Puluc is an ancient abstract game for two players played by the K'iche' people of Guatemala. A linear, brutal, and symbolic race, where small warriors advance along a sacred path while fate is dictated by the rhythm of corn, its kernels, and the sounds of tradition.
The board is a simple row of twenty-one spaces, but it's enough to depict a complete battle: rapid movements, unexpected captures, and decisions that can turn everything around with a single step. Every roll of the corn die isn't just luck: it's a boost, a portent, a call to boldness.
Puluc thrives on sudden bursts and blows: a narrow path where every mistake is costly.
Your warriors advance, clash, capture, and are captured. Each piece is a combatant who carries a fragment of your plan. Traditional variations add different flavors: the Antelope, the Eagle, the Scorpion... each version changes the pace and the type of pressure on the opponent.
It's an ancient, fast-paced game, an immediate yet characterful experience, ideal for those who love ethnic abstractions that embody history, identity, and a hint of ritual chaos.
Every step is a risk, every capture a story: welcome to the path of the warriors.





