- This is the type of news I want in my feed 
- It’s a game of monopoly that’s still ongoing - It’s the made up house rules that make monopoly take so long. Play by the real rules and it’ll take 45-90 minutes 
 
- This is the best summary I could come up with: 
 - Some 500 years ago, construction workers in the midst of building Ćmielów Castle in Poland carved a simple game board into a slab of the sandstone floor as a diversion for their leisure time. - According to archaeologist Tomasz Olszacki, it’s a two-person strategy board game called Mill, also known as Nine Men’s Morris, Merels, or “cowboy checkers” in North America. - The earliest-known Mill game board was found carved into the roofing slabs of an Egyptian temple at Kurna, which likely predates the Common Era. - And in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Titania talks about how “the nine men’s morris is filled up with mud”—perhaps a reference to the giant outdoor boards carved into medieval village greens. - Built sometime between 1519 and 1531 by a local nobleman named Krzysztof Szydłowiecki, the castle fell into Swedish hands in 1657 and was partially demolished in 1702. - But then it changed hands again in 2022, and archaeological work at the site resumed, leading to the game board’s discovery. 
 - The original article contains 684 words, the summary contains 164 words. Saved 76%. I’m a bot and I’m open source! - Hehe, from the summary it sounds like Sweden held the castle up until last year 
 
- For reference, looks like a variation of this. 
- if you’ve touched the queen, dearest Agamemnon, you have committed. you must move the queen. 
- Is that GWENT Beta? 





