Candy Sharing Game – Activity Directions
Candy Sharing Game Rules
- The players should sit in a circle.
- Each circle will have a leader who starts the game by
distributing wrapped candies among participants. The distribution of
candy will not necessarily be even -- some playerswill start out
with more and some players may start out with none.
- During the game, players should keep their candy on the ground
in front of them. They should make sure that the candy does not
get lost under their legs and they should not hold it in their
hands.
- When the leader says ``Share!'', everyone who has two or more
pieces of candy in front of them gives one piece to the person on
their right and one piece to the person on their left. They should
use both arms to do this at the same time. Players with one or zero
pieces of candy do nothing.
- After the appropriate players have shared candy, the leader
will say ``Share!'' again. This process repeats until the group
sees a pattern emerge in the game.
- Several things might happen with the game.
- The game might stop because no one is passing candy any
more.
- The game might settle down so that even though everyone
passes candy every time, the amount of candy that each player
has is always the same. This is called a fixed point.
- A repeating pattern might emerge in the way that the candy
is shared. This is called a cycle.
Candy Sharing Game Challenges
- Find an initial distribution of candy that eventually causes the
game to stop. That is, tell the leader how to arrange the candy so
that some players pass candy a few times, but then all players stop
passing candy. What distribution or distribution strategy did you
use to do this?
- Find an initial distribution of candy that leads to a
fixed point. Remember that a fixed point happens when
everyone passes candy, but the amount of candy in front of each
person stays the same after each pass. What distribution or
distribution strategy did you use?
- Find an initial distribution of candy that leads to a
cycle. A cycle happens when there is a repeating pattern of
sharing that never stops. What distribution or distribution strategy
did you use?
Consider the following questions as a group and experiment to figure
them out.
- What is the smallest amount of candy that you can use to design
a game that never stops?
- What is the smallest amount of candy that you can use if you
want to guarantee that the game will never stop no matter how the
leader distributes the candy? (This question is slightly different
from the previous question because in that question you were allowed
to tell the leader how to distribute the candy.)
- What is the largest amount of candy that you can use if you
want a game that leads to a cycle instead of a fixed point?
- What is the smallest amount of candy that you can use if you
want to design a game that leads to a fixed point?
- What is the smallest amount of candy that you can use if you
want to guarantee that the game will lead to a fixed point no
matter how the leader distributes the candy?
Changing The Rules
After you have tried the challenges on the next page, you might want
to try changing the rules of the game. For example, you might try a
version where the players always pass half their candy to the person
on their left (keeping one more than they pass if they have an odd
number). What kinds of eventual patterns emerge in this game?