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About PipQuest Play

How it works

PipQuest teaches backgammon the way it's really won: not by hoping for good dice, but by reading the board and playing the odds. The dice give you numbers; you choose how to use them — and that's where all the skill lives.

  • Board Studio — read a full backgammon board. First, count the pip race: add up how far each of your checkers has to travel to bear off. A lower count means you're ahead. Then spot the hit: which move lands on a lone enemy checker and sends it all the way back to the bar. Every answer is checked by the same rules engine the game uses.
  • Predict the Odds — backgammon has exactly 36 possible rolls of two dice. Before the reveal, you predict how many of those 36 rolls would hit a blot a given distance away. Then we roll all 36 and count together, and you see the probability and the reason. Predicting first — even when you're wrong — is what makes the odds stick.
  • Concept kits — sixteen short multiple-choice rounds, from the board and the dice to pip-counting, probability, the doubling cube, opening rolls, back games, and match play. Hints when you need them.

Why "pip-counting" matters

A "pip" is one step a checker travels. Your pip count is the total number of steps all your checkers still need to get home and bear off — so it's really a proportional-reasoning puzzle hiding inside a board game. Counting the race tells you whether to run (you're ahead) or to keep contact and try to hit (you're behind). It's the single most useful number in the game.

Our privacy promise

PipQuest Play is free, works offline, and collects nothing. No accounts, no ads, no tracking, and no data ever leaves your device — your level and streak are saved only in this browser.

Losing a roll is part of it

Nobody controls the dice. A wrong prediction or a missed hit never costs you anything here — it just points you to the stronger idea next time. Good players make good decisions and let the dice fall where they may.