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| - In a game all three colors were used. Pieces could be added or moved around on the board. A move was made by calling the color and position the piece needed to be placed, such as "red, grid 13-3" or "11-6, Green". A counter-move could be made by calling "counter" and placing, or moving around, a piece on the board. A win was declared by calling "kadis-kot". In one-on-one games, the player with the most wins would win the overall competition.
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| abstract
| - In a game all three colors were used. Pieces could be added or moved around on the board. A move was made by calling the color and position the piece needed to be placed, such as "red, grid 13-3" or "11-6, Green". A counter-move could be made by calling "counter" and placing, or moving around, a piece on the board. A win was declared by calling "kadis-kot". In one-on-one games, the player with the most wins would win the overall competition. USS Voyager crewmembers also played kadis-kot via a subspace communication channel. Each player had a board on which the pieces were placed. Every player moved both his own and his opponents' pieces to follow the progress of the game. The total number of pieces needed to play this game is unknown. However, at a given time there were at least eleven orange, twenty-four red, and twenty-three green pieces in a game, although not all on the board at the same time. The maximum numbers of players seen participating in a kadis-kot game was five. (VOY: "Ashes to Ashes") It appears that kadis-kot was some sort of strategic board game, possibly similar to Othello, Reversi, or checkers. The specific rules by which it was played, and how one could win, are unknown.
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