictures and
text to info2@celebritycheckers.com
A customized game will be developed and posted JUST FOR YOU !!
Click HERE for Select a Babe Checkers
Choose from: Britney Spears, Pamela Anderson, Brook Burke, Christina Aguilera, Martha Stewart, Mary-Kate Olsen, Nicole Richie, Paris Hilton, Whitney Houston, Monica Lewinsky, Hilary Duff, Anna Kournikova, Hillary Clinton, Jessica Simpson
Click HERE for Select a Politician Checkers
Choose from: Arnold Schwarnegger, George Bush, John Dean, Dick Cheney, John Edwards, Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, Osama bin Laden, Rush Limbaugh, Sadam Hussein, Al Sharpton, Bill Clinton, Joe Leiberman
Performers (or Performer Sucks!)
Mary-Kate Olsen -vs- Anorexia Michel Jackson -vs- Eminem
Siegfried & Roy -vs- The Tiger Anna Nicole Smith -vs- TrimSpa (Trim Spa)
The Newlyweds, Nick Lachey -vs-Jessica Simpson
Howard Stern -vs- The FCC Howard Stern -vs- Jay Leno
Janet Jackson -vs- Justin Timberlake Howard Stern -vs- Don Imus
Britney Spears -vs- Jason Allen Alexander
Whitney Houston -vs- Bobby Brown Glen Campbell -vs- The Rhinestone Cowboy
Michael Jackson -vs- Tom Sneddon Oxycontin -vs- Rush Limbaugh
Political / Current Events (or Celebrity Sucks!)
VP Dick Cheney -vs- Senator Patrick Leahy
Bill Clinton -vs- Monica Lewinski
Senator John Kerry -vs- Presidential Candidate John Kerry
Barry Bonds -vs- Steroids Senator John Kerry -vs- President George W. Bush
George Bush -vs- Osama bin Laden
Bill Clinton -vs- Hillary Clinton Kazaa -vs- Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)
Martha Stewart -vs- Queer Eye for the Straight Guy (Fab Five)
The Terminator -vs- Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
O.J. Simpson -vs- Marcia Clark
College Football
OSU Buckeyes -vs- Michigan Wolverines Michigan Wolverines -vs- Ohio State Buckeyes
Florida Gators -vs- Florida State Seminoles Florida State Seminoles -vs- Florida Gators
Yale Bulldogs -vs- Harvard Crimson
National Football League
Browns -vs- Steelers Pittsburgh -vs- Cleveland
Major League Baseball
Red Sox Manny Ramirez -vs- Yankees Roger Clemens
Boston Red Sox -vs- New York Yankees New York Yankees -vs- Boston Red Sox
Pete Rose -vs- Gambling Bart Giamatti -vs- Pete Rose
Sammy Sosa -vs- Cork Cracker Jack -vs- Crunch and Munch
National Basketball Association
Carlos Boozer -vs- Cleveland Cavaliers
Shaquille O'Neal -vs- Kobe Bryant Lebron James -vs- Carmello Anthony
Tracy McGrady -vs- Kobe Bryant Allen Iverson -vs- Kobe Bryant
National Hockey League
Kris Draper -vs- Claude LeMieux Claude Lapointe -vs- Theo Fleury
Cartoon / Animation / Miscellaneous
Santa -vs- The Grinch Julius -vs- Skurvy Coca-Cola -vs- Pepsi
Harry Potter -vs- Lord Voldemort Smiley -vs- Skull
American Express -vs- Mastercard Google -vs- Yahoo
Homer Simpson -vs- Bart Simpson
MSN -vs- AOL (coming soon) The Terminator -vs- Robocop Project Management
Litigation -vs- Asbestosis / Mesothelioma Litigation -vs- Vioxx
Babes
(The Simple Life) Paris Hilton -vs- Nicole Richie Britney Spears -vs- Christina Aguilera
Brooke Burke -vs- Pamela Anderson Hilary Duff -vs- Anna Kournikova
NASCAR
Dale Earnhardt -vs- Jeff Gordon
Checkers is a board game played between two players, who alternate moves. The player who cannot move, because he has no pieces, or because all of his pieces are blocked, loses the game. Players can resign or agree to draws.
The board is square, with sixty-four smaller squares, arranged in an 8x8 grid. The smaller squares are alternately light and dark colored (green and buff in tournaments), in the famous "checker-board" pattern. The game of checkers is played on the dark (black or green) squares. Each player has a dark square on his far left and a light square on his far right. The double-corner is the distinctive pair of dark squares in the near right corner.
The pieces are Red and White, and are called Black and White in most books. In some modern publications, they are called Red and White. Sets bought in stores may be other colors. Black and Red pieces are still called Black (or Red) and White, so that you can read the books. The pieces are of cylindrical shape, much wider than they are tall (see diagram). Tournament pieces are smooth, and have no designs (crowns or concentric circles) on them. The pieces are placed on the dark squares of the board.
The starting position is with each player having twelve pieces, on the twelve dark squares closest to his edge of the board. Notice that in checker diagrams, the pieces are usually placed on the light colored squares, for readability. On a real board they are on the dark squares.
Moving: A piece which is not a king can move one square, diagonally, forward, as in the diagram at the right. A king can move one square diagonally, forward or backward. A piece (piece or king) can only move to a vacant square. A move can also consist of one or more jumps (next paragraph).
Jumping: You capture an opponent's piece (piece or king) by jumping over it, diagonally, to the adjacent vacant square beyond it. The three squares must be lined up (diagonally adjacent) as in the diagram at the left: your jumping piece (piece or king), opponent's piece (piece or king), empty square. A king can jump diagonally, forward or backward. A piece which is not a king, can only jump diagonally forward. You can make a multiple jump (see the diagram on the right), with one piece only, by jumping to empty square to empty square. In a multiple jump, the jumping piece or king can change directions, jumping first in one direction and then in another direction. You can only jump one piece with any given jump, but you can jump several pieces with a move of several jumps. You remove the jumped pieces from the board. You cannot jump your own piece. You cannot jump the same piece twice, in the same move. If you can jump, you must. And, a multiple jump must be completed; you cannot stop part way through a multiple jump. If you have a choice of jumps, you can choose among them, regardless of whether some of them are multiple, or not. A piece, whether it is a king or not, can jump a king.
Kinging: When a piece reaches the last row (the King Row), it becomes a King. A second checker is placed on top of that one, by the opponent. A piece that has just kinged, cannot continue jumping pieces, until the next move.
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