Based on the Squid Game Marbles from Netflix cotton bag and 20 marbles. Please note photo shows 12 listing is for 10 marbles.
Ideal stocking filler this year.As seen on the series: This game appears in Episode 6. The players pair off in twos, and each person is given one pouch of 10 marbles. An overhead speaker announces the rules: Their partner will be their opponent, not their teammate, and the objective is to “take all 10 marbles from your partner” in 30 minutes. The show features three kinds of marble games:

1. Throwing: According to Ji-young (Lee Yoo-mi), who is paired off with Kang Sae-byuk (Jung Ho-yeon), they are apparently free to make their own rules. The two play one round in the last few minutes by seeing who can throw it the farthest.

2. Guessing: Cho Sang-woo (Park Hae-soo) explains to Abdul Ali (Anupam Tripathi), who has never played the game before, that the “even-odd” version of the game is played by guessing whether the number of marbles in your opponent’s hand is an odd number or an even number.

3. Flicking: Jang Deok-su (Heo Sung-tae) and his partner take turns throwing marbles into a hole they’ve dug. “If your marble reaches the hole, then you get to take all the marbles on the ground,” Deok-su says.

1. First, draw a triangle into the ground.

2. Place any number of marbles into the triangle.

3. Position yourself and your opponent equidistant from the triangle. Using your middle finger and thumb, flick one of your marbles into the triangle and try to knock out the placed marbles. Any marbles you knock out are yours.

4. If your marble touches the triangle’s lines or stays in the triangle, then you lose any marbles you’ve won thus far. This is called tohagi (vomiting).

5. A winner is called when there are no more marbles left in the triangle or when only one player is left standing and all other players have lost their marbles.

The objective of most marble games is to collect as many marbles as possible. Winning often meant that you got to keep your opponent’s marbles.