What is a Dart board?

Dart Board is the goal of Darts, in the same spirit as the goal of the round Bullseye used in archery. It is assumed that warriors in the Middle Ages alternate to throw a short spear at the inverted barrels or round targets created from a cross -section of the tree. This improvised game would later be improved for internal use by creating small arrows and a standardized wooden dartboard. The DART board used in modern electronic games DART is often designed from plastic material perforated holes. Soft tip arrows are used to protect the board from the arrow from damage. The material used on the DART board rarely affects the playing strategy, but some darts may not penetrate with a wooden arrow as easily as a cork. The official DART rules require a bull to be placed 5 feet 8 inches (173 cm) from the ground and 7 feet 9 1/2 inches (237 cm) from the player. This is not a distance measured from the wall, but from the face of the DART board. The area around the DART board should provide some protection against wandering throws.Professional DART often install a wooden board called "och" just across the boundary line for throws. Ochly prevents the transition of the legs and other parts of the body to the foul.

traditional board DART contains numbers 1-20 located around the peripheral area in the following arrangement:

(upper) 20 - 1 - 18 - 4 - 13 - 6 - 10 - 15 - 2 - 17 - 3 - 19 - 16 - 8 - 11 - 14 - 9 - 12 - 5

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The numbers are further divided into wedges leading to the center of the album. Two concentric rings indicate areas where point values ​​double and triple. Bullseye is rated as 50 points, while the ring surrounding it is worth 25 points. In fact, Bullyes is not worth the landing of the arrow in the "triple 20" section. Good players spend hours improving for this particular part of the DART board.

On the DART album, literally hundreds of games and variants are played, but one popular game is called "301".Two players start the game with the same score of 301 points. The goal is to achieve exactly 0 points in front of the opponent. Each player triggers three darts and the resulting score is deducted from the previous effort. For example, if the first player gets 100 points in the first round, his new score is 201. The second player can earn 50 points, causing his 251 score. Each player continues to deduct their ODIR score until one of them reaches 0. The player's score remains where it was before. This can give the opponent many chances catch up with scoring. If the score of the player is 17, it must either hit a single 17 -point shot or a combination leading to exactly 17 points. The strategy is as important as the skill of playing tournaments.

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