<h1>Pegged</h1> <img align=left src=xemboss.gif> <img align=right src=card/as.gif> <h2><i>The Ace of Penguins</i></h2> <h2><tt>Pegged</tt></h2> <p>Copyright � 1998 by DJ Delorie <tt><dj@delorie.com><br> http://www.delorie.com/</tt></p> <p>Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License, see http://www.gnu.org/ for details.</p> <p>If you enjoy this game, please send a donation (any size) to DJ Delorie. See http://www.delorie.com/donations.html for details.</p> <h1>Goal</h1> <h2>The Goal</h2> <img align=right src=pegged-p.gif> <p>The goal of <tt>pegged</tt> is to remove all but one of the pegs from the board. Ideally, this peg should be in the hole that was empty at the start of the game. </p> <p>My personal goal is to make money and have fun! <tt>:-)</tt></p> <h1>Play</h1> <h2>How to Play</h2> <p>Hole = <img align=center src=pegged-h.gif> <img align=center src=pegged-p.gif> = Peg</p> <p>Use the mouse (either button) to drag pegs to make them "jump" over an adjacent peg into an empty hole, making the jumpped peg disappear. When only one peg remains, you win. When more than one remain but no jumps are possible, you lose.</p> <p>Note that the cross-shaped games do not allow diagonal jumps.</p> <p>If all the holes have pegs in them, click on any one to remove it and start the game.</p> <h1>Keys</h1> <h2>Using the Keyboard</h2> <p>The numbers <tt>1..9</tt>select games. <tt>1..7</tt> are square games (easy to hard) and <tt>8..9</tt> are triangle games. The backspace key "undoes" your previous moves.</p> <p>The <tt>q</tt> <tt>Esc</tt> and <tt>Ctrl-C</tt> keys quit the game. The <tt>F2</tt> key restarts the game. The <tt>F1</tt> key shows this help. <p>When viewing help, the space bar, <tt>F1</tt> or <tt>Esc</tt> return you to your game. Numbers show that section (0 for any pre-header section). Letters show section starting with that letter. <h1>Credits</h1> <h2>Credits</h2> <p>This program is Copyright � 1998 by DJ Delorie <tt><dj@delorie.com></tt></p> <p>The Ace of Penguins system was written by me, DJ Delorie, so that my wife Pat could play her favorite Windows 95 games on my Linux laptop. She gets credit for <i>hours</i> of testing <tt>;-)</tt></p> <p>Many thanks to the SGI, Linux, and GNU developers, for the tools and systems I use.</p> <p>Special thanks to Rebecca, for showing that <tt>test2</tt> was a useful program.</p>