Materials Needed:
Altoids 50g Tin (Rectangular)
Printer
Glue (Spray adhesive works well but a gluestick will also work)
Crazy Glue
Scissors
Fimo (for making your own game pieces)
Rare Earth Magnets
Hammer (optional, you'll see why in step 5)
Safety Glasses (if you need to bust up your magnets into smaller pieces)
Remember to vote if you like it!
*Important Warnings:
Magnets: Though this game is pocket size you should take care what you already have in your pocket when placing this game inside as it makes use of some very strong magnets. Some things like sensitive electronics, cameras, and especially credit cards with magnetic stripes do not play well with rare-earth magnets.
Choking Hazard: If you're making this for your kids (or with them) keep in mind that the game pieces are small and could pose a choking hazard to small children.
Step 1: Cleaning The Tin
Mint dust, while tasty, can impede the glueing portion later on. Run the tin under a tap and then dry thoroughly with paper towel. If you have a can of compressed air it wouldn't hurt to give it a quick blast just to make sure its all gone.
Step 2: Print & Cutout The Game Surfaces
Using scissors carefully cut the game surfaces out. There is also a blank template included if you choose to make your own instead of using the supplied ones.
Step 3: Glue The Game Surfaces To Your Tin
Step 4: Make Your Game Pieces Part 1
There are probably many ways to make the various game pieces you'll need so don't feel you have to follow this to the letter.
Below are the various pieces you'll need for each game:
Chess: One set for each side made of the following
8 Pawns, 2 Castles (Rooks), 2 Knights, 2 Bishops, 1 King, 1 Queen.
Checkers:
12 Checkers of one colour, 12 checkers of another colour
Backgammon:
Two sets of 15 checkers, Two sets of two dice, one doubling cube with sides numbered 2,4,8,16, 32, and 64
It would be a good idea to just use the backgammon checkers for regular checkers instead of making seperate pieces for each game.
Step 5: Make Your Game Pieces Part 2
When I made mine I thought just fitting the magnets into the Fimo would be enough but as you can see in the attached image they'd fall out.
You can do it one of two ways:
1) You can do what I did and try to form-fit the magnets into your game pieces first, bake them, and then glue them.
2) Keep your game pieces flat on the bottom, bake them, then glue them in place.
Either way should work, my method was due to trial and error.
Step 6: Play
*Important Warnings:
Magnets: Though this game is pocket size you should take care what you already have in your pocket when placing this game inside as it makes use of some very strong magnets. Some things like sensitive electronics, cameras, and especially credit cards with magnetic stripes do not play well with rare-earth magnets.
Choking Hazard: If you're making this for your kids (or with them) keep in mind that the game pieces are small and could pose a choking hazard to small children.














































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http://www.claires.com/store/goods/Teens/cat310120/Clips-%26-Magnetics/p52199/Colored-Gemstones-Magnetic-Earring-Set-of-9/
Seriously though, is this a double post gone terribly wrong, or did you intend to make four separate consecutive posts? :P
Now, if you want a real challenge, try Quantum tic-tac-toe. It was a game designed to help students understand quantum mechanics, so you can pretty much guess the level of strategy involved.
-Y
Thank you good sir.
Care to elaborate?
i used the kiln oven in my school to make the pieces for chess out of clay.
but i didnt want to make the actual figures (i tried the first time and the cracked in me pocket), i just made black and white checkers with K, Q, B, H (horse), R, and P, and i play every weekend on the train to the nyc with my friends.
Cheers
You can also try googling Polymer Clay and see if anything else comes up.